Carbonator Recipes


My carbonator arrived earlier this week and It’s been a flurry of activity in the kitchen carbonating all sorts of things.  
 
 

Kick the Bottle: Make Your Own Soda Flavors

Easy, fun, and all-growed-up, these 11 syrup recipes – like watermelon mint, dark & stormy, and Mexican root beer – are a gas

by Adam Erace  August 8, 2011

http://www.gilttaste.com/stories/1151-kick-the-bottle-make-your-own-soda-flavors

 

Jerks have never been so popular. Soda jerks, that is. Americans are rediscovering a lust for fizzes with a fervor not seen since the turn of the 19th century. Sales of the Sodastream, the home water carbonator, were up nearly 300 percent last year. My fiancé bought me one for my birthday, and I haven’t stopped jerking since. She understands.
Making soda at home is cheaper and I daresay healthier than opening a gas station cooler, since the average amateur pop artist isn’t sweetening their drinks with buckets of high fructose corn syrup. But here’s the real reason it’s better: you get to make up amazing flavors, especially if you use great produce. There are few nobler deaths for overripe fruit.
Start with your basic simple syrup recipe: an even ratio of sugar to water. Two cups of each will make about a pint of syrup, enough to flavor about four liters of soda, depending on how sweet you like it. Add half a teaspoon of tartaric or citric acid, a natural preservative available online or at home-brew shops. The acid will bring balance, clarity and a Sour Patch tang to these sweet syrups, and more importantly, help them keep in the fridge up to a few months, a trick I learned from Katie Loeb, bartender and cordial tinkerer at the Oyster House in my hometown of Philadelphia.
Bring the water, sugar and acid to a boil with your flavoring agents, then simmer 15-20 minutes and cool completely. Herb or spice syrups like mint, chamomile and cinnamon only need to be strained, preferably through a cheesecloth-lined sieve. Ditto for syrups involving juicy berries and cherries; over the heat, these fruits will bleed as willingly as Fangtasia patrons, so there’s no need to puree. A blender makes quick work of the less acquiescent fruits: melons, pineapple, pitted peaches and plums, apples and pears, etc. After they’ve cooked and cooled, puree these syrups on high for a silky consistency. Use the syrups immediately in soda water, and keep the leftovers in the fridge. It’s that easy.
Starting with this basic recipe, you can customize your syrups with anything in the garden and pantry. Cardamom? Jasmine tea? That bergamot bush you planted and now have no idea what to do with? It all plays. The beauty of homemade soda syrups is that they’re very forgiving. You almost can’t mess them up. But before you get simmering, just keep these tips in mind:
  • While straight herbal or spice syrups require no adjustment of the 2+2+½ formula, fruit ones do. Remove half a cup of water for fruit syrups that don’t need pureeing and a full cup for syrups ones that do.
  •  If you’re using citrus juices, add them separately after the syrup has cooled.
  • Adjust the sugar based on the natural sweetness of fruit.
But really the best advice is to experiment and have a spoon handy. At-home soda auteurs should apply the same wisdom honored by the best chefs: Taste as you go.
A bunch of recipes to get you started
Start with the base syrup recipe of 2 cups water + 2 cups sugar + ½ teaspoon tartaric acid (adjusted to the above guidelines), then add:
  • Watermelon Mint = 1 bunch mint + 2 cups cubed seedless watermelon + peeled zest of 1 lime + pinch chili powder
In steamy Bangkok, street vendors sell cellophane bags of cut-up fruit dusted in chili and lime. This syrup echoes those flavors and stars summer’s blushing belle, watermelon.
  • Dark & Stormy = 1 cup of fresh ginger, cut into ½-inch pieces + ¼ cup dark rum + peeled zest of 1 lime + juice of 1 lime
One of the earth’s great cocktails distilled into a virgin syrup. (The simmering boils off the rum’s alcohol.) Try replacing a cup of sugar with a cup blackstrap molasses for a richer result.
  • Honey Chamomile = 3 chamomile teabags (or 1 bunch fresh chamomile) + peeled zest of 1 lemon + 1 cup honey (replaces 1 cup sugar)
Reputation for relaxation? Not this chamomile syrup; sweetened with honey, it’s a kick-ass complement to gin.
  • Cherry Almond = 1 cup pitted tart cherries + 1 teaspoon almond extract + pinch Chinese five spice powder (optional, but very nice)
Sweet almond rounds out the lip-smacking twang of tart cherries. The resulting soda loves dark rum and Tiki cocktails.
  • Mexican Root Beer = 1 bunch hoja santa + 1 drop lemon oil
This easy riff on Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s popular herbal green root beer uses the Mexican herb hoja santa in lieu of tarragon. Redolent of anise, cinnamon and birch, these “holy leaves” (find them at Mexican grocers) have all the soda’s flavors in a single package. No wonder the herb’s nickname is “root beer plant.”
  • Matcha Melon = 3 green teabags + 2 cups fresh honeydew + peeled zest of 1 lime
Brewed triple-strength, delicate green tea becomes a flower powerhouse that matches well with fruity honeydew. Try it with cantaloupe, too.
  • Mint Chip = 1 bunch chocolate mint + 1 teaspoon cocoa powder + 2 drops natural green food coloring
For a soda that drinks like a dessert, start with fragrant chocolate mint (available at many farmers’ markets). Cocoa powder enhances the herb’s innate chocolate flavor.
  • Honeysuckle Peach = 2 cups peaches, peeled, pitted and quartered + 1 bunch fresh honeysuckle
Fresh blossoms give this peach syrup an intoxicating perfume and flavor. Quadruple the recipe as a base for sorbet, ice pops or granita.
  • Tom Kha = ½ cup coconut cream + 4 kaffir lime leaves + 1 stalk bruised lemongrass + 1-inch piece fresh galangal, lightly smashed
This exotic, ivory syrup is inspired by the aromatics in Thai tom kha, or coconut soup. If you can’t find galangal, substitute with ginger.
  • Shiso (or Mint) Orange = 1 bunch fresh shiso or mint + peeled zest of 2 oranges + juice of 1 orange, strained of pulp
Who loves orange soda? Everyone when it’s paired with minty, cinnamony, sawtoothed shiso.
  • Spiced Plum = 2 cups plums, peeled, pitted and quartered + peeled zest of 2 limes + juice of 1 lime, strained of pulp + 1 teaspoon cloves
Plums and lime say summer, while the cloves evoke mulled cider on snowy mornings, but this seemingly incongruous trinity go surprisingly well together. I first tried them in a chutney paired with foie gras at Philly’s acclaimed French BYOB Bibou. Turns out, they’re just as happy in glass of soda.
 

Q Codes

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q_code

Q codes

Some of the more common Q codes

Q codes are used in many kinds of radio communications, including CB sideband but not typically on CB AM. (If your radio doesn’t have sideband, don’t worry about Q codes.) Q codes originated with amateur radio but their use in CB, even more so than 10 codes, can vary depending on who published the list.
The following is an abbreviated list of Q codes borrowed from amateur radio:

  • QRM man made noise, adjacent channel interference
  • QRN static noise
  • QRO increase power
  • QRP reduce power
  • QRT shut down, clear
  • QSL confirmation, often refers to confirmation cards exchanged by hams
  • QSO conversation
  • QSX standing by on the side
  • QSY move to another frequency
  • QTH address, location

The following is from a list of Q codes used by the X-Ray Club (a sideband-users club headquartered in Paradise, California):

  • QRL Busy, Stand By
  • QRM Man Made Interference
  • QRT Stop Transmit or Shutting Down (same as 10-7 on AM)
  • QRX Stop Transmit or Standing By
  • QRZ Who is Calling?
  • QS Receiving Well
  • QSB Receiving Poorly
  • QSK I have something to Say or Station breaking QSM Repeat Message
  • QSO Radio Contact
  • QSP Relay Message
  • QSX Standing By (same as 10-10 on AM)
  • QSY Changing Frequency
  • QTH My Location is… or What’s your location? QTR Correct Time

Q codes may be used to ask questions (QTH?) or to answer them (QTH is 5th and Ivy Streets.)
The ARRL Handbook and the ARRL operating guides have more complete listings of those used for amateur radio. (ARRL is an amateur radio organization.) Historically, the Q signals were instituted at the ‘World Administrative Radio Conference’ (WARC) in 1912. Because of their international origin, Q codes may be more accepted outside English-speaking countries than 10 codes are.

Alinco Dx-SR8 and Random Wire Antenna Lengths

With my General ticket I’ve been anxious to get on HF.  I got a great deal on a used Alinco DX-SR8T and EDX-2 random wire tuner.  Even though the bands look a little ragged today I’m still excited to get a wire connected.




So those are the numbers above that we have to stay as far away from as possible when building a long-wire antenna.

Here they are in order:REVISED: 16 19 22 26 32 33 38 44 46 48 52 64 65 66 76 78 80 88 92 95 96 99 104 110 112 114 123 128 130 132 133 138 144 152 154 156 160 165 171 176 182 184 190 192 195 198 208 209 220 224 228 230 231 234 240 242 246 247 256 260 264 266 272 276 285 286 288 297 304 308 312 320 322 323 325 330 336 338 342 352 361 363 364 366 368 369 374 380 384 390 396 399 400 414 416 418 429 432 437 440 442 448 455 456 460 462 464 468 475 480 484 494 495 496.

Some of these numbers are too close to squeeze in between them.

Here are the final numbers (in my opinion) in green below that would be good for a long-wire antenna: (You may want to make a note of them)

REVISED: 29  35.5  41  58  71  84  107  119  148  203  347  407  423


Random Wire Wiki

Hey! where are the tremolo holes….

Gfs white poplar strat body and an Eden neck. Mim strat tremolo and a pretty awesome prewired pick guard.  More info to follow….

http://www.strat-talk.com/forum/tech-talk/521-drilling-body-tremolo-install.html 
parts list:
tuners
bushings
neck plate, screws
strat jack
brass 10.5mm start block
Custom engraved fender neck cover
http://www.lazrart.com/guitar_plates.htm

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