BurntOrngeLonghorn84
Well-Known Member
There's places outside the US?![]()
Too bad spell check doesn't catch grammar too, eh?
There's places outside the US?![]()
Too bad spell check doesn't catch grammar too, eh?![]()
"Perfect temperature control during fermentation so yeast doesn’t make off-flavours or headache-causing compounds." (Ethanol?)
NB*: I am not advocating the use or tolerance of extreme ungrammatical posts, gratuitous neologisms or textspeak (or maybe that's "txtspk") in a forum where specific and precise information is valued.
(NB = l. nota bene, note well.)
I think it's worth noting that we're not the target market for this product. Yeah, it's Mr Beer all shiny, but that's the point.
NZ, where this product is based, has (like most Commonwealth nations) a high consumer tax on beverage alcohol. Money drives the homebrew market, not necessarily quality: If you pay the equivalent of US$5 per glass of lager beer, homebrew becomes much more driven by personal economics than our focus on esoterica.
Frankly, for those people, an investment in a machine like this will pay itself off rather rapidly. It's expensive, but it's all in one; hell, that beats the pants off Mr Beer! If all I wanted was cold beer, and I had the dosh to throw at this machine, I'd have one like a shot!
And I don't know there's too much to sniff at, either. I freely admit to mixing up pre-hopped, tinned extract kits when I either run low or see hot weather coming. Methinks those who protest too loudly against them have something to hide.
Cheers,
Bob
Again, context is key. And you're missing it.
Read ALL of their literature (I did) and you'll arrive at the conclusion that homebrewing in NZ isn't as advanced as what we know. Primarily that's because homebrewing is a substitute for buying commercial beer - homebrewers want to drink commercial beer but it's too expensive relative to homebrew. So they try to clone their favorite commercial beers (or at least brew something close). Those attempts fail, generally.
No, Revvy, I didn't come up with this machine. You're right - I wish I had! :cross:
Bob
They should sell this in Sharper Image and Sky Mall with all the other stupid crap only rich people buy and then never use.
Again, context is key. And you're missing it.
Read ALL of their literature (I did) and you'll arrive at the conclusion that homebrewing in NZ isn't as advanced as what we know. Primarily that's because homebrewing is a substitute for buying commercial beer - homebrewers want to drink commercial beer but it's too expensive relative to homebrew. So they try to clone their favorite commercial beers (or at least brew something close). Those attempts fail, generally.
No, Revvy, I didn't come up with this machine. You're right - I wish I had! :cross:
Bob
Advantages of Personal Brewing
1. Our beer is made in a single vessel, without damaging transfer steps. We combine fermentation, maturation, clarification and keg and bar all in the one vessel, whilst still adhering to all true brewing principles. It is therefore technically the freshest beer in the world. And beer is like bread, its best fresh.
Advantages of Personal Brewing
1. Our beer is made in a single vessel, without damaging transfer steps. We combine fermentation, maturation, clarification and keg and bar all in the one vessel, whilst still adhering to all true brewing principles. It is therefore technically the freshest beer in the world. And beer is like bread, its best fresh.[/QUOTE
Revvy???? Where arrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrre you?!?!?!?!
come and gone already.