Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Ancient Beer. Mmmm....beeeer....

From discovery.com

Ancient Yeast Reborn in Modern Beer
Eric Bland, Discovery News

Sept. 23, 2008 -- Trapped inside a Lebanese weevil covered in ancient Burmese amber, a tiny colony of bacteria and yeast has lain dormant for up to 45 million years. A decade ago Raul Cano, now a scientist at the California Polytechnic State University, drilled a tiny hole into the amber and extracted more than 2,000 different kinds of microscopic creatures.

Activating the ancient yeast, Cano now brews barrels (not bottles) of pale ale and German wheat beer through the Fossil Fuels Brewing Company.

"You can always buy brewing yeast, and your product will be based on the brewmaster's recipes," said Cano. "Our yeast has a double angle: We have yeast no one else has and our own beer recipes."

The beer has received good reviews at the Russian River Beer Festival and from other reviewers. The Oakland Tribune beer critic, William Brand, says the beer has "a wierd spiciness at the finish," and The Washington Post said the beer was "smooth and spicy."

Part of that taste comes from the yeast's unique metabolism. "The ancient yeast is restricted to a narrow band of carbohydrates, unlike more modern yeasts, which can consume just about any kind of sugar," said Cano.

Eventually the yeast will likely evolve the ability to eat other sugars, which could change the taste of the beer. Cano plans to keep a batch of the original yeast to keep the beer true to form.

If this has a ring of deju-vu, it could be because Cano's amber-drilling technique is the same one popularized in the movie Jurassic Park, where scientists extracted ancient dinosaur DNA from the bellies of blood-sucking insects trapped in fossilized tree sap.

Cano's original goal was to find ancient microscopic creatures that might have some kind of medical value, particularly pharmaceutical drugs.

While that particular avenue of research didn't yield significant results, the larger question of how microscopic creatures survived for millions of years could help scientists understand certain diseases, said Charles Greenblatt, a scientist at Hebrew University in Jerusalem who studies ancient bacteria.

"We've got cases of guys who contracted [tuberculosis] during World War II and lived with it for 60, 70 years," said Greenblatt. "Then suddenly they get another disease, the TB wakes up from its dormancy and kills them."

Inducing dormancy could be a new way to fight disease and infection, said Greenblatt. Instead of outright killing infectious creatures, doctors could instead put them to sleep. The infection would still be present in the patient's body, but it wouldn't hurt the patient.

Neither Cano nor Greenblatt can say what the upper limit for hibernating yeast or bacteria is; it could be hundreds of million years. But while other scientists work on that, Cano plans to spend his time tossing back a few cold ones, and hoping others will too.

"We think that people will drink one beer out of curiosity," said Cano. "But if the beer doesn't taste good no one will drink a second."

Monday, September 15, 2008

PSA

Public Service Announcement:

Do not eat wasabi-covered peas and then scratch the inside of your nose.

Quite hilarious for those watching, not so much fun for those trying to inhale.

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

Brady out?

What a shame! Tom Brady is most likely out for the whole season before the guy gets more than 10 minutes under his belt. What the heck!!! Some call it an accident, some are calling it a dirty tackle.

Now yes, I like the Patriots. (Honestly my 'true' team is the Raiders but we all know they suck) This whole incident brings to light something I have been saying for a few years...don't put all your eggs in one basket. Will the team be able to go on as a "team", performing at the same level, without one player?

We shall see. Personally I think they will play well but nowhere near the top of their game. Why? I think they concentrated too much on only a few players' development. We'll see, we'll see...

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Replay in baseball

So apparently there is now instant replay in baseball.


"Like everything else in life, there are times that you have to make an adjustment," baseball commissioner Bud Selig said following Tuesday's announcement. "My opposition to unlimited instant replay is still very much in play. I really think that the game has prospered for well over a century now doing things the way we did it."


Well it is true that with all the odd baseball parks around as of late that the "home run" call has been harder and harder for the officiating crews to make. Last month there were several incidents where it was plainly obvious that the umps made the wrong call. In baseball, where you work hard to get one point at a time, I can certainly see that one 'little mistake' can affect the outcome of the entire game.

I don't know if I whole heartedly agree with the whole thing. Right now they are saying that instant replay is only being used for 'boundary calls.' Ok, that I can deal with. You and I know it's only a matter of time before they start using it for calling tag-outs, balls, and strikes. I certainly disagree with that application. The 'human factor' is what makes baseball so appealing!

The orioles manager agrees with my particular point of view:

"I find it very strange that, with 30 games to go in the season, that they would start it now. I find that very peculiar. If they wanted it so bad, what took them so long to get it going and why wait until this particular point in time?"

Here's the stupid part. If the crew chief ump think that a call needs to be challenged, he and all the other umpires leave the field to go to a special booth behind the dugouts. A call is made to MLB headquarters in New York, where a retired ump will review the video and play it back to the crew chief. The crew chief has the final call and will only overturn the original call if there is clear evidence.

If there is any objection from coaches/team members about an overturned call they will instantly be ejected.

I still say perhaps they should fix the PARKS and make boundary markers more conspicuous and leave the calls up to humans...