I've been laughing while reading some of your posts, people.
gbx said:Myth: Almost everything ever written about water chemistry. ie. Guinness is dark because Dublin water hard. Pilsners are pale because Pilsen water is soft.
Myth: Almost everything every written about beer history: ie. Strong Scotch Ale is an historic style of beer
I remember trying to write on my first post. Lol JK
gbx said:Myth: That I shouldn't bother proof reading my posts before clicking "submit"
That you need to sanitize bottle caps...
Why wouldn't someone sanitize bottle caps? It takes 10 seconds to put a small amount of sanitize in a bowl and keep your caps in their while you fill the bottles. That's almost less effort than farting.
Tow-may-tow, tow-mah-tow. For homebrewing, I count these as myths; the risk level is neglible for the typical home brewer. They certainly should not be the boogeyman that get thrown around.
But hey, every article I write has an opinion slant to it - I don't pretend otherwise. Feel free to write me off as a crackpot.![]()
Why wouldn't someone sanitize bottle caps? It takes 10 seconds to put a small amount of sanitize in a bowl and keep your caps in their while you fill the bottles. That's almost less effort than farting.
Myth: if you don't drink while brewing, you will offend the yeast and they will refuse to do their job.
Walking_Target said:True Belgian candi syrup is a product of beet sugar being caramelized and depending on who you talk to, inverted; though inversion is a key part of the process and does not need to be done separately.
Now, you can't make "Belgian" candi sugar at home, unless your home happens to be in Belgium.
The two big points, it needs to be beet sugar in the eyes of most purists, and it needs to be cooked in one go, no inverting, then storing, then cooking it to consistency.
For all that, i'd rather buy the stuff at $6 a pound from OBK.
Not that many out of all those that can afford kegging equipment. Most buy kegs,etc so they don't have to bulk prime & wait. And if you prime in a keg with sugar solution,as I said before,it's no better than bulk priming in those plastic barrel things common in the UK. As the beer empties out,co2 comes out of the beer to equalize the pressure in the empty head space. Leaving increasing flatter beer due to the increasing empty head space.
On YouTube, every conversation inevitably devolves into some sort of racial diatribe involving Hitler.
On HomeBrewTalk, every conversation inevitably devolves into a surprisingly tedious and increasingly irrelevant economics debate.![]()
You can defiantly save money. I can make 5 gallons of IPA for 50-60$ and it costs 100$ if I buy it in the grocery store. I make extract batches so far but you save even more if you do all grain. The equipment is the only other thing that costs money but its a one time expense. What am I missing here?
Myth - Homebrew makes you fat.
yeah must agree with this wholeheartedly. canada has crazy beer prices set by the government, i was getting quality beer for 1/4th to 1/6th the price of the store depending on the style. i keep my setup simple and make great beer at a good price.
"Manatees are bad for head retention"
Patently false.
Only if you don't roast them first. If not, yeah, then you get those head-killing fats in the beer.
But who is that sloppy?
I have "Dry Manatted" with live ones with NO issues.
See here this monkey spit study backing up my science.
http://www.monkeyspit.net/sites/manatee/recipes.html
Roasted manatee is a totally different (and CRUEL) flavor.
Manatees play well with the dolphins and archituthis. Why would you burn it to death? Or do you roast the dolphins and squids too?
I have had smoked dolphin, where a live dolphin was cold smoked for about 6 hours, and then released more or less alive, have you tried that?
cheesydemon3 - how pathetic am I that I know exactly what your avatar is?
You are not pathetic.
You are a fat, bloated, eeeeediot!
But would you like to buy some rubber neeples?
Perhaps. I understand that the Shaving Yak enjoys them.