17 June 2009

Powdered red wine


Das Getränkepulver im praktischen Portionsbeutel weist wie ein leichter Wein aus der Flasche einen Alkoholgehalt von 8,2% auf. Für Expeditionen in Schnee und Kälte wurde zudem der passende Glühwein in Pulverform entwickelt. Für den besonderen Augenblick im abendlichen Camp.
Presumably all one needs to do is add alcohol...

Credit, via Arbroath.

In the comments Peder Hanson cites the text as indicating the alcohol is already included. Here's the English:
The beverage powder that comes in convenient portions packed in pouches has an alcoholic content of 8,2%, which is similar to a light bottled wine.
I had assumed that alcohol can't be powdered. Apparently I'm wrong. And I still don't understand how a powder can be a certain % alcohol. Or maybe the powder is dissolved in a few cc of pure alcohol contained in the foil packet and just needs to be diluted with an appropriate volume of water? I don't know.

Addendum: Note the distributor also sells cheeseburger in a can. Yum. And so good for you too... the perfect supplement to counteract the active outdoor lifestyle... (I'm not a curmudgeon; just chuckling...) :.)

Second addendum: The ever-present "anonymous" has come up with the answer: "According to food chemist Udo Pollmer of the European Institute of Food and Nutrition Sciences in Munich, alcohol can be absorbed in cyclodextrines, a sugar derivate. In this way, encapsuled in small capsules, the fluid can be handled as a powder."

Powdered alcohol. How cool is that? Thanks for tracking that down. You learn something every day.

5 comments:

  1. This sounds like the "wine blocks" that were sold during Prohibition and came with instructions like "Do not just add water to make wine".

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  2. "According to food chemist Udo Pollmer of the European Institute of Food and Nutrition Sciences in Munich, alcohol can be absorbed in cyclodextrines, a sugar derivate. In this way, encapsuled in small capsules, the fluid can be handled as a powder."

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

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  3. You carry this with you for what reason?
    To save weight?

    What do you add to the dry powder?
    Water?
    Where so you get the water from?
    Carry it with you?

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  4. @ Anonymous 2 - I get your point - that one could just as well take wine on the hike as take water to change to wine (reminds me of something... You don't suppose HE... nah...)

    One probable advantage is not having to pack the wine bottle(s) back out.

    And this would also be useful for backcountry hiking where you're drinking from the local stream that the bears pee in. Perhaps adding chablis flavor will cover up the tinge of iodine...

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