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I might be nuts, but wouldn't it be easier to make some Kombucha?
Unfortunately, this is a myth that never seems to die.There won't be oxygen in the vessel because the off-gassed CO2 will blanket the top of the beer and as long as you can transfer it pretty calmly
I agree.I might be nuts, but wouldn't it be easier to make some Kombucha?
I'm sure it would be easier.I agree.
Or a lowish alcohol beer and dilute with soda water or sprite as sort of beer shandy.
Or the almost alcohol free rock shandy & malawi shandy
We're over-thinking it...I agree that it will be perfectly fine, but the air convection from the hot liquid and evaporating alcohol will move any CO2. There won’t be any kind of CO2 blanket. Even a light puff of air from your mouth will blow any CO2 away easily.
so you're saying it's BAFO time; Brew Around and Find OutWe're over-thinking it...
Time to put some beer in a pot and see what happens. Either we'll have something drinkable or continue to stock up on Athletic.![]()
That's right!so you're saying it's BAFO time; Brew Around and Find Out
;-)
You didn't lie. You did come back with car parts. It just so happened that they were all stuck together in the form of a real nice car!So, in July I claimed my prize. had the wife drop me off SAI airport to head up to Waco for some car parts, and I would 'get a ride back'. All of which was true, I just got a ride back in my new Mustang Dark Horse.
THIS... is exactly what I told my wife. It spawned a weeks long debate with all of our friends, which resulted in a unanimous loss for her. Everyone agreed it was a 2nd wedding, not a 'mere celebration'. So one of my friends asked what would happen if I got roped into another wedding. I had to think about it for a moment, but her car would get replaced with the biggest Ford Super Duty I could find. She's not a fan of getting in and out of my Raptor either.You didn't lie. You did come back with car parts. It just so happened that they were all stuck together in the form of a real nice car!
This is great! Seems that mashing routine and yeast selection can yield a suitably low ABV beer. We're taking away the thing that makes it a preserved food, so I can definitely see issues with shelf-life and food safety but there are ways to deal with that.The site ultralow brewing gives lots of tips and recipes. Their guides give all the details for you to achieve decent low ABV beers
Totally of topic, but I gotta ask:The site ultralow brewing gives lots of tips and recipes. Their guides give all the details for you to achieve decent low ABV beers
Hahaha! France! I love Gaston Lagaffe who is Belgian in fact from the genius drawer André FranquinTotally of topic, but I gotta ask:
Where are you from? Since you got Guust Flater as an avatar....
yeah, one of them introduced me to the 'cold mash'. Pretty neat idea and would be good for low alcohol.This is great! Seems that mashing routine and yeast selection can yield a suitably low ABV beer. We're taking away the thing that makes it a preserved food, so I can definitely see issues with shelf-life and food safety but there are ways to deal with that.
That's the factor I'd be most concerned with. I'm pretty sure that I can use my canner and stack pints in my big boil pot and hold water at 170-180F for long enough to pasteurize the beer. I'd have to get a can or two up to temp to be sure they wouldn't leak or blow but I think they'd hold.I don't want it hanging around long for the potential contamination issue.
The site ultralow brewing gives lots of tips and recipes. Their guides give all the details for you to achieve decent low ABV beers