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HOMEBREW Digest #3473

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HOMEBREW Digest
 · 8 months ago

HOMEBREW Digest #3473		             Wed 08 November 2000 


FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
Digest Janitor: janitor@hbd.org


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Contents:
low gravity brewing (amgrady)
Two-Hearted Ale--some recipes ("Kevin Kutskill")
Are you serious (Steve Lacey)
dead sparrows (Steve Lacey)
Yeast Questions (Bob Hall)
Two Hearted Ale ("Jim Verlinde")
San Antonio Brewing Supplies ("Todd M. Snyder")
Arkansas Common (Jeff Renner)
Beer and the election ("Pannicke, Glen A.")
re: Beer tubes revisited (The Artist Formerly Known As Kap'n Salty)
Re: Some interesting and informative historical points (Jeff Renner)
Re: Gump reports ("patrick finerty jr.")
Will the true bladder fermenter please stand up ("Pannicke, Glen A.")
Two Hearted ("Jones, Steven T")
"Servo-myces" and the "Zn problem" ("Alan Meeker")
Re: RIMS/HERMS Piping ("Daniel C Stedman")
steeping bag hopping ("Richard B. Dulany Jr.")
Re: 3-way valve ("Brian D. Kern")
Tom Moench - Politics and Beer (Jim Bermingham)
Oh so sad (Beaverplt)
Political Rants/Beer Engines/Two Hearted ("Darryl Newbury")
Boston Trip ("H. Dowda")
Degrees baume to %v/v ("Fab & Simon")
Pathetic (Cabeca Dopenis)
Re: Pseudo-lager ("Richard Pass")
Green Bullets (Randy Ricchi)
Yeast for British Mild? (RBoland)
re: ..."Pathetic"/new yeast/rennet ("Stephen Alexander")


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----------------------------------------------------------------------


Date: Tue, 07 Nov 2000 08:55:19 -0500
From: amgrady@together.net
Subject: low gravity brewing

I have a question regarding the low gravity brewing discussion that has
been going on...

In my simple system, I make 5 gallon batches where I generally use 8# or
more of grain, and then sparge to ~6.5 gallons, and boil to 5.5
gallons. I get about a 1.048-1.050 OG for this type of 'minimum batch',
and the last runnings are just OK/borderline...any more sparging, and
astringency comes out. If I just use less grain, then at the end of the
sparge I am going to be really wringing out the tannins, and the OG will
be quite low at the end...SO, I am not going to make a 5 gallon, 1.040
or less batch of beer by just reducing the grain bill, as that will be
one astringent beer!

SO - it seems that there are several choices for making a 1.040 or less
OG beer:
1) Make a smaller batch (3-4 gal) using a smaller grain bill;
2) Use a 'normal' grain bill and dilute before boil;
3) Use a 'normal' grain bill and dilute after the boil;
4) Make a 'normal' batch and dilute after fermentation;
5) something else?

It seems like everyone ought to have this 'problem', so what do you do?
Or are any of the above basically the same, results-wise?

regards,
Matt Grady
Burlington, Vermont


------------------------------

Date: Mon, 6 Nov 2000 22:07:28 -0500
From: "Kevin Kutskill" <beer-geek@home.com>
Subject: Two-Hearted Ale--some recipes

In response to a request to post a Two-Hearted Ale Recipe, here ya go.

Our homebrew club (Clinton River Association of Fermenting Trendsetters),
has informally adopted this beer as its mascot, and we have diligently been
researching and experimenting, to try to duplicate this Nectar From
Kalamazoo. We think we have come close (at least our taste buds think so).
The key is a heavy blast of Centennial hops, in bitterness, flavor, and
aroma. Here is one of my latest batches, similar to the recipes from other
club members.


Larry's IPA

Batch size: 10
Style: India Pale Ale

Date Gravity
Brewing: 11/09/99 1.063
Racking: 11/12/99 1.021
Bottling: 11/22/99 1.016
Alcohol: 4.9% (w/w)
Alcohol: 6.1% (v/v)

Ingredients:

Klages 20.0 pounds
Crystal 10 2.0 pounds
Cara Pils 1.0 pounds
Centennial 2.0 ounces 60 min 9.7 % AA 34.7 ibu leaf
Centennial 2.0 ounces 20 min 9.7 % AA 12.5 ibu leaf
Centennial 2.0 ounces 5 min 9.7 % AA 7.4 ibu leaf
Centennial 2.0 ounces Dry Hopped 9.7 % AA 6.7 ibu leaf

===========================================================
sorry, just typing in the recipe is giving me a craving for a pint of it.
Hang on. . . . . . . . . .
ok, that's better (tastes good!)
===========================================================

Extraction efficiency: 80 %

Boil size: 11.0 Gallons

Mashing schedule

minute degrees Fahrenheit
60 148
75 170
135 170

Fermentation

Wyeast #1056 American Ale Slurry

Primary fermentation: 6-1/2 Gallon Carboy
Secondary Fermentation: 5 Gallon Carboy
Primed with: 12 PSI CO2
==========================================

Now, just about a month ago, we were fortunate to have the opportunity to
talk to an individual that was closely related to the brewing of this beer,
and he gave us some guidelines for the recipe, on a per-barrel recipe size.
Scaled down to a 10 gallon batch, it goes something like this:


Bell's Two-Hearted Ale

Batch size: 10.0
Brewer:
Style: India Pale Ale

Date Gravity Plato
Brewing: 1.063 15.4
Racking:
Bottling: 1.010 2.6
Alcohol: 5.6% (w/w)
Alcohol: 7.0% (v/v)

Ingredients:

Klages 25.0 pounds 60 min mash
Crystal 40 3.0 ounces 60 min mash
Centennial 2.6 ounces 60 min 9.9 % AA 58.4 ibu pellet
Centennial 5.2 ounces Dry Hopped 9.9 % AA 0.0 ibu pellet

Extraction efficiency: 70 %
Boil size: 11.0 Gallons

Fermentation

Bell's Yeast
=============================================

You can see that they are pretty similar, but the one detail that we haven't
been able to nail down is the attenuation of the beer/final alcohol.
Sources put the starting gravity at 1.062 and the alcohol by volume at 7.0%;
this makes for a final gravity of around 1.010 (84% attenuation). Still
tastes good with the 75% attenuation with Wyeast 1056, but we think that
Larry Bell's yeast may be a high attenuator, and we are in the process of
isolating the yeast from one of his beers to brew a batch with that.

For those extract brewers, you can start with just plain light malt extract
and steep the specialty grains, using enough of the malt extract to get the
starting gravity up to 1.062.

Hope this helps.

My glass is empty, and my bladder is full, so it must be time to go.

Kevin
beer-geek@home.com



------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 17:57:29 +1100
From: Steve Lacey <stevel@sf.nsw.gov.au>
Subject: Are you serious

This is the funniest thing I've read in a long time....

>If you think this sounds irrational, and to put yourself in my shoes (or
>to remind you of your own shoes, I don't know), try replacing the word
'>beer' with 'firearms' in the above paragraphs.

Are you suggesting that to say beer=firearms is not irrational???

Matey, you just don't know how funny that sounds to us down here where
firearms are HIGHLY controlled and beer is, well, a national pass time.

Chill!

Stick to brewing and let the pollies eat each other.

Steve Lacey
Sydney


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 18:04:31 +1100
From: Steve Lacey <stevel@sf.nsw.gov.au>
Subject: dead sparrows

>David Fisher asks if his malt is ruined after finding a dead sparrow in
>the bag. My answer is "BREW WITH IT, MAN!" Think of all the great >brew
>names you can come up with for beers made with this malt... Dead >Sparrow
>pale ale, Dead Sparrow bitter, yada yada yada... ;^)

You overlooked an obvious one, Randy:

"Cock Robin's Revenge India Pale Ale"

Feel free to use it David, but an acknowledgement in your will would be
appreciated.

Cheers,

Steve Lacey
Sydney



------------------------------

Date: Tue, 07 Nov 2000 09:02:39 +0000
From: Bob Hall <nap_aca_bh@nwoca.org>
Subject: Yeast Questions

Seems like my queries have piled up, so here goes:

1) 1056 QUIRKS - I do quite a bit of brewing with Wyeast 1056, and
during the past year have had a number of batches with and
alcoholic/medicine-like flavor (could be phenol, but I could never match
a taste to a text description). Anyway, I recently brewed a 5 gallon
batch (all grain) of pale ale, split the wort, and fermented half with a
1056 starter and half with rehydrated Nottingham. Primary and secondary
fermentation for both was in glass. The Nottingham finished and was in
the bottle much faster than the 1056, and when compared the Nottingham
was clean but the 1056 displayed the above-listed off flavors. I thought
about a possible infection, but used the 1056 slurry to immediately
ferment a Sierra Nevada clone that seems fine. Any tips or thoughts on
what could have caused the difference, or difference in
nutritional/aeration requirements of the two yeasts would be
appreciated.

2) WHITELAB EAST COAST ALE - The local HBS cut the price on some
WhiteLab yeast that were reaching expiration, and I picked up a couple
vials of East Coast Ale. My search of the archives turned up little.
Does anyone out there use it? I'd appreciate your impressions and
suggestions.

3) SAFALE S-04/WYEAST 1968 - I've always enjoyed the beers of Columbus
Brewing Co, and recently found that they brew exclusively with Wyeast
1968. I thought about trying it, but the flocculation/aeration problems
were a concern. In HBD #3472 Mike from New Orleans implies that Safale
S-04 is the dry version of 1968. Is that so, and should one expect
similar results when using the two .... and the same problems?

4) WYEAST 1007 - Brewed a kolsch and an alt this weekend, and split a
starter of Wyeast 1007 German Ale between the two. I've never had such a
violent fermentation ... out the top of fermentation vessels that
typically had plenty of headspace to spare. No real question here, just
an observation and was wondering if others had experienced such
eruptions with this yeast.

Thanks for the tips,
Bob




------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 09:23:20 -0500
From: "Jim Verlinde" <bean@voyager.net>
Subject: Two Hearted Ale

Rob and Kate ask about Two Hearted Ale.
Here is a URL that will tell you all about it.
www.bellsbeer.com
Two Hearted Ale is just one example of Larry Bell's expertise in brewing
some of the most wonderful ales in the country/world.

Jim Verlinde
Primetime Brewers
Grand Rapids, MI




------------------------------

Date: Tue, 07 Nov 2000 10:03:08 -0500
From: "Todd M. Snyder" <tmsnyder@buffalo.edu>
Subject: San Antonio Brewing Supplies

>From: "Weaver Joseph Todd Capt. 39MDG/SGOAM"
> Would someone please help me locate shops in the San
>Antonio area. Thanks.
>Todd Weaver

From: "T & S Klepfer" <lee-thomas@indian-creek.net>
I recommend San Antonio Homebrew Supply, owned and operated by Todd
Huntress, located on US Hwy 281 N. at Henderson Pass. Don't know the
phone
number. Besides being your only choice in SA, and being fairly small,
it's
a good store with good people.
Thomas Klepfer


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 09:48:56 -0500
From: Jeff Renner <nerenner@umich.edu>
Subject: Arkansas Common

Cliff Huenergard <chue@hctc.com> wrote me this question because his
post got rejected because of his mailer (I suggested he see HBD.org
for formatting suggestions). I will do some further checking but
Kentucky Common is a style I have heard of, and I seem to remember
that it was a rough and ready ale of the last century, usually using
some sugar, and fermented fast and kegged for quick consumption.

If you answer, please do so directly to Cliff and/or HBD, not me.

Jeff

-=-=-=-=-

From: "CH" <chue@hctc.com>
To: <nerenner@umich.edu>
Subject: Arkansas Common
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 2000 10:12:15 -0800

<snip>
In the past I have seen reference to something called Arkansas Common
beer usually in reference to California Common being the only true
American style. Do you know if this style exists and are there
recipes for it? I have done an HBD and Internet search and haven't
had luck. I decided to turn to you because of your knowledge of
pre-prohibition lagers and hoped you'd know about Arkansas Common if
it did exist.
Thanks
Cliff Huenergard
Belfair, WA
-=-=-=-=-
- --
-=-=-=-=-
Jeff Renner in Ann Arbor, Michigan USA, c/o nerenner@umich.edu
"One never knows, do one?" Fats Waller, American Musician, 1904-1943


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 07 Nov 2000 09:58:50 -0500
From: "Pannicke, Glen A." <glen_pannicke@merck.com>
Subject: Beer and the election

Todd M. Snyder envisions the following scenario:

> Gore trumpets this new cause around the
>country and shames the house and senate into pushing through a "Beer
>Ingredient Registration" program. You and I now have to register our
>brewing equipment, apply for permits to buy barley malt, and are
>portrayed as extremists in the media. Eventually there is another beer
>related, headline grabbing tragedy, another 'brewing control' measure is
>pushed through, and our now-registered equipment is outlawed and quickly
>confiscated.

Fellow brewmeisters, don't laugh. It's not too far removed from reality.
Technically in the state of New Jersey, you neeed a permit issued by the
Alcoholic Beverage Control if you want to homebrew:

NJ State Statute 33:1-75. Special permit for home manufacture of wine or
malt alcoholic beverages for personal consumption; issuance, fee, tax
liability. The director may, subject to rules and regulations, issue
special permits authorizing the manufacture by a person who is 21 years of
age
or older, within a home or other noncommercial premises, of wines or malt
alcoholic beverages in quantities not exceeding 200 gallons per calendar
year for the person's personal or household use or consumption. The director
shall, by regulation, establish a reasonable fee to cover the costs
incurred in issuing the special permits required by this section.

No the dopey thing about this is the last sentance. They charge a
"reasonable fee" to cover the cost of the permit. Eliminate this useless
piece of paper and you will eliminate all costs associated with this
senseless act and therefore the need to collect a fee.

Do I have a permit? No. Do I need one? Probably. Consider the following:
my neighbor (who is a prick) sees me cleaning my SS fermentor, some kegs and
my immersion chiller. He has no clue what I am doing because I don't speak
to him (since he's a prick). He calls the police to bust my balls and says
I'm making moonshine (because he's a prick). Then I get the police showing
up at my door with the BAC and a search warrant, like they did to that poor
slob on COPS. They confiscate my equipment because it looks like
distillation equipment, the whole thing finally gets cleared up, but in the
the state. Did I mention that my neighbor is a real prick?

Then there's the other side of the coin. Once you get the permit, you may
now have legally allowed the BAC free entry into your home to inspect your
equipment, establish if you've produced over your 2000 gallon limit, make
sure you're not selling or distributing.... No warrant needed... No
advance notice... Just saunter in whenever they want...

The only thing I *DO* like about these statues is the following:

The Director of the Division of Alcoholic Beverage Control ... may issue a
special permit for the temporary or emergency transportation of alcoholic
beverages into or out of the State...

Now I like the fact that they allow for an "alcohol emergency". I don't
know what would constitute one on the state level, but I'm sure it's gonna
be a blast!

As for the political vein which has entered into the HBD in the last few
days before the election, realize that all politicians are liars, cheats and
swindlers. They all would slit their own momma's throats to get into
office. None of them deserve beer!


Carpe cerevisiae!

Glen Pannicke
http://www.pannicke.net
"He was a wise man who invented beer" - Plato


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 07 Nov 2000 15:06:12 GMT
From: mikey@swampgas.com (The Artist Formerly Known As Kap'n Salty)
Subject: re: Beer tubes revisited

Doug Hurst wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Mr. Sanders wrote:
[humorous assertion that a beerline is not actually a cylinder
snipped]

First let me say that I never claimed to be a "knowledgable", just
someone who remembered the equation. Next, let me refute your
assertion that a coiled tube is somehow different from a cylinder. If
you straighten your tube out it is certainly cylinder. Now if you put
a bend in your tube what happens to the tube? The inside of the bend
compresses and becomes shorter while the outside of the bend stretches
and becomes longer. I don't know for sure but I would guess that the
amount of shortening equals the amount of lengthening, creating a zero
amount of change in the overall length and volume. Therefore a coiled
beer line will hold close to, if not exactly, the same amount as a
perfectly straight one. Or am I missing something here?
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<

You're missing something, although you HAVE demonstrated that your
understanding of the principle of conservation of matter is flawless.

Graham was just having a little fun.
**************************************
Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball.


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 10:14:39 -0500
From: Jeff Renner <nerenner@umich.edu>
Subject: Re: Some interesting and informative historical points

"Dr. Pivo" <dp@pivo.w.se> confesses

> ... except the first one was the swim bladder of a Russian sturgeon,
>which I had just finished using as a condom when I heard "Catherine the
>Great's" husband coming.

Well, it sounds like it was good for you and him. I do hope you had
the good manners to make sure that Catherine was satisfied.

Jeff

(As bad as this is, it is much better than presidential campaign politics!)

"Do you smoke after sex?"
"I don't know, I've never looked."
- --
-=-=-=-=-
Jeff Renner in Ann Arbor, Michigan USA, c/o nerenner@umich.edu
"One never knows, do one?" Fats Waller, American Musician, 1904-1943


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 10:19:13 -0500
From: "patrick finerty jr." <zinc@finerty.net>
Subject: Re: Gump reports

howdy folks,

here's some trivia for you: after iron, Zn is the second most abundant
metal found in the human body.

i'm wonderng how soluble inorganic Zn (ZnS04, ZnCl2) would be in wort,
especially after a boil. usually there are phosphates in the water and
from my experience in grad school (zinc finger proteins - hence my
user name) Zn can and does form insoluble complexes with phosphates
unless it is quite dilute. this effect is enhanced at higher
temperatures.

i doubt there is free Zn in the yeast; it is found in complex with
various proteins. i'm assuming that many of these proteins will
denature upon exposure to boiling wort but this does not mean the
metal will be released. many unfolded proteins are still able to bind
metals quite well (i.e. protein His tags are unstructured/unfolded) as
the metal forms a type of folding nucleus. still, that requires the
metal binding residues to be very near each other in the primary
sequence.

perhaps Zn loaded proteins do make their way into the chilled wort
where the zinc can be utilized by growing yeast. or, perhaps the Zn
concentrations are low enough that insol ppts are not formed.

-patrick in Toronto
- --
"There is only one aim in life and that is to live it."
Karl Shapiro,(1959) from an essay on Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer
finger pfinerty@nyx10.nyx.net for PGP key
http://finerty.net/pjf


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 07 Nov 2000 10:20:50 -0500
From: "Pannicke, Glen A." <glen_pannicke@merck.com>
Subject: Will the true bladder fermenter please stand up

Jeff wrote:

>A likely scenario is that animal stomachs make good containers for
>liquids. Your unrecorded human probably put milk in a young goat's
>stomach for storage and lo! it turned into cheese.

I'd like to propose that the BJCP guidelines be amended that Scottish Ales
should only be fermented in the stomach lining of a sheep or calf as in the
tradition of making haggis ;-)

Blech! Ack! Ugh!

Carpe cerevisiae!

Glen Pannicke
http://www.pannicke.net
"He was a wise man who invented beer" - Plato






------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 11:12:51 -0500
From: "Jones, Steven T" <stjones@eastman.com>
Subject: Two Hearted

This is slightly off topic, but given the interest in Two Hearted Ale and
Hemingway's short story, I thought I'd pass on this link. I found an online
copy of the story at http://xroads.virginia.edu/~DRBR/hem_river.html (no,
the DRBR isn't Jay's Doctor Beer site - it stands for Digital Reserve Book
Room).


Steve




------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 11:31:08 -0500
From: "Alan Meeker" <ameeker@mail.jhmi.edu>
Subject: "Servo-myces" and the "Zn problem"


Hubert writes from Austria,

"It seems to me the product was developed and tested together with
Weihenstephan. They wrote a report in German Brauwelt #45-46/99, p2158-
2160, titled "Zinc problem solved?" - and early this year I had the
opportunity to discuss my fermentation problems with Dr. Clemens Forster
from Weihenstephan. His diagnosis was clear: Zinc deficiency! - and I
should try that ServoMyces zinc yeast, because their research has shown,
that zinc "pre-digested" (metabolized) by yeast is superior to any other
form of addition (and it goes with Reinheitsgebot)."

Again, it sounds to me like the main driving force in developing these
Zn-sequestering yeast was to allow a Zn addition that isn't prohibited by
the Reinheitsgebot. If you are brewing under such strictures and this will
allow you to sleep at night then by all means use it. I'll stick to ZnCl2
myself, especially as the mass of Zn salt one needs to add to reach the
desired range in 20L of wort amounts to about a pinhead sized grain of the
salt, thus it is unlikely that using these "servomyces" could possibly
compete on a cost basis. The idea that the Zn contained inside these yeast
has a greater bioavailability than inorganic salt additions sounds fishy to
me seeing as how you are adding to the boiling wort. The Zn is likely bound
up as a cofactor in some of the yeast proteins or in some other manner
chelated to compounds inside the yeast, but once these are boiled their
structures will be disrupted and the Zn should be released and then will be
equivalent to exogenously added Zn salt. It should also be pointed out that
by adding these yeast you are adding more than just Zn - the yeast addition
can also be viewed as an addition of "yeast nutrient." How much are you
adding per unit volume and what is the cost of the addition?

If there is good /scientific/ data out there showing a real benefit due
/specifically/ to the Zn content of these yeast (superior to the benefits of
simply adding an equivalent amount of ZnCl2) then I'd be very interested in
seeing it!

-Alan Meeker
Johns Hopkins Sch. Med
Biochemistry, Cell and Mol. Biology
Baltimore, MD





------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 10:46:09 -0600
From: "Daniel C Stedman" <"daniel_c_stedman"@uhc.com>
Subject: Re: RIMS/HERMS Piping

Regarding Glen's question on flexible tubing for RIMS, I have had great luck
using MovingBrews.com's 1/2" Norprene tubing and 1/2" Polysulfone quick
disconnects. I haven't encountered any cavitation with my 1/25 hp pump (the
6144MM HIGH TEMP from Moving Brews) and it is VERY nice to be able to take all
of my tubing off of my RIMS for cleaning, repriming my pump, etc... The Norprene
is expensive but durable, and I found that I only needed around 12 feet to cover
all of my system's needs (though my system is neither a HERMS or a
PID-controlled RIMS - just simple recirculation). I've never had any leakage
from the quick-disconnects (keep them lubed with keg lube, though) and it is
nice to be able to just snap your tuns together as needed. Be sure to lay out
how you are going to fit everything together on paper before ordering so that
you get the correct number of each fitting. And don't be afraid to drill out the
little x's in the middle of the disconnects - just be careful not to drill all
the way through it, as I did on one...

Good luck!

Dan in Minnetonka




------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 10:12:01 -0700
From: "Richard B. Dulany Jr." <RDulany@co.el-paso.tx.us>
Subject: steeping bag hopping

Having read the posts about mash hopping, I'm curious if us extract brewers
could perform something similar. I often steep crystal malt (or some other
specialty grain) at 155 F before the boil. What would happen, if anything,
if I added hop pellets to the steeping bag? Has anyone tried this?

Richard Dulany
El Paso, TX


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 10:21:26 -0800 (PST)
From: "Brian D. Kern" <bdk@srl.caltech.edu>
Subject: Re: 3-way valve

Glen Pannicke writes (HBD #3472):

> Another question. Anyone know a good source for acceptable 3-way valves (or
> a gated wye with a single lever?) This seems like a better single hand
> alternative to multiple ball valves when diversion from one path to another
> is required.

Check out www.mcmaster.com, in their products tab do a find on
"three-way ball valves". Cheapest is bronze ("three-way center-inlet
diverting ball valve") at $12-14, brass ("three-way brass diverting
ball valve") $14-28, etc. For some reason, the brass variety is
only rated to 140 F, while bronze and steel are both good to 350 F.
I absolutely love dealing with McMaster-Carr -- they never screw up,
they always deliver exactly when they say they will, and they've never
been out of stock on anything I've ordered.


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 12:22:10 -0600
From: Jim Bermingham <bermingham@antennaproducts.com>
Subject: Tom Moench - Politics and Beer

Tom, I didn't want to post this until after the election was over. I don't
believe politics belong on the Digest. BUT, You don't know Texas or
Texans. Remember Bush is a Texan.

Texan's don't believe in much government. Don't want it, don't need it,
never did, never will. Our State Government only meets 4 months every 2
years. Most of us believe that's 3 months and 3 weeks too long.

Until a few years ago it was legal to drink and drive in Texas. The BIG
Government that you seem to love in D.C. decided to stop highway funds
coming to us unless Texas passed a law making it illegal to do this. Since
the last time we succeeded from the union it caused a war, and because we
have more paved highways in Texas than any other state, we had to change
the law.

George W. may have stopped drinking, but he is still a good-o-boy from
Texas and if we want to drink it's OK with him. When he said he wanted a
smaller Government he meant it.

As the signs coming into Texas say "Welcome to Texas, now go back home"
"Don't Mess With Texas"

Jim Bermingham
Millsap, TEXAS



------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 12:41:33 -0800 (PST)
From: Beaverplt <beaverplt@yahoo.com>
Subject: Oh so sad

The big day arrived (OK so I rushed it a little) when
I could pop open one of my first grain extract brews.
I was just sick when the distict odor of soap was the
first thing to hit me. The same thing happened on the
second bottle. Obviously I did a lousy job rinsing
these bottles, but I gotta believe I didn't screw up
on the whole batch. The taste of the beer was spoiled
by the soap. But I was able to determine that when I
find a bottle that I rinsed properly, I will enjoy
this brew. I also think the cleaner I used may have
something to do with this. These bottles were cleaned
with a bleach soap combination. It may be that this
stuff clings to the glass and needs a better rinsing.
At this point I don't know yet, but any input will be
appreciated. At the very least I learned another
lesson along the road of brewing.



__________________________________________________
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------------------------------

Date: Tue, 07 Nov 2000 17:11:49 -0500
From: "Darryl Newbury" <darryl@sagedesign.com>
Subject: Political Rants/Beer Engines/Two Hearted

As a Canadian, the political pananoia of your Americans amuses, eer....
frightens me. Comments like "although Al Gore and his party may eventually
figure out how to put an end to (voting)" from Todd Snyder in Buffalo are
beyond belief. As for thoughts on BAC ... if the Republicans, counter part
on this side of the border the Canadian Alliance Party is any indication,
be forewarned. Stockwell Day, the leader of Canada's right wing,
conservative, pro gun party is advocating a reduction of the legal driving
limit from our current .08 to .05.

Bob Boland was promoting the virtues of session bitter and milds a week or
so ago and suggested serving them through a beer engine. Bob, anyone else
from the St Louis Brews, or anyone out there.... I'd be interested in
making a beer engine like the ones that the Brews had at MCAB, are there
any instructions out there for making ones own beer engine?

As for Two-Hearted Ale, I tasted it once at the Michigan Craft Brewers
Festival .... wonderful stuff. If anyone feels inspired they can send me a
case and a copy of the Hemmingway book, and I'll be one happy Canuck.

Cheers, Darryl in Toronto



------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 14:27:20 -0800 (PST)
From: "H. Dowda" <hdowda@yahoo.com>
Subject: Boston Trip

Going to Boston, MA next Saturday for 5 days. Be in
the Back Bay area,Dalton St (?), no car but public
transportation available. Any recommendations in the
area appreciated.

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Thousands of Stores. Millions of Products. All in one Place.
http://shopping.yahoo.com/


------------------------------

Date: Mon, 15 Feb 1904 16:35:16 +1030
From: "Fab & Simon" <bluetrees@picknowl.com.au>
Subject: Degrees baume to %v/v

Greeting to the collective. Hope this is an easy one. A friend has a
hydrometer that is in degrees baume and would like to covert to %v/v. Is
Baume equivalent to Degrees plato? Does anyone have a formula I could pass
on? Thanks.

Fab & Simon
Ashlyn & Cedar
& the hitchcock chooks (the chooks no longer brew)



------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 09:07:30 -0800 (PST)
From: Cabeca Dopenis <cabecadopenis@excite.com>
Subject: Pathetic


Damn straight Jethro!! A new organization for drinkers is forming.
DAMM...Drunks Against Mad Mothers (Mothers may be defined as you will)

C. Dopenis







------------------------------

Date: Wed, 8 Nov 2000 12:03:44 +1100
From: "Richard Pass" <richard.pass@anu.edu.au>
Subject: Re: Pseudo-lager

Matthew t Marino <mattncherie@juno.com> wrote:


<<I would like to make a good bock but I dont have the ability to ferment
at recomended lager temps. I can realisticly ferment at 60 F and "lager"
at 45 F. Does any one have experience with lager yeasts at this temp or
even ale yeasts that might provide good results. Maybe wyeast 2112
California Lager. I also notice the temp range on Wyeast 2278 Chzech
Pils is 48-64 F. >>

Matt,
a good compromise is Saflager yeast which should be available from most
homebrew suppliers. I've used this yeast commercially in a number of beers
including a Bock. 60 F is well within its range. You should let it warm up
to 65 F when the gravity drops to one third of the original gravity to allow
for diacetyl breakdown (one of Saflager's unfortunate tendencies). Leave it
at 65 for a couple of days, by which time it should drop to around one
quarter OG then rack and cool to 45 F or lower if possible for lagering.
You will need to force carbonate because Saflager doesn't do much below 50
F. Oh yes, make sure you rehydrate the yeast as per instructions. From
memory it was 30 mins in pure water at 25 C (77 F) which is a lower rehyd
temp than most dried yeasts.

2278 is also good in a Bock but I'd be inclined ferment closer to the lower
occurence of esters.

Cheers,
Richard Pass




------------------------------

Date: Tue, 07 Nov 2000 20:31:33 -0500
From: Randy Ricchi <rricchi@ccisd.k12.mi.us>
Subject: Green Bullets

I bought some Green Bullet hops (New Zealand) a few months ago, but have
yet to brew with them. 9.5 alpha, they are described as an "excellent
choice for a hoppy lager, with a deep flowery and slightly citrus note.

Does anyone have any experience with this hop? How is it for pale ales,
pilseners, etc.? TIA



------------------------------

Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 23:40:54 EST
From: RBoland@aol.com
Subject: Yeast for British Mild?

We've had good luck with Wyeast Scottish (1968) and London Ale III (1318).
The objectives are to get a good malty flavor and a bit of residual
sweetness. Good luck.

Bob


------------------------------

Date: Wed, 8 Nov 2000 00:07:28 -0500
From: "Stephen Alexander" <steve-alexander@worldnet.att.net>
Subject: re: ..."Pathetic"/new yeast/rennet

Jethro (while squishing Tom Moensch like a bug) writes ...

>forced mandate of a National .08 DUI legislation tied to
>future federal highway dollars.

Feds are prohibited from making certain laws, so coerce states to in
exchange for returned tax dollars. Subverts the constitution.

>...step towards a national series of
>lawsuits against alcohol manufacturers, ....

Feds force behavior they cannot legislate by means of lawsuits & contract
award. Constitutional end-run..

>[...] considering the ridiculous confiscation laws in this country,

Confiscation violates the 14th amendment (due process required), just
blatantly ignored by DOJ.

They haven't dragged Cicero's head through the streets but we just as
certainly live in the post-Republic era. The early casualties are minority
rights not valued by a demagogued majority, more at 11.

==

JGump also says ..

> ServoMyces, [...] !
>This dry yeast, specifically grown to assimilate zinc, an essential, and
>often under-rated key to success of yeast growth is currently under testing

Zinc is a required nutrient (cofactor to many enzymes) and an underestimated
one. I've written about it before in the HBD archives as have others.
Excess zinc leads to problems like early/excessive autolysis. How does
ServoMyces control for the ambient zinc level ? What level of zinc is
target ? I'm guessing about 0.5ppm.

==

Jeff Renner says ...

>Your unrecorded human probably put milk in a young goat's
>stomach for storage and lo! it turned into cheese.

Or perhaps some ancient butcher recognized already
familiar curds in a young calf/goat stomach.

Getting from there to harvesting rennet (containing rennin)
is not for the squeamish. Is "Renner" really Old English for
'dances with goat entrails' ? [Sorry Jeff - couldn't help myself].


-S




------------------------------
End of HOMEBREW Digest #3473, 11/08/00
*************************************
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