Brew Dad
Well-Known Member
And for those who have dogs, spent grains make excellent dog biscuits. Loads of simple recipes on the interwebs....
Compost your grain
...
And for those who have dogs, spent grains make excellent dog biscuits. Loads of simple recipes on the interwebs....
Compost your grain
...
I make bread from some of mine (recipe: https://www.thehomebrewforum.co.uk/threads/bread-from-spent-grains.82180/), but watch out for the husks.And for those who have dogs, spent grains make excellent dog biscuits. Loads of simple recipes on the interwebs.
Yeah that's another one, I save some for cleaning but you get more than 5 times enough. I've considered the no chill method, but that means no cold break. The Australians seem to make it work though.
I ordered a couple of custom grain kits (to make brewing for my mate’s Stag a bit easier) back in March and they both came in paper bags. In April I ordered various amounts of grain and all bar the 15kg (which was in a plastic liner gain sack) came in plastic bags.I tried to do this, GEB sell 10kgs of grain in sacks but they are plastic lined. Those sacks can be used for growing potatoes or maybe other veg. For storing root veg you need to cut the plastic lining out. GEB did say they are trying to use paper bags but that seems to not have materialised.
One option is to reuse plastic bags. Good for keeping sandwiches in to take to work. Alternatively try and offset, cut down on meat.
Yeuk. I had some of that once at a CAMRA meeting. Everyone was going for it and it looked and tasted like shiite. Always been supsicious of CAMRA since then.
It doesn’t look very appetising
Hopefully they'll get back to it. I know vegware does a range of "plastics" but they're quite expensive.I ordered a couple of custom grain kits (to make brewing for my mate’s Stag a bit easier) back in March and they both came in paper bags. In April I ordered various amounts of grain and all bar the 15kg (which was in a plastic liner gain sack) came in plastic bags.
I know the seal on the bottom of the paper bags on the grain kits wasn’t very good so I wonder if they’ve gone back to plastic while they figure out how to seal the paper bags better.
You are clearly more of an optimist than I am when it comes to changing the behaviour of the average 'man on the street'. My views are based on 50 years of life observation as an adult. For example look around you and see how people respond when they are told that certain things are bad for their health like eating too much fat and sugar, with the possibility of heart disease, diabetes etc. And that's at a personal level easily remedied if you value your life, not a long term issue that may be decades away before it hits us hard and at the present time very much at arm's length from one's daily existence.Listen man, I do agree with you. But if even a few more of those 99,999 thought a bit more about what they were doing, then maybe it could become 88,888? I'm not staunchly into zero plastic, I know it is useful sometimes, but it's nice to try to reduce as well, vote with our wallets. I wasn't trying to start a war of ideals here, just wondered if anyone had any ideas.
I get that some people will never change, but that's no reason not to change your own habits, even ones 50 years in the making. "Nobody else is doing it, so why should I?" isn't a good enough excuse any more. Will buying your carrots loose rather than in the plastic bag save the world or undo damage that has already been done? Obviously not. But there has definitely been a shift in people's behavior and shopping habits and I think that supermarkets and businesses are looking at their bottom lines and seeing a shift towards plastic free products.You are clearly more of an optimist than I am when it comes to changing the behaviour of the average 'man on the street'. My views are based on 50 years of life observation as an adult. For example look around you and see how people respond when they are told that certain things are bad for their health like eating too much fat and sugar, with the possibility of heart disease, diabetes etc. And that's at a personal level easily remedied if you value your life, not a long term issue that may be decades away before it hits us hard and at the present time very much at arm's length from one's daily existence.
You can get a reusable plastic tub to go and collect your grain, but that tub will end up in the bin eventually and probably contains the same amount of plastic waste as 1,000 plastic bags used to package the grain as-is.
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