The nice thing about brewing indoors, on occasion I brew naked. Hah.
The nice thing about brewing indoors, on occasion I brew naked. Hah.
I thought I was the only one
I know we are all being funny but Yoop brought up a very important point... this is a hobby that requires at least a modicum of protective gear. A shirt and a pair of shorts and crocs at the very least. Unless you are making apfelwein in a better bottle indoors on a surface you are unlikely to slip on... in which case... go ahead and let it all hang out.
Here's a photo of me on a recent brew day...
CreamyGoodness said:Cleanest. Brew Room. Ever.
Just a pair of cutoff jorts. I would brew in the nude, but I have a... medical condition....
Me doing BIAB:
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I heard Netflix just bought 13 episodes for your next season of debauchery.
That's a good point. There's an interesting complexity, though. Clothing can protect against hot liquid burns, but it can also make minor burns more serious.
If you get splashed with a gallon of boiling water across the chest, you'll get a nasty scald before it runs off to the floor. The relatively small amount of water that sticks to your skin will cool quickly because of its small heat mass.
If that same gallon gets absorbed by a heavy woolen sweater, on the other hand, there will be no place for it to go and thus no place for that heat energy to dissipate except directly into your skin.
I've seen bad burns become extremely bad burns for exactly this reason. I'm no expert on this stuff, and hope anyone who is will chime in, but I've always felt safer wearing relatively less fabric rather than relatively more. Perhaps that makes me more vulnerable to minor burns and less vulnerable to serious burns, but I'm not sure what the recommendations are here.
Perry Ellis suit, preferably with a vest; Pronto Uomo shirt with French cuffs; Bostonian wing tips, polished to a high gloss; and Carlo Franco seven fold tie.