Not For Horses said:I was reading some research a year or so ago by a university in Oregon (I think). They were working on a combination of enzymes and yeast strains that can break down wood pulp (cellulose fibers in a lignin matrix) into less complex sugars that could be fermented for fuel ethanol.
I don't remember any mention of beer or the Germans though.
piss take here,but I certainly hope so,I'm a chippy so I get beer from my sawdust.!vittorio said:In ww2 the Nazi found a way to ferment saw dust to make bread, is there a way to make saw dust into beer?
In Australia milk waste is recombined with fresh milk in the form of permeate and sold as $1 "milk" in Coles and Woolies.punkin said:Yep, there are proprietry processes for cellulose and lignen into ethanol, can't say that it would be beer though. Milk waste is popular in NZ for ethanol recovery.
I worked on a dairy farm for a few years while I was at uni. When I got a glass of milk out of the vat I didn't adjust anything.Ducatiboy stu said:Permeate is not a waste product. It is part of the makeup of milk. ALL MILK contains permeate. All they do is adjust the amount in milk.
You should make a wood-based beer with jarrah sawdust, caramelised carrots and quinoa as the base, beetroot juice added in the boil and caramelised date syrup added in primary.Bizier said:I would only consider using wood as a source of beer carbohydrate if my options were horrendously diminished.