planforrain

joined 1 year ago
[–] planforrain@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 1 year ago

Sherlock Zen is a logic puzzle game that looks like dos shareware from the win 3.1 era.

The previous version was one of the first android games I ever installed, I played through the free levels a couple of times but never bought the unlock.

I thought about it recently when doing a grid logic puzzle in a magazine I bought at the airport and went looking for it. I was sad that it didn't seem to exist anymore and eventually went down a rabbit hole and found the creators website which gave me huge nostalgia. He is also active on mastodon. So I bought the new version finally and have been thoroughly enjoying it!

[–] planforrain@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The joy of homebrewing has a section I think called "betterbrew" that is extract recipes plus specialty grains. That's how I started except through the Austin homebrew mini-mash recipes. You basically steep some blend of grains like crystal and carawheat in a strainer bag for awhile and then add the base malt extract after you have removed them.

I'm not sure my beer has gotten any better since going to all grain but there are more opportunities to make mistakes. So I also think about going back.

You can view the whole recipes on the ahb website by finding the click here for instructions link, like this one:

https://austinhomebrew.com/products/ahs-fall-esb-8c-mini-mash-homebrew-ingredient-kit

[–] planforrain@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I've tried some craft non-alcoholic beers and didn't really like them. Too sweet, grainy in a weird way. It sounds hard to pull off removing the alcohol at a small scale anyway and it seems like a lot of work. I have never heard of the super low abv recipes in this thread, I'll have to look closer.

I think kombucha is going to feel the most like brewing beer in the sense that it requires sanitation, boiling, waiting. If you don't like it then probably a no go but my family is obsessed. I made it a few times but only thought it was better than store bought once, I'd like to get better at.it.

Hop water also sounds really good, I had hopped hard seltzer but the cheap alcohol in hard seltzer always tastes bad to me. Reminds me of making straight table sugar alcohol.

Craft sodas with homemade extracts would also be fun. Low sugar with steeped peach syrup and mint or strawberry basil. I have only tried root beer from extract and keg carbonated lemonade so far.

[–] planforrain@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 1 year ago

I have a bunch of hobbies and most of them are diy focused so top gear without going pro would be like an electronically controlled all stainless RIMS system and a jacket chilled conical fermenter or vintage griswold cast iron and hand made carbon steel knives or those SNES carts I lost when I was a teenager.

The absolute pinnacle of my collection would be enough time to actually use what I already have.

 

A moment of silence for my favorite Christmas beer. Their flagship has always been good to me too.

Does anyone have a favorite holiday recipe? I've only made one and it came out a little too sweet for me:

http://www.greatfermentations.com/downloads/instructions/beerkits/StGambrinusSpicedHolidayAle-AllGrain.pdf

[–] planforrain@lemmy.sdf.org 4 points 1 year ago

I think I'm going to try it for my next batch. Tapwater is over 80f here in the summer and we are always in or on the edge of drought.

I'm going to try fermenting in a corny keg, I don't have a spunding valve yet but I'd like to get one and try pressurized and no oxygen fermentation.

[–] planforrain@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Whatever you like to drink is the stock answer of course but I would pick a pale ale because they are pretty forgiving. Or if you are somewhere hot, like I am, a saison to lean into it.

edited to say as you are trying to show someone new and success is so motivating

if you want to experiment with something more unusual I totally understand, i'd like to take another crack at a gose. the first time I tried it came out undrinkably salty