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Date: 01 Dec 2006 23:00:01
From: Request Address Only - No Articles
Subject: Homebrew Digest #5104 (December 01, 2006)




HOMEBREW Digest #5104 Fri 01 December 2006


FORUM ON BEER, HOMEBREWING, AND RELATED ISSUES
Digest Janitor: pbabcock at hbd.org


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Contents:
Brewing in the Netherlands (Thomas Rohner)
hei, Smallest ramrod of the year, how are you? :) ("Hoogers Michael")
Re: Better Bottles ("Nick Nikiforov")
Old Wort ("Amos Brooks")
haha man, why your weenie is so small?? :)) ("King John")


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Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 09:14:00 +0100
From: Thomas Rohner <t.rohner at bluewin.ch >
Subject: Brewing in the Netherlands

Hi Bob

for ingredients, go to brouwland.com.
I order certain stuff there, they are prompt and nice and have a good
selection.
I do it from Switzerland and that's "outside EU" even if we're
surrounded by it ;-) We have to pay duty and too much for shipping,
especially when ordering heavy stuff :-(
BTW we brew with Weyermann malts exclusively, since it's easy to get
here. But hops, Wyeast and other special stuff is ordered from the upper
mentioned. Try their dry yeast from fermentis, it really works fine (no
affiliation whatsoever)
We use the K-97 for alt and koelsch or other top-fermented brews with
clean yeast caracteristics, S-04 for english style beers.
For wheat beers, we use 3068 from Wyeast. We have tested many different
strains from Wyeast, but since we are lazy b@$t@rds, we always have some
dry yeast in reach. The other thing with Wyeast is, the cell count of
the standard smack pack doesn't fit our kettle size (50-60l).

The dutch love beer, that's true. But most don't have a clue about it.
This holds true for most, if not every country that i know. By the way,
Belgium is not far from the Netherlands, the selection is much richer
there. My most favored beers come from Bavaria by the way. But you will
find nice brews almost everywhere nowadays. (I even drank budmilcoors
myself, before i started to brew and found out that Sam Adams and others
are widely available in the US. Around here, i stick to the local small
breweries stuff.

Thomas



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

Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 13:10:34 +0000
From: "Hoogers Michael" <Wright at webaddressbook.com >
Subject: hei, Smallest ramrod of the year, how are you? :)

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- --
sposngornjqgopogofsqoonkou
ertrtretretreptoireptoi poreitproit
to slip through. Not a mouse--and not even that man--what's his name . .?
That man from Karioth. You do know him, don't you, High Priest? Yes ... if
someone like that were to get in here, he would bitterly regret it. You
believe me when I say that, don't you? I tell you, High Priest, that from
henceforth you shall have no peace! Neither you nor your people '--Pilate
pointed to the right where the pinnacle of the temple flashed in the
distance. ' I, Pontius Pilate, knight of the Golden Lance, tell you so! ' '
I know it! ' fearlessly replied the bearded Caiaphas. His eyes flashed as he
raised his hand to the sky and went on : ' The Jewish people knows that you
hate it with a terrible hatred and that you have brought it much




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

Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 14:36:17 -0500
From: "Nick Nikiforov" <NNikifor at dos.state.ny.us >
Subject: Re: Better Bottles

I just bought another 6 gallon glass carboy recently. I already have a 5
and 6
but rarely use them. I never use them for beer. I always secondary beer
in a corny.
But, I have been making wine and did not want to age the wine in
plastic for more than
3 months.

One point: How much oxygen is permeated through the rubber bung and air
lock?
I would be willing to bet that there is more O2 transferred through the

bung and air-lock than through the walls of the better-bottle.

I would consider trading in my carboy for store credit. Never did feel
safe using
such a large piece of glass filled with 80 pounds of liquid.

Nick
Albany, NY


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

Date: Fri, 1 Dec 2006 18:07:48 -0500
From: "Amos Brooks" <amosbrooks at gmail.com >
Subject: Old Wort

Hi,
I've been lurking for a while and I must say that I have learned a lot
just by listening. Thank you all very much for the fantastic insights. I
have a question for you brilliant folks. I am a bit of a procrastinator and
have let my poor oatmeal stout sit for about a month or two in the secondary
fermentor. It is obviously not fermenting much anymore and I probably should
have racked it into bottles a long time ago. I will be priming with
1.75cups of wheat DME (according to the directions) for my 5 gallon
batch. My
question is has the wort been sitting too long? If I prime it as is will
enough of the yeast have survived to allow the priming to occur? If not
should I pitch some more yeast? If so how much?
This is what I get for not drinking enough! I had been waiting to
collect enough bottles. Is brewing faster than you drink a common problem?

Thanks in advance,
Amos Brooks
Waterbury, CT


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

Date: Sat, 02 Dec 2006 01:27:15 +0000
From: "King John" <Goncharova at virtualcountries.com >
Subject: haha man, why your weenie is so small?? :))

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- --
rooloflsljlfmglgmhjllulplshjljmtlp
ertrtretretreptoireptoi poreitproit
him. He went pale, wiped his forehead with his handkerchief and thought: '
What's the matter with me? This has never happened before. Heart playing
tricks . . . I'm overstrained ... I think it's time to chuck everything up
and go and take the waters at Kislovodsk. . . .'
Just then the sultry air coagulated and wove itself into the shape of a
man--a transparent man of the strangest appearance. On his small head was a
jockey-cap and he wore a short check bum-freezer made of air. The man was
seven feet tall but narrow in the shoulders, incredibly thin and with a face
made for derision.
Berlioz's life was so arranged that he was not accustomed to seeing




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End of HOMEBREW Digest #5104, 12/01/06
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