Copy Link
Add to Bookmark
Report
HOMEBREW Digest #5374
HOMEBREW Digest #5374 Sun 20 July 2008
FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
Digest Janitor: pbabcock at hbd.org
***************************************************************
AUGUST'S HOME BREW DIGEST BROUGHT TO YOU BY:
The Ann Arbor Brewers Guild
Visit them at http://aabg.org
Support those who support you! Visit our sponsor's site!
********** Also visit http://hbd.org/hbdsponsors.html *********
DONATE to the Home Brew Digest. Home Brew Digest, Inc. is a
501(c)3 not-for-profit organization under IRS rules (see the
FAQ at http://hbd.org for details of this status). Donations
can be made by check to Home Brew Digest mailed to:
HBD Server Fund
PO Box 871309
Canton Township, MI 48187-6309
or by paypal to address serverfund@hbd.org. DONATIONS of $250
or more will be provided with receipts. SPONSORSHIPS of any
amount are considered paid advertisement, and may be deductible
under IRS rules as a business expense. Please consult with your
tax professional, then see http://hbd.org for available
sponsorship opportunities.
***************************************************************
Contents:
Efficiency and Astringency ("Jason Gazeley")
Yeast slants versus suspension (Fred L Johnson)
HBD's future and.... (Robin Griller)
further to plastic bottles.... (Robin Griller)
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* The HBD Logo Store is now open! *
* http://www.hbd.org/store.html *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* Beer is our obsession and we're late for therapy! *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Send articles for __publication_only__ to post@hbd.org
If your e-mail account is being deleted, please unsubscribe first!!
To SUBSCRIBE or UNSUBSCRIBE send an e-mail message with the word
"subscribe" or "unsubscribe" to request@hbd.org FROM THE E-MAIL
ACCOUNT YOU WISH TO HAVE SUBSCRIBED OR UNSUBSCRIBED!!!**
IF YOU HAVE SPAM-PROOFED your e-mail address, you cannot subscribe to
the digest as we cannot reach you. We will not correct your address
for the automation - that's your job.
HAVING TROUBLE posting, subscribing or unsusubscribing? See the HBD FAQ at
http://hbd.org.
LOOKING TO BUY OR SELL USED EQUIPMENT? Please do not post about it here. Go
instead to http://homebrewfleamarket.com and post a free ad there.
The HBD is a copyrighted document. The compilation is copyright
HBD.ORG. Individual postings are copyright by their authors. ASK
before reproducing and you'll rarely have trouble. Digest content
cannot be reproduced by any means for sale or profit.
More information is available by sending the word "info" to
req@hbd.org or read the HBD FAQ at http://hbd.org.
JANITORs on duty: Pat Babcock (pbabcock at hbd dot org), Jason Henning,
and Spencer Thomas
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 19 Jul 2008 09:25:57 -0600
From: "Jason Gazeley" <jason.gazeley at gmail.com>
Subject: Efficiency and Astringency
I recently bought a Barley Crusher Malt Mill.
Scince buying the mill my efficiency has gone
from 70% to 82%. The mill is set to .039". I crush
with a drill as slowly as possible. I recirculate
Through 1/2" silicone tubbing and a stainless
false bottom at a rate of .75 gallons per minute.
I fly sparge with 170f water. I use BeerSmith to
calculate the amount of water I use.
Scince buying the mill all of my beers have an
astringency that although not over powering is
still noticeable and annoying. Is it possible that
my new higher efficiency my sparge water gravity
is dropping too low to maintain a good Ph range?
Or could it be something else? What solutions
would you recommend?
Cheers,
Jason
- --
Join our Yahoo Homebrew group
Desert_Quenchers
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 19 Jul 2008 13:25:50 -0400
From: Fred L Johnson <FLJohnson52 at nc.rr.com>
Subject: Yeast slants versus suspension
For years, I have kept my yeast cultures by merely putting 10 mL of a
suspension a fully-fermentated starter culture into sterile 30 mL
vials and keeping these at about 35 degrees F. When I'm ready to make
a starter, I just pull out a vial and transfer the contents into the
starter medium, and this can be several months later.
Is there an advantage to using slants to store my yeast instead of
the method I've been using?
The principal difference that I can see in the two methods is as
follows. Yeast grown and stored on slants are put into storage at a
time when the yeast is actively growing and is in contact with a
fully nutritive medium, whereas the yeast are in a dormant state when
I put them into storage from the spent starter culture and are stored
in a medium that has no fermentable sugars.
I'd especially love to hear from the microbiologists or anyone with
experience in this.
Fred L Johnson
Apex, North Carolina, USA
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 19 Jul 2008 20:19:39 -0400
From: Robin Griller <rgriller at chass.utoronto.ca>
Subject: HBD's future and....
Hi Pat etal.,
I like the suggestion of a sustaining membership. I'd be happy to
contrubute a small but steady amount of cash for the hbd to keep going....
in terms of what you described, Pat, does this mean that Brews and Views
will cease to exist once HBD moves to a new set up?
cheers,
Robin
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 19 Jul 2008 20:24:46 -0400
From: Robin Griller <rgriller at chass.utoronto.ca>
Subject: further to plastic bottles....
Steve A, wrote:
"Try a month or two. Most plastics transpire oxygen. Some transverse
PET laminate bottles which are relatively impervious were under
development for commercial beer use (by SAB-Miller I think) but I
haven't seen these on the market ((perhaps never will given feedstock
prices))"
A number of breweries selling here in Canada use PET bottles for
selling beer here, including Charles Wells' Brewery (from the UK), which
sells their IPA and Lager in 2 litre brown PET bottles, and a few of the
micros up here. I could check with LCBO employees to ask about shelf life,
but there doesn't seem to be any issue there. As I said, using the brown
PET bottles sold in homebrew shops up here, none of the brewers I know who
used them ever had any problems with beer stored in them over a period of
several months.....
Robin
------------------------------
End of HOMEBREW Digest #5374, 07/20/08
*************************************
-------