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Beer duck food: beer: additive

BeerLax
Butane Beer
Glow in the dark beer
Hangover-Light Beer
halfbakery Helium Lager
Contrary to popular belief
Nicorette Beer

idea: add, search,


annotate, link,
Glow in the dark
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random Engineer yeast to make beer [vote the
glow in the dark or under (+34, for, scene.
blacklight -5) against] You're
meta: news, help, sitting
about, links, quietly
report a problem Yeast is the most popular organism for the biology
folks out there - so why not modify it to glow in the in your
dark and use it in beer? Think of the humorous and car
entertaining applications. with a
account: browse faint
anonymously, or Have you been drinking? Lets take out the blacklight. green
get an account Beer glowing in the bottle would be great fun at glow
and write. parties. coming
—iryshe, Nov 17 2000 from
user: your
pass: (??) different method, same result lips. A
register, login http://abcnews.go.c...glowguns000106.html police
looks like these guys have beaten the yeast people officer
too it, with the added effect of not needing a steps
constant uv source. the pic at the top says it all up to
[cposs, Nov 17 2000, last modified Oct 21 2004] the
drivers
door.
Glowing food additive
http://www.prolume....Biolume/BIOLUME.HTM
Stuff that glows made into food products [Krate, Feb "Have
11 2002, last modified Oct 21 2004] we
been
drinking
HyperGlow Caffeinated Beer
sir?"
http://www.thinkgee...ooflirpa/beer.shtml
[Ander, Oct 18 2007]
"Err, no
officer..."
[link]
—DrBob,
Nov 17
2000

Hmmmm. What glows in, may also glow out...


—Lemon, Nov 17 2000
You mean it doesn't glow now? Uh-Oh.
—thumbwax, Nov 17 2000

Heavy doses of ionizing radiation are known to cause


cancer, and certain strongly radioactive substances
"glow in the dark" due to Cerenkov radiation and
fluorescence. Substances which glow in the dark are
not necessarily carcinogenic, however, as evidenced by
Biotoy.
—egnor, Nov 18 2000

During the winter months, just imagine the potential


for writing your name in the snow!

(Assuming the body doesn't metabolise the glow-in-the-


dark component, of course.)
—BigThor, Nov 19 2000

Think about it BigThor, you wouldn't even NEED snow to


write your name in. You could do it anywhere and it
would stay!
—djhotsauce, Nov 22 2000

OK, I'll take that line of reasoning to next step... Guys,


especially after a whole buncha beers, run for the risk
of sporting trowser-fronts that look particularly
unattractive in night clubs, should he inadvertantly
drip slightly, or suffer an after-squirt.
—danrue, Dec 05 2000

Hey Danrue don't forget about the shoe!!!!!!


(dribble,dribble)
—misa hornee, Dec 06 2000

"Guinness Lumi-Stout(tm) -- The Dark Beer That's A


Little Bit Brighter."
—PotatoStew, Dec 06 2000

Why stop there? We need glow in the dark Liquor too!


—Johnsoe2, Dec 21 2000

Gin and Tonics glow under blacklight, maybe it's the


Quinine in the tonic water.
—Mohhomad, Jan 09 2001

PeterSealy's addition to this idea definitely adds to its


appeal. Makes it useful to a larger audience, including
non-drinkers. And danrue, it's not just guys who get the
drips. I've seen this phenomenon in both genders,
though I'll spare you the details.
Glow-in-the-dark stuff is fascinating. You know, if you
use a blacklight to look for scorpions at night, you'll
find them--they glow, too. Pretty common knowledge,
but I just felt like sharing.
—rachele, Jan 20 2001

If scorpions glow, then why not just put a few in each


can of beer? Kinda like the worm in the tequila bottle.
—Vance, Jan 30 2001

drunks to try and share a lot of things with people...


—roisin, Aug 25 2001

Good spot cpos. Judging from the article, I wouldn't be


surprised if they go full time into manufacturing
novelty items and give up the boat trips altogether.
How easily science is perverted.
—DrBob, Sep 29 2001

Check out the link I added. Here is a company that


makes a safe (or so they claim) edible glowing
additive.
—Krate, Feb 11 2002

Glow in the dark cough syrup!


—JesseOQ, Aug 06 2003

I don't think glow in the dark yeast would work with


beer. In (nearly all) commercial beers, all the yeast is
strained out so their beers can be the crystal clear
brews we're used to.

You'd have to add some other glowing agent that stays


in the beer. The tips of lanternfish perhaps? Lightning
bugs butts?
—MentalFlurry, Dec 25 2003

If you drink enough your whole body will glow!


—Oliii, Dec 26 2003

What about just brewing it from rivers close to


Chernobyl or Three Mile Island... or some other "hot
spot"?
—zigness, Feb 14 2004

I hear there's something in cat's piss that glows under


blacklight.
—Aegis, Feb 15 2004

It's not just true for cats, [Aegis]. Take a blacklight into
a gas-station mens' room. Blugh!
Oh, and don't pollute my beer, thanks. Beer is made of
water, malted barley, hops, and yeast. You can use
some wheat or oats too, but I'll pass on corn and rice.

(Whoops, I just became a necromancer!)


—Souse Mouse, Dec 12 2005

How about glow in the dark toilet water. No need to


turn on the light to find the target after so many green
beers.
—miggavin, Dec 13 2005

taking [danrue]'s post too far - In a nightclub - "Hey


Dude, your trousers are glowing!"

Of course - //Miller Light//!


—Dub, Dec 13 2005

Isn't there a lyric in Ziggy Stardust - "Just a beer light


to guide us" ?
—coprocephalous, Dec 13 2005

//Hmm, Lead by a bottle more like!//


—Dub, Dec 13 2005

Just encountered this idea. Would save a fortune on


lighting in an offlicense.
—vincevincevince, Oct 17 2007

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