Posted on 04/21/2014 3:18:24 AM PDT by markomalley
How many packets can I add to my water, and can I make a drink which is 400 proof?
If you think airlines had problems with unruly & obnoxious drunks before, just wait till those boors start flying with a pocketful of these alcoholic fizzies...
Powdered alcohol always reminds me of a movie from 1966 staring Jerry Lewis called “Way... Way Out.” It’s about astronauts and the Russians have powdered Vodka.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7HlEIVgPfmw
The fascists approve this but cancer drugs for people who have a few months to live will have to wait another 10 years.
400 proof is 200% alcohol, so I think not.
I see a line of 21 and over pixie sticks hitting the shelves within the next year, or fun dip.
Hoax - ethyl alcohol is a liquid. There is no way to de-liquefy, IJS!
I agree with you, the guy must have figured out how to micro encapsulate the alcohol.
I questioned this in another thread.
The trick is that the liquid alcohol is microencapsulated in tiny dextrose (or something) beads.
So adding water will release the alcohol from the beads. Presumably, the flavoring is mixed in with the beads.
To get a 100 ml drink with 6% alcohol, one would have to add at least 6 grams of beads, or half a tablespoon.
Alcohol can’t be powdered. It’s little capsules that open when water is added. But for marketing purposes, “powdered alcohol” goes further.
How long before some sensation-seeking irresponsible idiot tries it without adding water first? Are the emergency rooms ready for this?
The government will cry "Something has to be done" and within 24 hours the democrats will have a law demanding a 50% tax on alcohol.
It's already been done with other liquids.
Repeat:
It’s a small drop of alcohol encapsulated, so a bunch of them behave like powder.
The same trick is used in baking: A small encapsulated drop of water is added to ingredients as a powder, baking heat releases the water vapor and the resulting baked good is very moist without being mushy.
Alcohol can be absorbed in cyclodextrines, a sugar derivate. In this way, encapsuled in small capsules, the fluid can be handled as a powder.
Yes, it is an encapsulation technique.
Won't change this for the generation of "Hope, change and NOW I CAN SHORT ALCOHOL"....lol!
I see a line of 21 and over pixie sticks hitting the shelves within the next year, or fun dip.
It will be next to the marijuanna candy.
In other science news, a broad-spectrum cure for cancer and practical fusion power are definitely possible within the next 10 years...just like they’ve been for the last 60 years...
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