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Chris Webster February 12th 04 04:46 PM

Freeze Dried Beer?
 
So I was glancing through the International Journal of Cancer(1) the
other day when I noticed they were using Freeze Dried Beer for a study.
So.....where can we get some?

--Chris

(1) Vol 108, 2004. p405 Material Methods section, paragraph 2.

Martin Thornquist February 12th 04 05:29 PM

Freeze Dried Beer?
 
[ Chris Webster ]

So I was glancing through the International Journal of Cancer(1) the
other day when I noticed they were using Freeze Dried Beer for a
study. So.....where can we get some?


Isn't that called whisky? Laphroaig cask strength is pretty near, at
least. :-)


Martin
--
"An ideal world is left as an exercise to the reader."
-Paul Graham, On Lisp

Gary S. February 12th 04 08:33 PM

Freeze Dried Beer?
 
On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 09:46:00 -0700, Chris Webster
wrote:

So I was glancing through the International Journal of Cancer(1) the
other day when I noticed they were using Freeze Dried Beer for a study.
So.....where can we get some?

This is one of those ideas that sounded good until someone actually
tasted it.

Happy trails,
Gary (net.yogi.bear)
------------------------------------------------
at the 51st percentile of ursine intelligence

Gary D. Schwartz, Needham, MA, USA
Please reply to: garyDOTschwartzATpoboxDOTcom

February 12th 04 10:09 PM

Freeze Dried Beer?
 
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

In article ,
Gary S. Idontwantspam@net wrote:
On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 09:46:00 -0700, Chris Webster
wrote:

So I was glancing through the International Journal of Cancer(1) the
other day when I noticed they were using Freeze Dried Beer for a study.
So.....where can we get some?

This is one of those ideas that sounded good until someone actually
tasted it.


_ Freeze distillation is an old New England Tradition. You take
hard cider and skim the ice off every day. Is is "dry" if there's
no water in it?

_ Booker C. Bense


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Gary S. February 13th 04 12:32 AM

Freeze Dried Beer?
 
On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 22:09:30 +0000 (UTC),
bbense+rec.boats.paddle.rec.skiing.backcountry.Fe
wrote:

In article ,
Gary S. Idontwantspam@net wrote:
On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 09:46:00 -0700, Chris Webster
wrote:

So I was glancing through the International Journal of Cancer(1) the
other day when I noticed they were using Freeze Dried Beer for a study.
So.....where can we get some?

This is one of those ideas that sounded good until someone actually
tasted it.

_ Freeze distillation is an old New England Tradition. You take
hard cider and skim the ice off every day. Is is "dry" if there's
no water in it?

_ Booker C. Bense

Yes, the classic way to turn hard cider into applejack, roughly
equivalent in alcohol content to a brandy.

The freezedried beer was a powder to which you added water and vodka,
and was supposed to have a little froth on top.

It was announced several years ago, hit the market, and faded away
rather quickly. Reviews were not favorable.

There is a more recent freeze- dried beer idea from a couple of Purdue
students, but they are proposing it as a "spice" to add beer flavor to
various foods, not to reconstitute into a drink.

Happy trails,
Gary (net.yogi.bear)
------------------------------------------------
at the 51st percentile of ursine intelligence

Gary D. Schwartz, Needham, MA, USA
Please reply to: garyDOTschwartzATpoboxDOTcom

William R. Watt February 13th 04 01:18 AM

Freeze Dried Beer?
 
you can always get a can of the surup home brew is made from and mix a bit
with water. this stuff is supposed to be good for you. use it on pancakes
right out of the can. more concentrate than freeze dry.

Chris Webster ) writes:
So I was glancing through the International Journal of Cancer(1) the
other day when I noticed they were using Freeze Dried Beer for a study.
So.....where can we get some?

--Chris

(1) Vol 108, 2004. p405 Material Methods section, paragraph 2.



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RickPB February 15th 04 11:06 PM

Freeze Dried Beer?
 
Actually, there were folks working on freeze dried beer many years ago. i.e.
freeze drieing the carbs and flavoring materials, adding microencapsulated
alcohol and some dry chemicals to give it some fizz when rehydrated. Haven't
heard much about it so I assume it tasted bad.
Rick

William R. Watt February 16th 04 01:44 PM

Freeze Dried Beer?
 
back40 ) writes:

Actually, there is a (former) Molson Brewery in Barrie which closed
last year, and I understand the new tenants were making a product
which dries quite well, and many consider a worthy substitute for
beer.


What is needed is a modern Johnny Appleseed to paddle the wilderness
planting high quality seed. :)



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Garrison Hilliard February 21st 04 03:25 AM

Freeze Dried Beer?
 
On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 09:46:00 -0700, Chris Webster wrote:

So I was glancing through the International Journal of Cancer(1) the
other day when I noticed they were using Freeze Dried Beer for a study.
So.....where can we get some?

--Chris

(1) Vol 108, 2004. p405 Material Methods section, paragraph 2.



In the remains of dehydrated drunks? ;-)


Actually, I don't know... but the idea of freeze-dried beer sounds intriguing!


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