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  1. rhumbunctious

    Alphanumeric "pricing gun" as labeler?

    19mm would fit perfect. I think this idea, combined with using different color text for different batches, would be an ideal solution. Even if in some rare cases the ink jet ink runs on a bottle or two, the color of the text/ink will still differentiate it from others (and at the end of the day...
  2. rhumbunctious

    Alphanumeric "pricing gun" as labeler?

    I've been considering getting an alphanumeric pricing gun to use as a bottle labeler. E.g. http://www.hamiltonpriceguns.co.uk/shopcart/shoptest/sp13info.php I'm not interested in making traditional labels (either designing them, sticking them, or removing them) but also need to keep my...
  3. rhumbunctious

    Coopers European Lager Kit with Ale Yeast?

    Hmmm... I may then try adding 500g or so extra dextrose, which would help to dry it out a bit, with the beneficial side effect of upping the ABV a bit. Eh?
  4. rhumbunctious

    Coopers European Lager Kit with Ale Yeast?

    I have two cans of Coopers European Lager that I picked up on sale, not realizing they use a true Lager yeast. I don't have facilities at the moment to maintain the cooler temps needed by a lager yeast, and am wondering what I might end up with if I instead used an ale yeast at around...
  5. rhumbunctious

    My starter doesn't look right

    I just pitched a starter (1 liter, 100g DME) of White Labs WLP568 Belgian Style Saison Ale Yeast Blend, first time ever using a White Labs yeast, and didn't see even a trace of krausen, but still kept giving it a swirl each time I walked past, and after 36 hours there was 2+ cm of yeast...
  6. rhumbunctious

    Obama is a homebrewer

    OK, well at least the label clears one thing up for me... I was wondering whether it was actually "'White House Honey' Ale", named after the first lady... ;-)
  7. rhumbunctious

    Pressure limits of Coopers Ox-Bar PET bottles?

    I'm wondering what the upper pressure limits are for the Coopers 500ml Ox-Bar PET bottles. If I want to brew e.g. a wheat beer with a final carbonation around 4.5 volumes CO2, will the PET bottles handle that? I'm presuming they will, but good to be sure before hand ;-)
  8. rhumbunctious

    Did I just cook my yeast?

    You could just chill the starter for a day or two, and decant the wort, thus only pitching primarily just the yeast.
  9. rhumbunctious

    It never ends, does it?

    True, true, it never ends... But if you think you've got it bad, try buying a sailboat ;-)
  10. rhumbunctious

    Looking for most tolerant higher temperature ale yeast

    I am temporarily in a location where I don't have as much control over fermentation temperature as I'd like, nothing really beyond a wet towel (swamp cooler) etc. I am able to keep my FV between 22-25C (72-78F) without too much trouble but keeping it below 22C for extended periods is a...
  11. rhumbunctious

    Need advice about very first Ginger Ale brew

    OK. I think the strategy I will take is to grate around 100g of fresh ginger and add it to the boil for about 5-10 minutes when boiling my priming sugar, so that it gets a little bit of spice before going into the bottles.
  12. rhumbunctious

    Need advice about very first Ginger Ale brew

    Well, yes and no. There is a very strong, excellent ginger flavor, so the boiling definitely extracted a substantial portion of the aroma or essence of the ginger. But yes, whatever gives ginger its bite apparently got boiled off. I expect I will adjust the recipe and process next time, but...
  13. rhumbunctious

    Need advice about very first Ginger Ale brew

    That's basically what I was thinking of doing, but using the ginger powder rather than fresh ginger. Just unsure when in the process would be best, and how much.
  14. rhumbunctious

    Need advice about very first Ginger Ale brew

    No, this is about the distinctive spicy bite that ginger ale typically has, especially Jamaican style ginger ale. Really spicy ginger ale can even make you cough if you drink it too fast. What I've got has a very distinct and smooth ginger flavor, but without the desired spicy bite. I suspect...
  15. rhumbunctious

    Need advice about very first Ginger Ale brew

    For those who may want all the details, here's the recipe as brewed: 23 liter batch OG before pitching 1.052 2 kg fresh ginger (no, that's not a typo) 2 lemons 3 limes 10 whole cloves 2 cinnamon sticks 2 kg brown sugar 1 kg dextrose (plus 250g to be added before bottling) 250 g lactose 1 tsp...
  16. rhumbunctious

    Need advice about very first Ginger Ale brew

    OK, I love Ginger Ale and decided to try brewing a batch from scratch, using only fresh ginger root, brown sugar, some cinnamon, lemons, and limes -- based on a recipe derived from numerous variants found online. It's been in the fermenter 6 days now and the airlock has finally stopped...
  17. rhumbunctious

    What Beer Was Your Point of No Return?

    Shepherd Neame Spitfire
  18. rhumbunctious

    Favorite Brewing Music

    The bubbling airlock is all the music I need ;-)
  19. rhumbunctious

    26C too high?

    I tossed a cold wet towel around the fermenter and have gotten it down to 24C. I can go out to buy a barrel to cool it further, though I'm wondering whether the damage is already done, with the first two full days of fermentation at 26C and whether, at least for this batch, it wouldn't make any...
  20. rhumbunctious

    26C too high?

    Hi folks, I just made my first ever batch two days ago, a Coopers English Bitter, made with 500g LME and 500g dextrose plus the kit yeast, and it's fermenting nicely, though where I have my fermenter, the strip thermometer is showing a steady 25-26C. Temp was 24C when yeast was pitched...
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