Cheshire Cat
Landlord.
I keep repeating but go to your local pub and ask for some empties as they get recycled and not returned. Then wash and remove the labels.
I replaced all the rubber seals on the Grolsch bottles I have with silicone.Just buy silicone mat and make them yourself as it's cheaper than buying caps
ITo combine the flip-top aspect as well as getting ones full of beer, plus the advantage of a crate to store them in you could look here https://www.my-food-online.net/drinks/beers/boxes?p=1
The beer is cheap, the postage is about the same as the beer but it doesn't work out wildly expensive especially if you were going to pay for flip-tops and/or a crate anyway.
Also, the Winterbok is lovely at this time of year
Ive just found a source for 330ml fliptops which I’m really pleased about. I’m a small woman - 330ml is just right for me, whereas 500ml is almost a pint but not enough to share - OK if that’s all I’m doing but makes me a bit sleepy and disinclined to get anything else done.I have about 4 boxes of "make your own" flip top bottles, and all the rest are Wychwood brown glass crown cap. They have standardised on one bottle throughout their range so I don't mind drinking their beer first. Must be used with a bench capper though.
All are 500ml which fills a pint glass well. Don't see the point in the 330ml bottles for homebrew.
I think the secret is to find a beer that you like in a bottle you want to keep. Then drink a lot of it.
It is still good to have a few pet bottles just to check carbonation.
I prefer 330's now it means I can have more variety in a session, and I can post 2 or 3 and it still comes in under the small post office parcel size/weight. Only downside is more bottling than if using 500/660'sI
Ive just found a source for 330ml fliptops which I’m really pleased about. I’m a small woman - 330ml is just right for me, whereas 500ml is almost a pint but not enough to share - OK if that’s all I’m doing but makes me a bit sleepy and disinclined to get anything else done.
Still don't understand why people pay for bottles.
They are (usually) free from most local pubs or eateries, just ask them if you can have a dig through their bottle bin, take them home, clean them up.
All mine came from these places, they were free and i must have around 400+ bottles, green ones, clear ones, brown ones.
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