"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Various and Sundry

Gonna hit up the legitimate theatre tonight:

For the past four weeks, Dell’Arte teachers have guided the actors through the Melodramatic territory, a style normally associated with twirling mustaches and maidens tied to railway lines. Six, student-devised, 15-minute plays explore moral dilemmas, neurosis, obsession and the struggle against repressive forces.

Sounds like my kind of thing. I like watching people perform stuff they create, and the fact that it's at bunch of 15-minute vignettes means that if any one is kinda awful -- which with student work is virtually guaranteed, and as it should be -- it will be over soon and the next one will be better. I think it'll be nice.

In nerd news, comment spam has reared its ugly head. I'll be tweaking things to try and change that so my apologies if that prevents you, my beloved readers, from yakking back at me.

And now, a grab-bag of thoughts with spring in the air.

For starters, here's a pointless 20-second video of my man Mark's "outdoor bike garage":

We've also been experimenting with home-brewery -- sustainable booze! -- and these efforts are beginning to bear fruit. Mark and Zya's first batch came out highly drinkable if not quite outstanding, and the second batch (ready to be opened tomorrow) looks even better. It had a robust color and a slightly-hoppy crisp flavor when we tasted it during the bottling process.

homebrew!

Mark is building up a good kit for making this a repeatable process. Batch number two introduced an innovative bottling mechanism, basically a food-grade five-gallon bucket with a spigot in the bottom. It's a lot easier than siphoning directly from the carboy into the 22-oz bottles (detritus from my taste for big heady beers) we wash and sterilize.

The next logical step is to get a small keg and a CO2 system going, which will eliminate the need for bottling at all and render a drinkable beer much more quickly. As it is, we feed the yeast a final bit of malt/sugar before pouring and capping the 22s, relying on the small amount of in-bottle fermentation to give us carbonation. Some friends were by this week who have the CO2 tank and soda keg thing going on, and it's pretty sweet to carry around your beer on-tap.

It's been gorgeous the past few days, and the warming sun feels good in my blood. Things feel like they're picking up, and I'm looking forward to some St. Paddy's Day revelry tomorrow. Though I'm sure it's not quite the same here as back in Nueva Jorka, I think I can make a day of it anyhow.

Next week I'll be down in the Bay, where Chapter Three in the process of securing nice, lofty office space. We've got 'Sheed coming in from Chi-town and are going to spend three days planning world domination, then nerd it out with the rest of the global crew in Sunnyvale.

Responses

This is something I've been toying with for a while, and I'afraid your post jus tpushed me over the edge. I've just spent about 4 hour researching this. It's easy, but there are so many ways to do it. I have this neat little back room here at the new apartment, and have been dying to put it to this use.

Anyway, why I write... any chance that you guys cultivate your own yeast, if so, can I beg/or buy a sample from you.

I can easily see myself getting obsessed with this.

We're not doing anything special with the yeast that I know of. You and sort of get it fired up in it's own little jar of sugar water for starters, but you can also just throw it into your wort. I think getting your own yeast culture is a little more advanced than we are at this point. We wash the old yeast out of the carboy, maybe feed a little to the dogs, but we don't keep it as far as I know.

I'll have to get the info from Mark though. Maybe a little video interview.

Yeah, the more I look at the starter kits the less I like them. An there's a lot of 'old country knowledge' that can go towards this.

You can renew your yeast strain - so you don't need to keep buying new unless you want a different strain. http://www.homebrew.com/articles/article09090001.shtml uses vials and slants, but I'm pretty sure you could use the same technique with things like steralized jars - think half-pint mason jars like for jam. I've had some good luck re-using goya olive jars for things, and might try those cause they are tall and skinny.

Similarly, you can make your own mash instead of buying the dried malt extract or malt syrup. You can order a 55lb bag for $32 here Thats enough for about 20 gallons, whereas if you stick with the others you spend about $80 for that, and have less control over what you're doing. If you're set up I think you could probably sparge it, and can the extract yourself for later use.

And you can grow your own hops if you're really fanatic.

I'm thinking of starting up with a ingredient kit that comes with the crushed malt and making my own kettle w/ spigot. Anywho, off to order the stuff I think.

It's all a matter of how much you weight the cost of hassle vs the cost of ingredients. The practical outcome for us so far is a nice beer that's about 1/2 market price with a small amount of labor. Increasing the labor could lower the cost to 1/4 or even 1/10th of the market price, but then you're spending a lot of time on your materials. If you enjoy that time spent, it's a win/win, but I personally don't mind spending $2 on yeast to save myself an hour or more of microbiology.

Your mileage, of course, may vary, but I'd suggest looking at what's feasible and really doing a few batches. That's where we're at, and it's a lot of fun.

I, personally, see the actual process of doing all this relaxing and fun. I just tonight debuted my new pickled garlic to friends (they enjoyed). This isn't work to me , but fun, so you hit the nail on the head there.

I also, wasn't suggesting courses of action for you. This is just how I think I might go about it. Homebrewing is like moonshining - its what makes America Great. Amongst ohter things.

I'm just saying that there's nothing like getting a batch of beer made to redouble one's incentive to do it again. It may make sense to take an easier route to get the ball rolling. That's all.

Can attest that Mark + Zia's virgin batch was stellar [and I am a micro brew snob]. Thanks for bringing some when you helped with the Grammy move.

SFO office space!?! Damn...you be moving uptown. Congrats.

Look forward to hearing about your Dell’Arte experience. Seems right up your alley.

An aside… ”nerd it out” link gives me Server not found.

Best info on brewing I've found on the 'net. www.northernbrewer.com. The forums/message boards are a must for any problems or questions you have.

I definitly agree on starting out easy. I haven't switched to all grain yet, because it takes longer and I probably would brew less. It is fun making you own equipment, I made my own wort chiller and kegerator.

It's a fun hobby, good luck if you try it.

Pages