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on 18-08-2015 04:07 PM
In Queensland, where there are 15 dry Indigenous communities, far north region crime coordinator Geoff Marsh said police were aware that homebrewers using the yeast in Vegemite to produce alcohol had “done it for years”.
If they were "aware" of this then they were misinformed, weren't they, because it has been demonstrated that it is impossible to use the yeast in vegemite to produce alcohol.
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on 18-08-2015 04:15 PM
So QLD crime co-ordinator Geoff Marsh and a QLD Headmaster from one of the schools in the Indigenous community there are lying, then, are they?
No, not lying, but, as I said, clearly misinformed. (or perhaps you prefer to believe that all those who say the yeast in Vegemite cannot be used to produce alcohol are lying)
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18-08-2015 04:35 PM - edited 18-08-2015 04:37 PM
@the_great_she_elephant wrote:In Queensland, where there are 15 dry Indigenous communities, far north region crime coordinator Geoff Marsh said police were aware that homebrewers using the yeast in Vegemite to produce alcohol had “done it for years”.
If they were "aware" of this then they were misinformed, weren't they, because it has been demonstrated that it is impossible to use the yeast in vegemite to produce alcohol.
Well, granted, they probably went with the general assumpion that the yeast was the fermentation agent, which we've since found out it is not. They probably didn't bother to google it lol.
But it's still possible to make beer with vegemite as we've seen in the articles in previous posts. So they were quite right in their assertions in saying that homebrew had been made using vegemite.
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on 18-08-2015 04:37 PM
No, not lying, but, as I said, clearly misinformed. (or perhaps you prefer to believe that all those who say the yeast in Vegemite cannot be used to produce alcohol are lying)
I have no such preference! Why would you insinuate that?
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on 18-08-2015 05:13 PM
@debra9275 wrote:To make alcohol from vegemite. You would have to add yeast and sugar to it.. The same as with fruit etc. you can't make alcohol from just Vegemite on it's own
well...no. That was never stated. lol
Apparently they add orange juice. It contains sugar.
That was said in the first post.
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on 18-08-2015 06:04 PM
But according to all the scientists that doesn't work... You,would also have to add yeast because the yeast in Vegemite is inactive..... That was in most of the articles posted. Including yours didn't you read them?
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on 18-08-2015 07:59 PM
@icyfroth wrote:
@debra9275 wrote:No argument from me 🙂
just quoting some of the facts published in the article you posted. It's worth a read right through I don't dispute anything they've said, it backs up everything else about how difficult or impossible it is to make alcohol out of Vegemite 🙂
yes it backs up that ppl have made home brew from it, and that it can be done.
And that it might be implausible that communites in NT do, but it's quite probable and has been known to happen according to far north region crime coordinator Geoff Marsh and One former school principal with decades of experience teaching in north Queensland Indigenous communities :
In Queensland, where there are 15 dry Indigenous communities, far north region crime coordinator Geoff Marsh said police were aware that homebrewers using the yeast in Vegemite to produce alcohol had “done it for years”.
“But there are a lot of products that contain yeast and it’s all a bit of a beat up. We’re not overly concerned about it at all in our position,” he told Guardian Australia.
One former school principal with decades of experience teaching in north Queensland Indigenous communities told Guardian Australia he first became aware of Vegemite used in brewing alcohol in the 1990s but this had since been eclipsed by an even unlikelier method – orange juice filtered through nappies.
So to call it not true is simply...well...not rue.
Wow. you can make alcohol using Vegemite which has no usable live yeast (apparently you have to add active yeast) and now you can make alcohol by filtering orange juice through nappies. Do you use cloth or paper nappies, I presume (hope) they are unused nappies. I guess the next alcohol making method will be making Scotch Whisky by filtering some strange concoction through a Scotchtsmans sporran
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18-08-2015 08:22 PM - edited 18-08-2015 08:23 PM
@tezza2844 wrote:
@icyfroth wrote:
@debra9275 wrote:No argument from me 🙂
just quoting some of the facts published in the article you posted. It's worth a read right through I don't dispute anything they've said, it backs up everything else about how difficult or impossible it is to make alcohol out of Vegemite 🙂
yes it backs up that ppl have made home brew from it, and that it can be done.
And that it might be implausible that communites in NT do, but it's quite probable and has been known to happen according to far north region crime coordinator Geoff Marsh and One former school principal with decades of experience teaching in north Queensland Indigenous communities :
In Queensland, where there are 15 dry Indigenous communities, far north region crime coordinator Geoff Marsh said police were aware that homebrewers using the yeast in Vegemite to produce alcohol had “done it for years”.
“But there are a lot of products that contain yeast and it’s all a bit of a beat up. We’re not overly concerned about it at all in our position,” he told Guardian Australia.
One former school principal with decades of experience teaching in north Queensland Indigenous communities told Guardian Australia he first became aware of Vegemite used in brewing alcohol in the 1990s but this had since been eclipsed by an even unlikelier method – orange juice filtered through nappies.
So to call it not true is simply...well...not rue.
Wow. you can make alcohol using Vegemite which has no usable live yeast (apparently you have to add active yeast) and now you can make alcohol by filtering orange juice through nappies. Do you use cloth or paper nappies, I presume (hope) they are unused nappies. I guess the next alcohol making method will be making Scotch Whisky by filtering some strange concoction through a Scotchtsmans sporran
Well Tezza that would be a fun experiment. Why don't you try it out?
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on 18-08-2015 08:34 PM
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on 18-08-2015 08:37 PM
@debra9275 wrote:But according to all the scientists that doesn't work... You,would also have to add yeast because the yeast in Vegemite is inactive..... That was in most of the articles posted. Including yours didn't you read them?
well...no you don't have to add yeast because the once the sugar (orange juice) and the organic (vegemite) come together they create their own fermentation process.