clayof2day
Well-Known Member
My question: Whats the OTR for glass?
clayof2day said:My question: Whats the OTR for glass?
Bobby_M said:I use better bottles, I already have them, sunk cost, so I don't really care either way. However, I would suggest that there are probably 20 other factors in your brewing process that would affect the flavor of a batch moreso than any difference in fermenter makeup (unless we're talking about something highly porous like wood or unglazed ceramic). If buckets are marginally acceptable, I'm sure you'll be fine with your #7 water jug.
Bobby_M said:What I'm trying to figure out is what your goal is. Are you looking to convince everyone to stop wasting money on PET bottles?
casebrew said:I don't think buckets are "marginally acceptable", I think they are the standard of the homebrew industry. The upgrade to glass or Better Bottles is NOT sold for chemical reasons, but for esthetic purposes. PC is better than the buckets, but the myth is that they are the worst thing you can do short of peeing into your beer.
No. Spend YOUR money however you like. My goal is to demystify homebrewing for the noobies. Making the hobby seem more technical (and more expensive) than it has to be scares folks away. Maybe I'm tilting at windmills. Oh well.
Keep in mind that the responses here are from the Choir member. Many devotees are lurkers, usually about 10 to each choir member. So forum discussions are educating more parishoners than you may realize.
All of these myths seem to make life more difficult for the noobs, and are FALSE:
Aluminum pots are bad. (Totally false)
Sucrose is bad. (partially false. Generally 20% is acceptable, but it's the lack of nitrogen that causes the off taste. Refined extract is as much the culprit as too much sucrose, which is glucose and fructose, without which you wouldn't have beer)
AG costs will send you to the poorhouse (if you believe all these myths)
Lead in brass fittings is bad. (How many cases of lead poisoning are reportedly due to lead in water lines?)
You have to mash in an insulated MLT. With $40 worth of fittings.
$1 worth of chlorine? NOoo, you need $16 worth of _____!
"Food Grade" anydamnthing.
Oxygenate, or else.
Lager is better than Ale.
Ale is bettter than Lager.
Keggers are better than bottlers.
Beer should taste like grapefruit peels. ( I'm a malt head, and just thought I would throw that in)
In the words of one of our heroes: " Just Brew It!" And try to be supportive to those disadvantaged members of the group who have lesser knowledge. Like me?
Crabmeat said:
Crabmeat said:haven't used it yet, I plan to use it for my first all grain. No leak on the inside, peer close and you can see a 7/16 o-ring. As for the trub that will settle below the opening of the pvc on the inside, I plan on using the cap from a juicy juice bottle to block trub from settling below the pvc because it fits perfect in the neck. I just need to drill a hole in the juicy juice and kill a bottle off.
olllllo said:Humidity (gaseous H2O) is always present.
abracadabra said:Here's what you might be getting if you buy a number 7 other
Other plastics, including acrylic, polycarbonate, polylactic acid , nylon and fiberglass.
When they say fiberglass I wonder if they really mean epoxy resins with fiberglass
Dennys Fine Consumptibles said:I know for a fact that blue watter bottles with #7 are polycarbonate.
And keep in mind these are food grade.
abracadabra said:You may be correct but not all blue bottles are #7 however.
"do they make stoppers etc in this size so I can do a batch (or 5) of Ed's Apelwein"