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Thor 08-03-2001 08:00 PM

New German Pistol Forums
 
Not only do we have the Luger forum, but two new other forums have been started by our generous sponser John Dunkle. Talking to Dok, I noticed that we have NOT made the PP/PPK forum known to a lot of you....OOPS! The link for it is: http://boards.rennlist.com/cgi-bin/pp-k/pp-k.pl

and the P.38 Forum is http://www.p38forum.com Both are excellent. Stop in, leave a profile and enjoy the discussions. Bis Spaeter! BTW, I like Warsteiner,St Pauli Girl and especially Spaten Oktoberfest! ~Thor~




Matt 08-03-2001 08:52 PM

Sehr gut biere, Thor!
 
I like those plus Paulaner, Becks, Augustiner, Hacker Pschor, Bitburger and any other German brew. Have you had Paulaner Salvator?




Hannah 08-03-2001 08:53 PM

Re: Sehr gut biere, Thor!
 
You have picked my favorite beers!

Beer is bread, but only allowed once a week




Dok 08-03-2001 09:02 PM

Ahhh, but the best kept secret is...
 
Mosel wine.




Thor 08-03-2001 09:23 PM

Re: Ahhh, but the best kept secret is...
 
Or Liebfraumilch!




Dok 08-03-2001 11:49 PM

Re: Ahhh, but the best kept secret is...
 
Which... if I'm not mistaken... *is* a Mosel!




Thor 08-04-2001 12:05 AM

Re: My favorite WHINE!!!!!
 
I think you is right!




Hannah 08-04-2001 02:01 PM

Re: Ahhh, but the best kept secret is...
 
Try Sp�€tlese also.....a Rhine wine made from the last pickings of the season......yummy




H�„kan Spuhr 08-05-2001 05:56 PM

Gammeldansk.........
 
The everlasting favourite is Gammeldansk.

Give it a try, but don't expect it to taste good the first time.

It's a snaps by the way.


Regards H�„kan




Ad 08-06-2001 04:32 AM

Hakan, how about aquavit?
 
In 1954, I had lunch outside Copenhagen with the directors of the Danish affiliate of a company my father worked for. They served it as an aperetif and said to drink it "neat" (in one quick swallow) rather than sipping it. It burned going down; but later left a wonderful warm glow in the pit of my stomach. A wonderful Scandinavian custom!!




Luke 08-06-2001 07:53 AM

Re: Ahhh, but the best kept secret is...
 
Especially like Piesporter Sp�€tlese, a little sweeter.




ViggoG 08-06-2001 11:27 PM

Re: :D What no "MEADE" Disgraceful
Thor 08-06-2001 11:51 PM

Re: :D What no "MEADE" Disgraceful
H�„kan Spuhr 08-07-2001 12:01 AM

Re: :D What no "MEADE" Disgraceful
Thor 08-07-2001 12:15 AM

Re: "MEADE".....a fun adventure !!
 
I helped a guy make some from Peaches, Honey, water, Champange yeast (must be strong yeast no live in hi alcohol content) He didnt know to call it PEED or MEEACH, I talked him into MEEACH! Fermented much like wine, but intial stage of fermentation is VIOLENT due to honey being so damn fermentable. Racked a couple of times, took a year under airlock to age, smooth and addicting! You can make it much like you would wine, but the CHAMPANGE yeast is the only one to use, beer, or wine yeast will be a failure! ~Thor~




Hannah 08-07-2001 01:23 AM

Mead is for special occasions, like Winter Solstice
 

ViggoG 08-07-2001 02:05 AM

Re: "MEADE".....off thread
 
I remember as a child , my maternal grandfather,(Einar Kanneworff (A Dane by birth), preferred fresh mead , and he kept it in a keg behind the pot belly stove . I had a blue butt on several occasions for being caught wet nosed in the gourd dipper .

I never did get any idea as to what his formula for that liquid nitro was , Grandpa died when I was ten .

However his Meade seemed to contain much of the same as you describe could any of you pass on to me the full receipe for this old nordic drink . I would much appreciate .


ViggoG viggogdereng@juno.com>




Jon 08-07-2001 10:59 AM

Re: can we have the secert recipe
 
greeting from new valahla,we could alway post thr recipe on technical informaton ..what go better with our lugers than a goblet of meade. look foward to the recipe.the thing you learn at luger forum.com. what a great place . jon


p.s if the medae doesn't taste good we can always use it for bore cleaner..does it get the jacket fowling out???




Dok 08-09-2001 01:57 PM

OT - Hrolf Arnorson's Mead Recipe
 
Ingredients: (for 1 gallon)


Modern


4lb Honey

10 ml Beer Yeast

5 ml Yeast Nutrient

5 ml Citric Acid

Water

15 ml fresh cold tea

Spices (various)


Medieval


4lb Honey

10 ml Beer Yeast

A bit more time in the first fermentation

Juice of 1/4 lemaon

Water

About 10 grape skins

Spices (various)


Dissolve the honey in three pints of water in a large pan, using some of this water to rinse out the honey jars. Bring to the boil using any spices that you want to add. Be very careful as dissolved honey boils over the top of a pan even quicker than milk does. Pour this into a fermentation vessel and add enough cold water to take the volume to seven and one half pints. Wait until this has cooled to about blood heat (37-39Ă?ÂșC) and then add the citric acid, the cold tea, and the yeast nutrient to the vessel. Stir well and then allow to settle. Dissolve the yeast in 1/2 pint of water and stir into the vessel. Close the vessel and leave for the first fermentation. This should take about two weeks or three if you are not using yeast nutrient.


At the end of the first fermentation, rack into a jar under airlock and leave at room temperature for at least 12 weeks or until you remember about it. At this point, you will probably want to fine the stuff. I normally use isinglass wine finings. After it has fined, rack into bottles and it will be ready to drink.




ViggoG 08-09-2001 03:05 PM

Re: OT - Hrolf Arnorson's Mead Recipe
 
Thanks Dok ;

Now has anyone the Recipe for the variety that contained chunks of fruit (oranges or tangerines , apples , peaches , etc .

ViggoG viggogdereng@juno.com>




Herb Fredricksen 08-10-2001 03:40 AM

Re: "MEADE".....a fun adventure !!
 
Add Asbach Uralt to the list of great drinks. I've done Bavarian and Austrian and Scandinavian dance all my life. Lots of beer drinking, shoe slapping, rough housing, singing, "juchzen" (yodeling/crowing at the moon) and all the foolishness that goes with youth at any age. Several memorable parties (as best I can remember them) involved, in addition to biersteins used in creative ways, a drink called a "lantern." A large clear pilsener class or Stiefel (boot shaped glass) of pale lager with a lightweight schnapps glass filled with Asbach floating in the middle. It looked like a candle or lantern when held up to a light. The quest was to drink the Asbach by tipping the glass/boot to your lips while trying to miss the bier. As I recall it didn't work and it didn't matter. Everything after that is a little fuzzy, but memorable, to the best of my memory.


Meanwhile another Luger is on my wish list, one I hope will fit unobtrusively in at least one pair of my Lederhosen. A few more beers and Asbachs and I won't fit in them.


Prosit, Herb Fredricksen, Schuhplattler, Tanzmeister, usw.




Dok 08-13-2001 11:03 AM

Great Post Herb, can see it now :) (EOM)
 

Bob Spitzer 08-15-2001 01:26 PM

Re: Sehr gut biere, Thor!
 
Hallo, have I missed something. Has no one a taste for a good Weissbier? Bob SP.




Matt 08-15-2001 09:00 PM

Re: Sehr gut biere, Thor!
 
Ja, Bob Sp., Paulaner Hefeweizen ist sehr gut! I drank plenty of it when I was in Munich. It's the only German bier my wife likes.




Bob Spitzer 08-15-2001 10:12 PM

Re: Sehr gut biere, Thor!
 
Thor, when we're over in Germany, Uncle Willi and I consume Erdlinger Weizen in joyfull and healthy amounts. Your wife apparently has great taste in her men and bier, Prosit->!





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