HOMEBREW Digest #3612 Fri 20 April 2001

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	FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
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Contents:
  Jethro Apologizes ("Rob Moline")
  Jethro on Chillers ("Rob Moline")
  Sediment in beer ("Cade Morgan")
  bottle caps (BrwyFoam)
  Jon's Sour beer ("Fred L. Johnson")
  Sour beer / RE: Do not visit www.beerlink.co.uk! ("Steven Parfitt")
  Caps (John Varady)
  Re: Spruce Beer ("Mike O'Brien")
  BJCP at GABF (JGORMAN)
  7th Annual Boneyard Brew-Off (Joel Plutchak)
  Re: cheese digest ("Houseman, David L")
  Phil's trip to the Dark Side (" Jim Bermingham")
  Re: Beerlink, Spam Merchants ("Doug Hurst")
  Jon's Probably Not Sour Beer ("ZANON, JON")
  UPS beer shipping woes ("Dean Fikar")
  Rachel's Spam (www.beerlink.co.uk) ("Eric R. Theiner")
  various and sundry (Frank Tutzauer)
  sour ("Joseph Marsh")
  Jon's Probably Not Sour Beer ("ZANON, JON")
  Spirit of Free Beer IX (Anderson Andy W NSSC)
  Aeration - What kind of Oxygen ? ("Alexandre Carminati")
  RE: False bottom ("Murray, Eric")
  re: Do not visit www.beerlink.co.uk! ("Murray, Eric")
  Serving line fluid dynamics (steven thomas)
  beer line, hops comparison, burners, spruce, horrible British web sites ("elvira toews")
  Fermentation lengths? ("Gregg Stearns")
  re: False bottom and efficiency (Clifton Moore)
  Re: Do not visit www.beerlink.co.uk! (Steve Thompson)

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---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 00:11:27 -0500 From: "Rob Moline" <brewer at isunet.net> Subject: Jethro Apologizes Jethro Apologizes Having spoken with Ken Johnson on the subject, and now accepting his word that he held no contempt for Gary Glass, I apologize for my scorched earth approach to his earlier comments. During our conversation, we expressed varying views, yet finally "agreed to disagree," which he concurred "was the way gentlemen handle such matters." Those matters mostly concerned the AHA, which has been fully deserving of such in the past. While my comments were made in response to what I perceived to be a personal attack, which I felt unfounded...it now appears that I was wrong.... and humbly apologize. This is not to say that I won't, in the future, offer my opinions, and any other comments I feel appropriate at the time...should anyone 'piss on' my mates...especially if they are undeserving of such. Remembering the Rules as taught by Rod Thomson, "I remember who my mates are....And I know the bloody difference." And I will back my mates, or anybody else, when they are not deserving of criticism...with all guns a-blazing. Having now been assured that Ken's words were not intended to harm Gary, I again apologize. Sir, I hope that when we next occupy the same pub, you will allow me to buy the first pint....or two! Jethro jethrogump at home.com "Aussie Rules- Rule Number 1- Remember Who Your Mates Are. Rule Number 2- Remember Who Your Mates Aren't. Rule Number 3- Know the Bloody Difference!" Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 00:56:52 -0500 From: "Rob Moline" <brewer at isunet.net> Subject: Jethro on Chillers Jethro on Chillers Having observed breweries...I agree that the single most infection prone portion of any brewery is the chiller. I could show you photo's, and relate horror stories that would not just amaze...but render you incredulous. This is not to say that slackness further along the line won't cause prob's as well. It will. In my pro-brewing experience, I have encountered chillers that, although allegedly cleaned with care and efficiency, nonetheless displayed caramelized wort, captured trub, hop residue, fungus, and even fractured gaskets within. Your mileage will vary....depending upon the maintenance you provide. Just as it is in the pro-brewing world...if you take care of your equipment, it will take care of you. Counterflow chillers aren't to be feared...they are to be maintained. Jethro Gump jethrogump at home.com "The More I Know About Beer, The More I Realize I Need To Know More About Beer!" Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 10:04:47 +0200 From: "Cade Morgan" <Cade.Morgan at eskom.co.za> Subject: Sediment in beer Hi fellow brewers. I have an ale brewing at the moment. I want to know if it is ruined. There is some yeast clumps floating on top. They don't seem to be clearing out. Is my beer ruined? Will it still clear out? At the moment, the beer is on day 7 of fermentation. Cade A Morgan cade.morgan at eskom.co.za +27 (0)17-7993244 Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 06:50:05 EDT From: BrwyFoam at aol.com Subject: bottle caps Dave Houseman writes: >I was very interested in your move to use bottling caps without any >sanitation treatment at all. I take it from this continued practice that >you haven't had any bottle infections attributable to these caps. For many years I rigorously sanitized bottle caps. However, during a visit to AB/Houston many moons ago the subject came up and the lead brewer told me that this was a waste of time. I subsequently found out that neither Miller nor Coors sanitizes their bottle caps. I immeditely plated our samples from caps I had on hand and got nil counts. Everytime I get new caps I repeat this (now using LMDA), and have yet in the last ten and so years to detect beer spoiling bacteria or yeast. I do however keep the caps carefully stored in santitary packages. > Do yo>only bottle for competitions from a keg or do you regularly bottle beer? About half of each batch is kegged and used for "local consumption", and the remainder is CP bottled. The latter is used for testing and competions (I enter a large number each year, including some that gets sent to Buzz-Off each year.). >Any beers (barleywines, for example) bottled for longer term storage? As an "oxidation freek" I keep samples of each batch a minimum of 12 mos. for testing and evaluation. If you are ever in my neighborhood be sure to stop by. We have a room (which once served as a dark room) that is full beer undergoing either thermal or age stressing. I hesitated to post this for the last thing I want to do is to encourage sloppy brewing practices. The brewer at AB put it this way. "There are areas of brewing where great care is needed, and others that are less critical. Sucessful brewers learn which is which, and devote the bulk of their time to the former." Cheers, George Fix Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 08:09:21 -0400 From: "Fred L. Johnson" <FLJohnson at worldnet.att.net> Subject: Jon's Sour beer Jon has a sour brown ale that tasted OK at the time of bottling. He is confident that he sanitized as best one can with a "no-rinse sanitizer", although he doesn't mention what kind of "sanitizer" he used. (I personally swear by dilute iodophor on everything without rinsing and use nothing else.) Jon is also concerned that his sanitizer (or perhaps chlorine in the tap water) could have caused the sour taste since he has been so careful to use the sanitizer on everything possible and has not rinsed after sanitization. If this brown ale is truly sour, it is almost certainly infected (although I've heard novices describe many other off flavors in beers as "sour"). Contamination in the fermentor will not necessarily be noticeable at the time of bottling, especially if the beer was bottled fairly quickly. I don't believe no-rinse sanitizers would cause his beer to taste sour. Because Jon has apparently been VERY cautious to be as sanitary as possible by sanitizing everything he can, I would first suspect the wort chiller (immersion-type?), since it, too, was only sanitized by sitting in a bucket with the sanitizer, although all steps between the point of chilling the wort and bottling should be examined (open kettle after chilling, possible hand contact with tubing, valves, etc). As Jon mentioned in his post, boiling the immersion chiller would be best and can do no harm to the beer as long as the chiller is reasonably clean when it goes in the boiling kettle. Immersion-type wort chillers are difficult to keep shiny clean, and most of us depend on a good boil to kill anything we've not cleaned off since the last brew. - -- Fred L. Johnson Apex, North Carolina USA Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 08:27:25 -0400 From: "Steven Parfitt" <the_gimp98 at hotmail.com> Subject: Sour beer / RE: Do not visit www.beerlink.co.uk! Well, after setting in the frig for a month and a half after I had bottled most of the beer in it, my keg of Wheat Beer has gone sour. I believe I only have a couple of glasses left in it, as I bottled most of it. The bottled beer seems ok, in fact it took third place in the competition at my local brew-club on the 9th. Normally I wouldn't fret over a couple of glasses of beer, but,.... I actually like it. As I understand it, this may be a Lacto-bacilis effect (I won't call it contamination since I like it). And, it may be a characteristic of some wheat-beer (Berliner-Weissen?). Sooo, (1) how do I test for Lacto-bacillis, (2) if it is indeed L-B,how do I maintain it, or culture it? (3)Can I just bottle it and use it later to add to another batch? (4) Can I use it to innoculate a batch of belgian beer in the later stages of aging? tks Dave Says: >I'd like to nominate www-dot-beerlink-dot-co-dot-uk as the most >annoying beer website. This morning I received three (3) separate >e-mails informing me that there was a new beer link site and that I had >"requested" the information. All messages were from "Rachel". ....... I'll second it. Just got the message forwarded from "Rachel" by "Rachel". I suspect that sending them a message will do no good. The message is probably autogenerated Spam. I prefer to simply block the sender. Steven, -75 XLCH- Ironhead Nano-Brewery, under construction. Johnson City, TN 5:47:38.9 S, 1:17:37.5 E Rennerian http://albums.photopoint.com/j/AlbumIndex?u=241124&a=1791925 "Fools you are... who say you like to learn from your mistakes.... I prefer to learn from the mistakes of others and avoid the cost of my own." Otto von Bismarck Return to table of contents
Date: 19 Apr 2001 09:13:46 EDT From: John Varady <rust1d at usa.net> Subject: Caps WRT not sanitizing your bottle caps, I haven't done so in 4 years and probably 3000+ bottles without getting burned for it. Bottling sucks enough as it is, you don't need to make it even more painful. John "So often these days, eating Indian food passes for spirituality. I don't meditate, I don't pray, but I eat 2 Samosas every day." Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 06:27:04 -0700 (PDT) From: "Mike O'Brien" <picobrew at yahoo.com> Subject: Re: Spruce Beer While doing a colonial brewing demonstration with a wooden lauter tun I stumbled on 'how to do a spruce beer'. With the wooden lauter tun the false bottom that I had been useing was straw - this worked well. I had read about the early settlers - or maybe it was Scandinavian brewers - that also using evergreen boughs as their 'screen'. So the first batch I added a few blue spruce tips to the lauter tun with the straw. It still filtered great and added a faint evergreen flavor and aroma. The second batch I brewed 10 gallons of a 1.056 amber ale I used a 'paper grocery bag full' (5 or 6#) of Blue Spruce tip (no straw) and it was wonderful! I have since used white spruce - not as nice - and White Pine - no flavor or aroma addition at all! When I brewed a 'big Scotch ale' (1.090) - with this method - the spruce character was still present but much subdued. Mike O'Brien pico-Brewing Systems, Inc. www.pico-brewing.com Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 09:25:00 -0400 From: JGORMAN at steelcase.com Subject: BJCP at GABF Does anyone know if there is going to be a BJCP Exam and the GABF in Denver this August? Jason Gorman River Dog Brewery Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 08:37:49 -0500 (CDT) From: Joel Plutchak <plutchak at ncsa.uiuc.edu> Subject: 7th Annual Boneyard Brew-Off Brewers, start your kettles! Judges, whet your palates! The Boneyard Union of Zymurgical Zealots (B.U.Z.Z.) announce the 7th Annual Boneyard Brew-Off, to be held in Champaign-Urbana Illinois on June 2nd. As usual we feature judging of beer and mead (sorry, no ciders this year) in all AHA/BJCP categories, as well as the No On Gets Out Alive High Gravity special category where the entries-- any beer or mead with a starting gravity of 1.070 or above-- are judged on a purely hedonic basis. Judges, stewards, and hangers-on will also be treated to the usual Friday night Judge Social and Saturday evening BBQ dinner. See <http://www.uiuc.edu/ro/BUZZ/> or contact me for details. Entry forms will be mailed to regional judges and clubs next week. - -- Joel Plutchak Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 09:37:57 -0400 From: "Houseman, David L" <David.Houseman at unisys.com> Subject: Re: cheese digest Yes, Cheese Digest, a well kept secret. For those of you who have pushed every envelop in brewing, wine making, cider making and mead making, cheese making is the next mountain to climb. Or do as I did and give your SO something to do with cultures and molds. From a couple sources I gathered together a kit of equipment and cultures and book as a Christmas present to my wife. She's watched me brew for years and enjoys my beer but hasn't participated in the labor (a little red hen comes to mind...). She really got into cheese making and made some wonderful cheeses (blue, gorgonzola, stilton, brie, camembert, cheddar, edam, mozzarella, ricotta, parmesan, etc.). The stilton was may absolute favorite. Just a wonderful, creamy, rich cheese. I bought some commercial stilton at $12.95/lb and compared the two and would take ours any day. For those that are interested, cheese making is not difficult, but the steps are somewhat tedious. It's a bit more rigorous to a recipe to yield the desired result but I suspect you can create your own types of cheese just as a homebrewer can create their own "style." The most expensive piece of equipment is a cheese press if you want to make cheeses requiring a press. You can make your own and our own Jack S. has plans for one on his web site. For homebrew shop owners, it's additional supplies that can be stocked and sold which have an affinity to your other customers. Dave Houseman Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 08:51:15 -0500 From: " Jim Bermingham" <bermingham at antennaproducts.com> Subject: Phil's trip to the Dark Side Has Phil gone over to the "Dark Side"? At least there seems to be something dark on his nose. Phil, FYI a lab coat has been ordered and will be on its way to you in the near future. Should the name tag read Scientist Phil, or Scientist Helen? For David Harsh: Yes "Rachel" came a calling. Regards, Jim Bermingham Millsap, TX Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 09:00:29 -0500 From: "Doug Hurst" <DougH at theshowdept.com> Subject: Re: Beerlink, Spam Merchants David Harsh wrote: "I'd like to nominate www-dot-beerlink-dot-co-dot-uk as the most annoying beer website. This morning I received three (3) separate e-mails informing me that there was a new beer link site and that I had "requested" the information. All messages were from "Rachel". Normally I just delete spam, but when I can slam them in their home territory, I take the opportunity." I too, received two emails from that f*&%# at $g spam merchant. I tried to email back to the sender but, as usual, it was a bogus email address. Obviously they went through the HBD and took email addresses off of the headers of posts. This type of thing really pisses me off and I am posting to the HBD in hopes that "Rachel" or any other spam merchants, who actually read the posts before stealing email addresses, will see this. I, and I hope we, will not visit links sent by way of unsolicited email, so KNOCK IT OFF! I'm sorry to waste HBD bandwidth on this topic but maybe it will do some good (though I doubt it, as they are certainly illiterate). Doug Hurst Chicago, IL Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 10:45:32 -0500 From: "ZANON, JON" <JEZANON at SEATSINC.COM> Subject: Jon's Probably Not Sour Beer - -----Original Message----- From: ZANON, JON Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2001 10:41 AM To: 'dlake at amuni.com' Subject: Jon's Probably Not Sour Beer Sorry to bother you again but you did respond and I have a hankering to get this right.....You know...maybe this could better be described as a dry metalic taste. Very pronounced. It isn't really sour I suppose, not like vinegar, more metalic, or mineral, but sort of unidentifiable. Oxides from the chiller? Is there a particular cleaner I should use to clean the outside of the copper. I just detergent washed it rinsed it and put it in the One Step. Wait..OK...I found some info on OneStep on the internet. It says it is an oxygenating sanitizer. It works by combining with water and producing hydrogen peroxide... Have you ever gargled with Hyd Peroxide? My grandmother had me do it once for a sore throat and come to think of it this beer has that sort of flavor, YUM YUM. Could the oxygenating/hydrogen peroxide cause this problem perhaps? The article Says the stuff breaks down to organic salts similar to what is in water anyway after a few weeks. That is, it can't be kept in solution and effective for more time than this as it deteriorates. Maybe the beer will come back? - -----Original Message----- From: Donald D. Lake [mailto:dlake at gdi.net] Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2001 9:37 AM To: JEZANON at SEATSINC.COM Subject: sour Jonathan, I'm not sure where to start. If your finished beer tasted fine at bottling, then it probably wasn't any infection that occured before fermentation. Chlorine is often a problem, but it doesn't cause sourness. It creates a compound called chlorophenols which taste like bandaids or burnt electrical. This flavor can also be caused by wild yeasts. But wild yeast rarely spoils finished beer. I've learned the hard way that chlorine is a powerful component and can ruin beer. I now charcoal filter all of my tap water before I add it to my mash or wort. Sour or acidic can be described as tart vinegar-like sensation on sides of the tounge. It can be caused by lactobacillus, pediococcus, from poor sanitation, excessive acid mash rest (rare) or high fermentation temperatures. So basically, the problems from sourness do not come at bottling. Could the fault be something other than "sour"? Maybe you had one infected bottle? Try another or ask someone more experienced with beer faults to taste it. Personally, I find a lot of faults with my own beer that others do not, including BJCP National judges. It's in my head. Sorry I wasnt more help. Don Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 10:54:10 -0700 From: "Dean Fikar" <dfikar at flash.net> Subject: UPS beer shipping woes After using UPS to ship beer at least a dozen times over the last couple of years I recently ran into my first real problem. I know that shipping beer for evaluation purposes (i.e. competition) is legal using private carriers such as UPS and Federal Express. I recently took a couple of boxes of beer down to the local UPS substation to ship to California for the MCAB. As is my usual custom, I labelled the contents "yeast samples" and dropped them off. A couple of hours later I got a phone call from the supervisor who questioned the contents, apparently after having opened the boxes. She informed me that they do not ship alcoholic beverages and gave me a hard time for labeling the boxes as yeast samples. I told her that I've done this many times before, often with the supervisors knowing the contents. Well, a rather heated discussion ensued which resulted in me driving down to the station to pick up the boxes while she took her time checking with the higher-ups. By the time I got there, she had gone ahead and put the boxes on the shipping ramp, purportedly to be shipped to California as I had requested. She didn't bother to tell me that she was going to do this before I rushed down there, thus wasting a trip. Another testy exchange ensued at the end of which she said she'd ship the boxes but "I'm not gonna ship no mo". Needless to say, my Czech blood had reached a rolling boil after trying in vain to reason with this cretin. At this point, it wouldn't surprise me if a couple of empty boxes arrive at the MCAB while my precious beer gets "judged" against a bottle of Colt 45 at the back of the Fort Worth UPS substation by a bunch of semiliterate UPS workers. My question is how do I avoid this in the future? I checed the UPS web site for their alcohol shipping policy and I didn't see anything about noncommercial shipping of alcoholic beverages. I was wondering if anyone knew of a written policy regarding such shipments so that I could show the supervisor next time and hopefully avoid these problems. Also, I'm wondering if Federal Express might be a better alternative or if they have the same vague discretionary policies that UPS has? I'd like to have something in writing that I could show either of these carriers when problems arise. Dean Fikar Fort Worth, TX Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 10:20:49 -0400 From: "Eric R. Theiner" <logic at skantech.com> Subject: Rachel's Spam (www.beerlink.co.uk) Yep, I've received a couple. I also received a couple from the same site a few months or a year ago. I (and I suspect most people) recognized it as spam trying to pretend to be a mis-directed email or a reply to something I had forgotten. I replied, asking if she really thought she could build credibility in this manner and got a response! Rachel (apparently she's a real person) answered that building credibility is exactly what she was trying to do-- thus the emails! Kind of sad, if you think about it. Rick Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 11:59:38 -0400 (EDT) From: Frank Tutzauer <comfrank at acsu.buffalo.edu> Subject: various and sundry Some random comments on yesterday's Digest: First, Paul has an idea about my hazy beer: >If you have ruled out the other sources of your haze, I would look to the >polyphenol contribution of your hops (likely) or your malt. > >The permanent haze you describe may be due to the complexation of the >polyphenols with haze-active, proline rich protein residues in your beer, >very common. The more complexation, the more light scattering haze. A guy in my club suggested using a protein rest because of the pilsner malt. If your explanation is correct, would a protein rest help? - ------------------------------------------------------- And then David takes it to the spammers in their own territory: > I'd like to nominate www-dot-beerlink-dot-co-dot-uk as the most >annoying beer website. This morning I received three (3) separate >e-mails informing me that there was a new beer link site and that I had >"requested" the information. All messages were from "Rachel". Normally >I just delete spam, but when I can slam them in their home territory, I >take the opportunity. > >Anybody else get these? Yes, Rachel visited me too. - ------------------------------------------------------- Aaron's moving: > Soon, I will be switching residences and wherever I end up living >will undoubtedly have less to offer in terms of brewing space than where I >am presently Dude, don't move! Tell your wife, your employer, your crack-head neighbors, or whoever is making you move, that your brewing space is more important! - -------------------------------------------------------- Then Jeremy comments on Jack and cheese: >The [cheese] digest comes out almost every day but traffic probably >averages <2 posts/day. Our own Jack Schmidling encouraged the formation >of the list and is the lead poster. I know a lot of people bristle at Jack's style, but he's definitely a "jack" of all trades. Few brewers know that Jack is also an accomplished astrophotographer with photos appearing in Sky & Telescope, for example. - -------------------------------------------------------- And finally, the announcement I've been waiting for: >From: Ken Schwartz <kenbob at elp.rr.com> >Subject: Fermentation Chiller Kits now available They look great. I ordered mine today! - --frank Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 11:02:14 -0500 From: "Joseph Marsh" <josephmarsh62 at hotmail.com> Subject: sour Sir: Not sure what the sour taste comes from but I do have a few suggestions. Get a water filter. A simple charcoal one will do to get rid of chlorine and it really makes a difference. I've tried the faucet mounted type with the cartridge mounted on the faucet and they're just a pain in the butt. I have one that mounts on the faucet with the actual filter separate on the counter. It works well and is much more out of the way. However for brewing I use an inline charcoal filter made for ice makers. It comes with quick connects but you have to build an adaptor to fit. I go to a garden hose. Fittings ran a couple or 3 bucks. The filter itself cost $15. A friend of mine uses the undersink type of cartridge filter made up with fittings to hook up to a hose also. His cost more and does the same job as mine. I keg my beer almost exclusively but when I did bottle I had problems with flat beer. I think the reason was not draining the sanitizer completely and the several drops left killed the yeast. I'm told that running your bottles through a dishwasher (without any soap) is adequate for sanitation. A simple trick to cut down on the possibility of infection is to use something like lysol spray. Spray the air in your kitchen to knock down any wild yeasts or other nasties. Good luck, Joe Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 12:50:56 -0500 From: "ZANON, JON" <JEZANON at SEATSINC.COM> Subject: Jon's Probably Not Sour Beer - -----Original Message----- From: ZANON, JON Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2001 10:46 AM To: 'post@hbd.org' Subject: Jon's Probably Not Sour Beer - -----Original Message----- From: ZANON, JON Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2001 10:41 AM To: 'dlake at amuni.com' Subject: Jon's Probably Not Sour Beer Sorry to bother you again but you did respond and I have a hankering to get this right.....You know...maybe this could better be described as a dry metalic taste. Very pronounced. It isn't really sour I suppose, not like vinegar, more metalic, or mineral, but sort of unidentifiable. Oxides from the chiller? Is there a particular cleaner I should use to clean the outside of the copper. I just detergent washed it rinsed it and put it in the One Step. Wait..OK...I found some info on OneStep on the internet. It says it is an oxygenating sanitizer. It works by combining with water and producing hydrogen peroxide... Have you ever gargled with Hyd Peroxide? My grandmother had me do it once for a sore throat and come to think of it this beer has that sort of flavor, YUM YUM. Could the oxygenating/hydrogen peroxide cause this problem perhaps? The article Says the stuff breaks down to organic salts similar to what is in water anyway after a few weeks. That is, it can't be kept in solution and effective for more time than this as it deteriorates. Maybe the beer will come back? Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 14:57:57 -0400 From: Anderson Andy W NSSC <AndersonRW at NAVSEA.NAVY.MIL> Subject: Spirit of Free Beer IX Hi, Just a quick plug for Spirit of Free Beer IX The Spirit of Free Beer is the annual homebrew contest held by Brewers United for Real Potables (BURP) in the Washington, DC metropolitan area. This year's contest will be held on May 19-20. Entries will be accepted between April 27 and May 12. See our web page at http://www.burp.org/SoFB2001/ for more details. BURP's annual Spirit of Free Beer has become one of the best, largest, and most fun competitions on the East coast. Each year, homebrewers throughout the country submit their best beers to this competition, trying to win their share of the lavishly rich prizes for which this competition is known. Get your entries in for fantastic prizes, and a chance to qualify for the MCAB. Quality judging is the hallmark of the Spirit of Free Beer and is our top priority. Quality judging means that you get the best possible feedback for your entries. BURP recruits qualified BJCP judges. Every entry will be judged by at least two BJCP judges, and three will judge most entries. If you are interested in judging, and are BJCP-qualified, please contact our Judge Coordinator, Tom Cannon, at judges at burp.org If you do not have web-access, and would like a snail-mail package, please send me your request@ Andy at burp.org Cheers, Andy Anderson 2001 SoFB Contest Organizer Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 16:49:09 -0300 From: "Alexandre Carminati" <carminat at email.com> Subject: Aeration - What kind of Oxygen ? When using oxygen (and a difusion stone) for mash aeration, what kind of oxygen should I use - I mean: it is available in medicinal and industrial versions... which one ? Both ? Other question: a CO2 cylinder can be filled with Oxygen ? Thanks a lot Alexandre Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 16:44:56 -0400 From: "Murray, Eric" <emurray at sud-chemieinc.com> Subject: RE: False bottom >>>I mash in a 150 qt rectangular cooler and with the plastic pipe manifold I made, and I have gotten horrible extraction / efficiency. >>> I also mash in a rectangular cooler with a cpvc manifold. My extraction rate is usually around 75% sometimes a little more. I would suspect that because of the size of your cooler (150 qt seems rather large), that your grain bed is too shallow unless you were making 10 or 15 gallons of a really big beer. My cooler is 48 qts and I can get around 30 lbs of grain in one mash. Not enough for a 10% beer (I do two mashes for those), but plenty for a 7.5% beer. Eric Murray Louisville, KY Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 16:48:02 -0400 From: "Murray, Eric" <emurray at sud-chemieinc.com> Subject: re: Do not visit www.beerlink.co.uk! David writes: >> I'd like to nominate www-dot-beerlink-dot-co-dot-uk as the most annoying beer website. This morning I received three (3) separate e-mails informing me that there was a new beer link site and that I had "requested" the information. All messages were from "Rachel". Normally I just delete spam, but when I can slam them in their home territory, I take the opportunity. Anybody else get these? <<< Yes, I got the spam too. On top of that, the site is pretty useless. I'll second the motion to ban the site. Eric Murray Louisville, KY Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 20:23:38 -0400 (EDT) From: steven thomas <drstrangebrew at mail.com> Subject: Serving line fluid dynamics Greetings All-- Fluid flow through tubing varies with the diameter, following Pioseulle's law: flow is inversely proportional to the fourth power of the tube radius (F~1/r^4). Thus, doubling the diameter yields sixteen times the flow, tripling the diameter yields eightyone times the flow, assuming the driving pressure differential and length are maintained. Hydrogen bonds are irrelevant; fluids entirely without hydrogen follow the same pattern. Flow is also proportional to the driving pressure differential (F~dP) and flow is inversely proportional to the tube length (F~1/L). By tweaking the tubing diameter, length, and the pressure difference the desired flow is readily attained. - --Steve Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 20:35:53 -0500 From: "elvira toews" <etoews1 at home.com> Subject: beer line, hops comparison, burners, spruce, horrible British web sites Patrick in Toronto has a most amazingly convoluted explanation for pressure drop in beer line, but since it will give more or less the correct result, I won't bother confusing anyone with fluid mechanics as taught to the pros. Good thinking, Patrick. The best summary of hop types I've seen is in "Designing Great Beers" by Ray Daniels. The funny thing is that the actual flavours fall about halfway between what the chemical analyses tell us and what the hop breeders were trying to accomplish when developing, e.g. Williamette or Mt. Hood. I don't know what's on the list in Michigan, but Wal-Mart in Canada advertised in today's flier an 85,000 BTU boiler c/w pot and basket for only $80 Canadian. I still plan to spend next brewing season indoors, but I am sorely tempted. The best spruce variety for brewing is the one that grows best near you. For me, that's blue or black spruce. I went picking near Kenora, Ontario in May a couple of years ago and it was a bit early. The spring growth was barely 1/2 inch long and it took an hour and a half to get about a pound. I would wait until early summer. The early buds were lovely, though. I might try them in a salad some time, they were that fresh and tender. David in Cincinnati is too kind to beerlink. I had the misfortune to get that email from Rachel at work. The "...information you requested..." line had me worrying about viruses, but I trust our sysop to be on top of security. Let us know if your system acts up. It's a pisspoor website anyway, all commercial and breweriana stuff. Cheers to all, Sean Richens srichens at sprint.ca Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 20:57:57 -0500 From: "Gregg Stearns" <gregg at ispi.net> Subject: Fermentation lengths? Greetings fellow brewers. I've been brewing for a few years now, but still consider myself an 'amatuer'. My question is: Whenever I brew a batch, it ferments very quickly, like the primary is done withing 48 hours. Is this 'normal'? Yes, my fermentation temp. is a few degrees high (usually around 72 degrees F). >From brewing to bottling is never more than 7 days, and I don't have problems/off tastes from too warm a fermentation. Second question has to do with secondary fermentations. The book i have says "primary for 5 days, secondary for 10 days" but the local brew shop guru says "3-4 days primary, until high krausen, then no more than 5 days in a secondary." These are his instructions for those that are bottling. Obviously those who keg and force carbonate can go longer in the secondary because viable yeast for bottle conditioning/carbonating isn't necessary. So, does 3-4 days primary, 4-5 days secondary sound right to ya'll? please CC your reply to gregg at ispi.net - -- Gregg Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 18:08:15 -0800 From: Clifton Moore <clifton.moore at att.net> Subject: re: False bottom and efficiency >>>I mash in a 150 qt rectangular cooler and with the plastic pipe manifold I made, and I have gotten horrible extraction / efficiency. >>> I have seen that manifold design can have a great effect on efficiency. I have used plastic plumbing pipe with a mix of t and elbow fittings that are easily cut to change the flow pattern. I agree that a shallow grain bed and a suboptimal manifold can give bad extractions. Return to table of contents
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 22:14:20 -0400 From: Steve Thompson <viking at jellico.com> Subject: Re: Do not visit www.beerlink.co.uk! I got it too.. Only once though and Rachel was the alleged culprit. Now I have someone to send those annoying chain e-mails too. :-) As an aside my brewing partner and I recently decided to experiment a little and threw together a sorghum ale. Due to the fact it clouded up terribly in the carboy (this was during the 2nd week of fermenting) we added some boiled up some Irish Moss and added it to the carboy and let it sit an extra week. It cleared up wonderfully and we bottled it after the 3rd week.. that was a month ago and to cut to the chase.. it didn't carbonate. Anything we can do to salvage it?? or is it time to pour it out? Thanks in advance. Steve Return to table of contents
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