It's that time of year again. The time when beer and spirits makers bundle their product with a glass in which to drink said alcohol. It's a beautiful thing though because different beers are best drank in different glasses and how is the common man supposed to know which glass to use in Obama's America? Anyway, today I purchased one of these bad boys. Here it is:
Samuel Smith's Oatmeal Stout is one of the best beers in the world. It's true. This package was $11.97 for the three beers, a glass, two coasters, and a beer guide (not pictured) which is simply a map of different beers available from this capitalist. At $4-$5 per bottle normal price this was already a fine deal, but upon unpacking I discovered that the glass seems to be aggressively nucleated. Like on steroids.
Is this what I have been looking for for so long? I hope to enjoy a nucleated brew in this soon. I'll report back with the results...
Saturday, November 21, 2015
Monday, November 16, 2015
Tomato Seed Saving Experiment
This will be an ongoing experiment. I bought some Kumato tomatoes from the store and decided to try to save some seeds. According to research I've done online, this is a terrible idea because this is a hybrid tomato produced by Syngenta. They only sell it to commercial farmers. Since its a hybrid, I guess, the seeds are not guaranteed to grow true to their parent. This means it could take multiple years and multiple generations to isolate a strain of tomato that tastes good. Well, I decided to throw caution into the wind and get busy experimenting.
Saving tomato seeds seems pretty straight forward actually. The first step is to cut your best tomato in half (you want to carry on the properties of your best tomatoes, so you save the best) and scoop out the seeds. Place the seeds in an open container out of sunlight for a few days. This allows the seeds to get covered in mold and is called fermentation. Return to the seeds and scrape the top layer of mold off. Then rinse the seeds until clean with water. The next step is to dry the seeds. Accomplish this by letting them sit out on a paper plate for several days. Once sufficiently dried, place them in a container for storage until the next tomato growing season.
Please enjoy the following step by step photo documentation:
Tomato, halved
Innards removed and placed in container
Seeds, chillin'
Seeds covered in Saran Wrap with air holes, placed in the basement
Update NĂºmero Uno
So I definitely forgot about this for a number of days. Here are the moldy tomato seed pics:
Gross
Then I rinsed them with cold water in the faucet. Thankfully I own a perfect tomato seed strainer somehow:
Final update:
After a few days, once the seeds were sufficiently dried out, I moved them to ziplock bags for storage.
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