Fermenter Smell

General homebrew discussion, tips and help on kit and malt extract brewing, and talk about equipment. Queries on sourcing supplies and equipment should go in The Store.
ryan
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Location: Brisbane

Post by ryan »

Kevnlis wrote:
ryan wrote:sharks are not mammals :lol:
But cows are, and they make beef, and they use alot of water, so if the whales are related that proves my point further ;)
what was your point, anyway?
I`ve forgotten now. :(
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Boonie
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Location: Lake Macquarie

Post by Boonie »

Not to mention the methane gas the cows produce..........bloody cows, it's all their fault.

I've reduced my footprint whilst brewing.

I've put in fluoro globes in my HB room :wink:

Reduced water usage by rinsing my empty bottles twice instead of the
old 4 times.

Using hot water to sterilise before bottling rather than Pink Steriliser, in the beginning I used to fill a 50 Litre bucket with Sterliser and dunk all bottles in and then fill with water twice to get rid of steriliser smell :shock: .

Using only 1 heater belt and putting all the other fermenters in the same cupboard with jackets on.

Sometimes brewing to 20 Litres instead of 23 :wink:

And Finally, weeing on the lawn whilst brewing rather than flushing down the toilet :lol: :wink: :lol:

Cheers

Boonie
A homebrew is like a fart, only the brewer thinks it's great.
Give me a flying headbutt.......
ryan
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Joined: Friday Oct 06, 2006 10:15 am
Location: Brisbane

Post by ryan »

the best thing you did there was using the hot water before bottling. You`ll never go back to sanitising and rinsing bottles again. :)
Kevnlis
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Post by Kevnlis »

It is good that you are trying Boonie, I should do a review on my process and see where I can save a little.

Killing fish might be fun but would probably prove ineffective ;)

I also need to stop pouring that first mouthful on the ground for all my fallen homies :lol:
Prost and happy brewing!

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O'Brien Gluten Free Beer
bottle top
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Joined: Wednesday Jun 06, 2007 11:40 pm
Location: Brisbane, Australia

Post by bottle top »

Kevnlis wrote: I also need to stop pouring that first mouthful on the ground for all my fallen homies :lol:
That's classic... Nearly inhaled my pumpkin soup ;)
collapoo
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Joined: Friday Jul 20, 2007 9:55 pm

Post by collapoo »

leave this thread for a few hours and the worlds sea life is under threat! but a do concur they do use a ridiculous amount of water, perhaps a vegan diet and gluten free beer is needed to save us all :wink:
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Tipsy
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Location: Sth. Gippsland, Victoria

Post by Tipsy »

ryan wrote:
Kevnlis wrote:
ryan wrote:sharks are not mammals :lol:
But cows are, and they make beef, and they use alot of water, so if the whales are related that proves my point further ;)
what was your point, anyway?
I`ve forgotten now. :(
Where do Dugons come into all this?
They are the cows of the sea :shock:
ryan
Posts: 1177
Joined: Friday Oct 06, 2006 10:15 am
Location: Brisbane

Post by ryan »

I`m more concerned with where bottletop got the information that it takes 50,000 lt. of water to produce 1 kg. of beef :idea:
collapoo
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Post by collapoo »

it takes into account all water needed to get that beef to your table, ie. water required to grow grass and grain that cow eats. every step up the food chain we loose about 90% of energy that is available in the previous food source.
i've seen similar info saying 1kg of protein from wheat needs 900L of water versus the tens of thousands needed to produce a kilo of protein from animals. basically meat eating is bad for the environment, but does it stop me, hell no.
ryan
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Joined: Friday Oct 06, 2006 10:15 am
Location: Brisbane

Post by ryan »

One 500g. char grill T-bone comin up, medium rare. :lol:
Kevnlis
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Post by Kevnlis »

Pork spare ribs here tonight, with home made barbeque sauce, I wonder how much water it takes to make a pig happy? Maybe if I start eating more pork and less beef I can justify all the beer I drink, think the missus would go for it? :lol:
Prost and happy brewing!

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O'Brien Gluten Free Beer
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warra48
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Location: Corlette NSW

Post by warra48 »

collapoo wrote:it takes into account all water needed to get that beef to your table, ie. water required to grow grass and grain that cow eats. every step up the food chain we loose about 90% of energy that is available in the previous food source.
i've seen similar info saying 1kg of protein from wheat needs 900L of water versus the tens of thousands needed to produce a kilo of protein from animals. basically meat eating is bad for the environment, but does it stop me, hell no.
Nobody will deprive me of my daily quota of meat, and to quote those TV ads aimed at all those vacuous empty image conscious ladies "I'm worth it".
bottle top
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Location: Brisbane, Australia

Post by bottle top »

ryan wrote:I`m more concerned with where bottletop got the information that it takes 50,000 lt. of water to produce 1 kg. of beef :idea:
Fret no longer - From http://www.csiro.au/communication/media ... r97259.htm

"The biggest users of water of all are meat and wool: growing kilo of beef requires 50,000 to 100,000 litres while a kilo of clean wool takes 170,000 litres of water"
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James L
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Location: Perth WA

Post by James L »

Geez i didnt even know that and i work for them.... HAHA
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"They speak of my drinking, but never consider my thirst."
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KEG
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Post by KEG »

Tipsy wrote:
ryan wrote:
Kevnlis wrote:
ryan wrote:sharks are not mammals :lol:
But cows are, and they make beef, and they use alot of water, so if the whales are related that proves my point further ;)
what was your point, anyway?
I`ve forgotten now. :(
Where do Dugons come into all this?
They are the cows of the sea :shock:
HERE's a really informative site about dugongs.
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ryan
Posts: 1177
Joined: Friday Oct 06, 2006 10:15 am
Location: Brisbane

Post by ryan »

bottle top wrote:
ryan wrote:I`m more concerned with where bottletop got the information that it takes 50,000 lt. of water to produce 1 kg. of beef :idea:
Fret no longer - From http://www.csiro.au/communication/media ... r97259.htm

"The biggest users of water of all are meat and wool: growing kilo of beef requires 50,000 to 100,000 litres while a kilo of clean wool takes 170,000 litres of water"
Thanks bottle. Very handy to know. I thought {heaven forbid :( } you might have been making it up.
A lot of good information comes from the Brisbane members of the forum I`ve noticed.
ryan
Posts: 1177
Joined: Friday Oct 06, 2006 10:15 am
Location: Brisbane

Post by ryan »

KEG wrote:
Tipsy wrote:
ryan wrote:
Kevnlis wrote:
ryan wrote:sharks are not mammals :lol:
But cows are, and they make beef, and they use alot of water, so if the whales are related that proves my point further ;)
what was your point, anyway?
I`ve forgotten now. :(
Where do Dugons come into all this?
They are the cows of the sea :shock:
HERE's a really informative site about dugongs.
Fascinating.......just....fascinating!
Found myself rivetted to the chair for the entire presentation :shock:
bottle top
Posts: 50
Joined: Wednesday Jun 06, 2007 11:40 pm
Location: Brisbane, Australia

Post by bottle top »

ryan wrote:
KEG wrote:
Tipsy wrote:
ryan wrote:
Kevnlis wrote:
ryan wrote:sharks are not mammals :lol:
But cows are, and they make beef, and they use alot of water, so if the whales are related that proves my point further ;)
what was your point, anyway?
I`ve forgotten now. :(
Where do Dugons come into all this?
They are the cows of the sea :shock:
HERE's a really informative site about dugongs.
Fascinating.......just....fascinating!
Found myself rivetted to the chair for the entire presentation :shock:
As long as we've completely forgotten about the topic:

http://www.weebls-stuff.com/toons/magical+trevor/

Gotta be the most catchy vid on teh interweb!
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Tipsy
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Joined: Saturday Jun 18, 2005 12:49 am
Location: Sth. Gippsland, Victoria

Post by Tipsy »

ryan wrote:
KEG wrote:
Tipsy wrote:
ryan wrote:
Kevnlis wrote:
ryan wrote:sharks are not mammals :lol:
But cows are, and they make beef, and they use alot of water, so if the whales are related that proves my point further ;)
what was your point, anyway?
I`ve forgotten now. :(
Where do Dugons come into all this?
They are the cows of the sea :shock:
HERE's a really informative site about dugongs.
Fascinating.......just....fascinating!
Found myself rivetted to the chair for the entire presentation :shock:
I find it hard to believe an octopus is better looking than a dugong.
ryan
Posts: 1177
Joined: Friday Oct 06, 2006 10:15 am
Location: Brisbane

Post by ryan »

In the old sailing ship days, dugongs were very popular with sailors as a sex substitute for women :shock:
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