Health~ma to your MiL, Cash.
Natter 62: The 62nd Natter
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
health ma ~~~~ to you MIL , Cash
Oh Cash, good thoughts for your MiL and family.
Thanks Gud for verifying my very shaky info on diesel engines. I knew it was bad because the nice lady who studies pollution at UCLA told me so, but I didn't remember why.
Helth-ma to your M-i-L, Cash.
I lost my December bus pass last night within an hour of buying it. Fortunately, it was at the Transit lost and found this morning, even if that did mean an hour and half round trip to retrieve it.
Huh. I didn't even know that making root beer the regular way is dangerous, due to the risk of explosions.
When I asked them about the yeast, the man behind the counter gave me a dreadful warning that making root beer with yeast is like making bombs. He said it was too dangerous as the bottles have a high likelihood of exploding. He also said that they had a high likelihood of fermenting the root beer and so it was a very poor way to make root beer. The method he suggested instead was carbon dioxide infusion. This required a carbon dioxide tank and regulator (I borrowed this from Dave) and a cornelious keg, which I purchased from Main Street Homebrew.
Eh, honestly, the dude at the beer store was either selling more expensive equipment or trolling for newbs. Every bottle-conditioned brew, be it beer, mead, root beer, ginger, or champagne, brings with it a certain number of bottle bombs eventually.
That's "bomb" as in "sudden loud noise from the basement", not as in "homeland security has you on their list".
Yeah, I was wondering. Because beer uses yeast, right?
I was gonna say. Yeasty brews gone awry is just part of the gig. And you get more complex interesting flavors that way.
At Yum you used to be able to get some sodas which were partly fermented and that was part of their appeal.
Tom says there is actually some truth to that, because the fact that the sugar stays and is not converted to alcohol. And when the concentrated sugar solution meets the yeast, it can be 'splodey.
Tom also mentioned carbon dioxide and a kegging method, without knowing the whole story (I just called out to him and asked if it was a possibility.)
Also, we have never had an exploding beer and we've bottle conditioned more than 20 batches.