I knew it wouldn't be long, the old 'cold beer' thread!- There's some top philosophers and scientists been holding their breath for this one.
After years of drinking warm beer, I've decided I might as well get used to it, because whatever method that's tried to cool them, the beers always end up warm. It's like lemmy off a cliff, and rats up drainpipes, sort of inevitable. Fridges, gennies, cold baths, shallow trays of water, wet tea towel competitions, dry ice, stuffed up a corpses bottom, they've all been tried. Well maybe not the last one, but I'm not holding out much hope for that either.
I think dry ice on site could be a winner, but wtf are we going to get dry ice? -it's tough enough getting wet ice.
Salt in the water is a bit off-track if you ask me. Assuming that the phenomenon we're after here is the one known as 'freezing point depression', then what you really need to do is freeze salt water, - that way when it melts it'll be wetter and colder. Of course there's also the phenomenon known as 'f*****g freezing depression', and I had that two years ago on Tuesday night on MB when the temperature seemed to plummet in the night and had my teeth playing like castanets.
I reckon half the problem is one of volume, there's not enough of it I reckon. Everyone, or mostly everyone (sorry Paddy...) is trying to cool small amounts, and what's needed is a large amount, the larger the better, - who could disagree with that? Maybe a wheely bin filled with as much ice and water as posssible, and members of the 'Cold Beer Club' could then dip in. The lucky ones could go in head first and emerge like Harry Houdini only with Peter Schmeichels nose.
So there you go, we need a club. And some beer. Oh god, I need some beer...
H