Build Your Own BSD Beer Brewing Control System 222
gnuguru writes "Here's a great use for some of your old hardware, a BSD beer brewing kit! Components: one 486, FreeBSD, a temperature logger kit, a relay board, some odds and ends from the useful box, and some time. Summer's just around the corner, so get to work gang!" You'll have to use this recipe, naturally.
Cool (Score:1, Funny)
Now I can make my own beer and spend my money on geek things and not in beer anymore!
Free as in beer (Score:3, Funny)
Yet another misinterpretation Richard Stallman's manifesto [gnu.org]! It must drive him bonkers.
EricJavaScript is not Java [ericgiguere.com]
Re:Cool (Score:2)
Actually, by the time you factor in the energy costs associated with making your own beer - buying from the store is actually cheaper.
Not always better, but definitely less expensive.
Re:Cool (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe it takes a lot of energy to brew a lager, but not an ale. I like ales better anyway...
-matthew
Re:Cool (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Cool (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Cool (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Cool (Score:2)
As for distillation, it's illegal in Australia also (although I've never heard of anyone getting busted unless they were trying to sell it), but it's apparently legal in New Zealand. The home-brew shops here all sell reflux stills for extracting *cough* "essential oils". They also provide, just to satisfy a quite natural intellectual cu
Re:Cool (Score:2)
I guess that putting a working still together would be pretty satisfying though.
Re:Cool (Score:2)
I believe the parts of the distillate you throw out are the first cup (methanol) and the last cup (fusel oils), btw. They aren't a problem when they're in your beer, but they'll kill you once you've distilled them.
Re:Cool (Score:2)
Oh sure... but don't EVER post any woes to a geek-oriented site about exchanging labor for quality in the end result
By your argument I must be insane. I want to grow my own wheat, barley, corn and hops to use for making my own lagers.
w00h00!!
Alternative ideas for this system... (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder how feasable it would be to set one of these up to regulate the water temperature in your shower. Set it for something warm and cozy, and it will run at that temperature until the hot water starts to decline, sound a warning, and maintain as high a temperature as possible following that, with a gradual return to the desired temperature if the supply of hot water returns to normal...
A simple thermostat isn't good enough... (Score:5, Informative)
By controlling the temperature profile during fermentation it is possible to radically change the "taste" of the product. That is why the Australian / South African wine growers can churn out a reasonably good product cheaply (as opposed to the French) as they use large temperature controlled stainless steel vats with scorched oak chips rather than small wooden casks.
Zombie Engineer
Re:A simple thermostat isn't good enough... (Score:3, Informative)
For your information, in France as elsewhere, the fermentation phase of wine brewing is done in large containers (inox or wood or cement vats).
The wine is only transferred to casks when the fermentation is done.
The period while the wine stays in casks is called elevage (can't remember the english term), and aims at refining the wine taste before bottling (this can last up to a few years). Not all wines go through a cask elevage.
There are a few cases of fermentation in casks, but they are truely the exce
Re:Alternative ideas for this system... (Score:3, Insightful)
There's something more useful or important than beer?
Re:Alternative ideas for this system... (Score:2, Insightful)
of for decades. It requires much faster responses than beer brewing,
and to do it right you need to understand the differential pressures
of the hot and cold water. It's a lot simpler to buy a thermostatic
valve.
Greg
Re:Alternative ideas for this system... (Score:2)
A good quality thermostatic valve (up to $500) also requires a device called a "valve rough" (couple of hundred), plumber's services (couple of hundred), provided you have the tile or whatever is there stripped off to solder/braze the water pipes, plus tile installation (can be bloody, up to three-five hundred).
Ask me how I know...
Though must say that it works perfectly. The only downside is that the hot water ends really abruptly when the hot water tank goes
Re:Alternative ideas for this system... (Score:2)
BSD (Score:5, Funny)
Re:BSD (Score:2)
Leading to the BSoD
Re:BSD (Score:2)
Advert Jingle!!! (Score:2)
Do Bud and Miller have too little taste for you?
Does Coors taste too commercialized and spare?
Are all the microbreweries too much for you?
Do trips down the beer aisle lead to despair?
Well there's no need to complain.
We'll eliminate your pain.
We can lupulize your brain, you'll feel just FINE!
Buy a BSD... Brewin' machine!
Does your own homebrew's quality just get you down?
Is life without some good hooch just a drag?
Re:Advert Jingle!!! (Score:2)
It fits. It works with theme, and even preserves the character of the origninal S&G lyrics.
I'm done now.
Accessories? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Accessories? (Score:2)
This is true of virtually all ales that are worth drinking, and a rather high percentage of quality lagers (as in "bottom-fermented beers", not meant in the "fizzy and yellow" sense) as well.
Re:Accessories? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Accessories? (Score:2)
Summer? (Score:4, Funny)
Being the 15th of January, it is exactly half way through Melbourne's 3 month summer season now. You self centered US folk :p
Re:Summer? (Score:2)
Re:Summer? (Score:2)
Re:Summer? (Score:2)
and damn snobs! you can brew without fancy computers!
Re:Summer? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Summer? (Score:2)
Re:Summer? (Score:2)
3 Months? Melbourne has all four seasons in a day, then it rains for the rest of the year...
You're better off migrating to one of the more sensible parts of Australia where we experience climate rather than weather.
Re:Summer? (Score:3, Interesting)
This is one reason the Czechs brew their Pilsner before it gets too hot, and then age it in cool cellars
Re:Summer? (Score:2)
Hey... (Score:2, Funny)
Oh, wait...
Re:Hey... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh wait...
Re:Hey... (Score:2)
Oh wait...
Re:Hey... (Score:2)
Free, as in? (Score:5, Funny)
GPL = Gnu Public Lager (Score:2)
Now we will need an annual BSD brew-hike. http://www.lbw2000.eu.org/ [eu.org]
An aussie who got his priorities right.... (Score:1)
Zombie Engineer
Let me see if I've got this straight.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Let me see if I've got this straight.... (Score:2)
Great for work (Score:4, Funny)
Open Source Beer? (Score:3, Funny)
Coincidence? (Score:3, Funny)
If anyone is interested in reading the recipe for the beer I'm making, look here [nuxx.net].
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
-matthew
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
I'm doing some minor temp control for this ale... The person I got the recipe from specified 70F-75F and... Well... that's warmer than I keep my house in the winter. So I'm doing the fermenta
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
My home is colder than 70F as well. I also kept the fermenter in the bathroom next to a radiator. Seems to have worked well. My next beer is a nice dark Porter. Although I suspect that I will have a much smaller audience for that one.
-matthew
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
Re:Coincidence? (Score:3, Funny)
Basically, the BSD licence is similar to PHK's (another FreeBSD developer) Beer-Ware Licence [freebsd.org]
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
Toldja FreeBSD wasn't dead!!!... (Score:5, Insightful)
BSD eh? (Score:3, Funny)
Should have known.
A distro dedicated to beer...how wonderful.
So when will we see Windows XP "Hard Lemonade" Edition?
Re:BSD eh? (Score:2)
So will this be free? (Score:3, Funny)
hmm. beeer. (Score:2)
hmm. beer.
i for one, welcome my new beerbrewing overlord. because at my place, the beer brews me.
wait a sec
Don't slashdot the telnet server (Score:2)
Let's not nuke the guy's interactive telnet temp server, OK?
This is not a "Brewing" device, it is a Fermenter (Score:2)
Of course you might as well pony up the dough for a real microbrewery at that point, but if we are going to d
Can I use something similar for coffee roasting? (Score:2)
Some coffee geeks even modify espresso machines & coffee roasters with a PID (a type of temperature controller). This kind of data logger would be very useful. There are thermometers that do this, but they are expensive.
Oh and btw, coffee made from beans roast
Re:Can I use something similar for coffee roasting (Score:2)
Hell, any *real* coffee shop has roasted everything in inventory in the last week.
Now, walking into the office with a bag of beans that are still warm from the roaster. *That's* a wonderful thing.
how about a networked hydrometer/refractometer (Score:2)
Interesting, I'm glad someone has done this... (Score:2)
I've been trying to design a computer controlled distiller. The worst part is trying to come up with the temperature sensors and the interface.
The sensors have to be able to go a bit over 100C, and I'm still not sure how to interface them with the PC. Too many temperature interfaces will only accept one or two probes.
Re:Interesting, I'm glad someone has done this... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting, I'm glad someone has done this... (Score:2)
I was poking around and found some sensors that are exactly what I need. Then I found Crystalfontz uses them for their PC temp sensors!
It's not just the IC probe, it's already assembled into a harness which can daisy chain, and they sell the extra sensors here: http://www.crystalfontz.com/cgi-bin/pricing.pl?pr
It's the second from the bottom.
That's an awful lot of work... (Score:2)
Re:That's an awful lot of work... (Score:2)
His top rate==US$180/hr. What a shame (Score:2)
Yet as a fairly green patent agent, I was hired out at about 100/hr. And almost ANY and EVERY lawyer in America charges somewhere between $US125-250/hr. Any schmoe law
Re:His top rate==US$180/hr. What a shame (Score:2)
Dignity over profit, I say.
Mixing caffeine with beer is a bad idea... (Score:2)
If you drink, just drink alcohol with good ole carbs (like normal beer). Avoid drinks like Rum+Coke (alcohol+caffeine) because they tend to make you a "mean drunk".
Vodka and Tonic = ok
Jack and Coke = recipe for bad news
Captain [Morgan] and Coke = bad news
Liquor and Red Bull = very bad news
Roy Rogers = ok
Beer = ok
Wine = ok
etc...
Re:Mixing caffeine with beer is a bad idea... (Score:2)
a combination of caffeinated mixers and alcohol is what it is... a tasty cockail.
cheers.
Re:Mixing caffeine with beer is a bad idea... (Score:2)
Re:Mixing caffeine with beer is a bad idea... (Score:2)
(Yes, it's a vague Simpsons reference)
Netcraft Confirms BSD (Score:2)
Tooting my own horn (Score:4, Interesting)
p.s. That last link of the story blurb goes to some folks who claim to have brewed the world's first Open Source beer. Balderdash! They're greenhorn newbies when it comes to Open Source beers and ales! My brewing software and recipes have been Open Source for years prior to their arrival. Heck, they even predate the license they use! So get the Original(tm) Open Source Beer and get QBrew!
p.p.s. Okay, I'm done blowing my own horn now. I won't do this again until the next beer/brewing story appears on Slashdot...
Fundamentally flawed (Score:2, Informative)
For a simpler (albeit less sexy/techie) solution check here [tinyurl.com]
Works fine for me, but only during warm temps, since it only turns the fridge off/on, and doesn't control a heat source.
And as for "open source" beer, there are recipes aplenty freely available on the 'net (e.g., HBD [hbd.org]). All you need is a couple buckets with spigots, an
Re:Fundamentally flawed (Score:2)
You should only go high tech when you have to. Why have a computer cont
This sounds like an interesting little hack... (Score:2)
RIMS (Score:3, Interesting)
To see a truly automated brewing system, you need a RIMS [mastermolding.com] system, which are pretty cool.
Beer'd (Score:2)
Because both BSD and Beer require a big bushy beard. The belly is self-sustaining.
Re:Slashdot Sucks Worse Everyday (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How long until... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Beer recipe English version anyone? (Score:2)
Re:Beer recipe English version anyone? (Score:2)
After its done working (about 2 weeks), siphon the beer off and put it into bottles. Add about 1/4 teaspoon of sugar per bottle. Cap them up and wait a couple more weeks. Chill and serve.
By using differ
Re:Beer recipe English version anyone? (Score:2)
Too Expensive (Score:2)
Re:Too Expensive (Score:2)
Re:Too Expensive (Score:2)
umm...he's in Australia (Score:2)
Re:About Time !!! (Score:2)
That would be a brewery.
Re:YOu know what goes great wtih beer (Score:2)
Open Source computing (mostly), beer, and the Steelers.
Re:Not the first open source beer recipe (Score:2)
Re:When all you have is a hammer... (Score:2)