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On Jan 9, 1:28*pm, "CalifBill" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Jan 8, 3:40 pm, Vic Smith wrote: On Tue, 8 Jan 2008 12:34:28 -0800 (PST), wrote: Well, they are consistent enough after the recipes are finalized. When brewing, changing one little thing can change the taste entirely, even a different type of yeast. But, Harry thinks it's all just throwing stuff in a bathtub and getting beer. Sounds like fun brewing your own beer. I might try it. Use the site you posted as a starting point. I made a Colby cheese once, from a kit. Took about 2 gallons of milk to make a pound. It was actually pretty good, but a bit rubbery. --Vic It's fantastic, you'd love it. Start with extract, they basically boil the grains for you and then can it after removing much of the water. Here's a good place to get kits that include everything except the bottles, including the caps. You can get a basic brewing kit like this:http://www.williamsbrewing.com/HOME_...T_P680C156.cfm then look for an ingredient kit. Cheese making sounds alot like homebrewing, so you'll be golden. Same rules as far as sanitation. When I used to go to England on business, the Boot's Pharmacy chain carried about 30 feet of shelf space of different brewing kits. *Any variety you could imagine. *Came with the Canned Wort, That'd be extract, if it were the wort, it'd be the full volume, five gallons or so. and a packet of yeast. *Made a few different varieties. *Some better than the others. *But the local microbrews are better. *And a lot easier. *Only problem was the first time I made beer, forgot an English pint is bigger than an american pint. *Ran out of bottles. |
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