aggienaut: (Default)
Diagrams of two complex pieces of equipment we have at work, and a note that we found a coffee maker too complex

   First I place a heating element on the floor and screw in the tube connecting it to a propane tank. Next a stainless steel container of about 20 liters (5 gallons) in volume goes on the heating element (not yet turned on). One of my coworkers lugs a five gallon plastic bucket across the cold warehouse floor and we dump its contents into the "kettle." The liquid is fermented agave juice and water. Next I place a rubber gasket on the circular opening of the kettle and attach a cylindrical pipe to it with a metal clamp. The pipe or "column" has a copper mesh in it. What this copper mesh does I have only vague ideas involving increased surface area, and it for some reason is greatly beneficial that it is made of copper specifically. These obscure secrets are perhaps the reason you usually need a chemical engineering degree to get hired as a commercial distiller.
   On top of this column I place a second gasket (which I would later forget in a subsequent run, nearly blowing myself up), and attach a second column. This second column has a hole on top in which I place an electronic thermometer through a rubber bung, and a smaller tube runs off the top of the column (see Fig B above). To actually make tequila we would need to NOT attach this second column as it makes the still TOO efficient and strips all the flavour out of things until everything becomes vodka. Not that we could have possibly made tequila anyway (tequila, like champagne, is only "tequila" if it comes from Tequila, Mexico, it turns out). I'd figure this out eventually, but this was my first time putting it together.

   Apparently my coworkers had tried to run the still before, while I was off doing something else for awhile, and had no success (note they also tried to brew coffee while I was absent...). So I return to work at what is ordinarily a beekeeping operation to find my boss has a new project for me: "Kris, make the still work."
   As the only one at my workplace with a college degree they often seem to have infinite confidence (way more than myself anyway!) that I am somehow imbued with the ability to figure out and understand anything complicated. My college degree has a lot more to do with understanding why Russia invaded the country of Georgia and who's the rightful president of Honduras than anything to do with science (though I did take "intro to brewing" for my science breadth requirement).
   I was one of the few people I know to never change my degree in college. I went in as an international relations major and came out still excited to work for the State Department or United Nations. I came out all excited to get a job related to my major ... and apparently you need "experience" for even the lowest rung positions so I became a beekeeper.

   I'd been feeling relatively unsuccessful in life, and the only college friends who are really noisy about what they're doing with their lives on facebook are those announcing they've passed the bar and progressing from aspiring esquirelings to full blown esquires. But I've also noticed lately a lot of peers quietly adding "graduated culinary institute" or other such vocational programs onto their education list. As the saying goes, "the college degree is the new high school diploma."

   So I've been working as a beekeeper. At least I'm given special projects and my employer seems to like special projects.

a diagram I drew of the 'bee-vac' we designed, tested, and built at work.  We've considered trying for a patent for it

   After another year of working "in the bee mines" I recently became infected with the wanderlust again and discovered that a craft brewery I deeply respect was interested in adding beekeeping to their various agricultural pursuits, so at their invitation I recently traveled up there to meet with them.

   I'd contemplated a career as a brewer or distiller in the past, going so far as to look into it a little bit and determine that chemistry degrees were usually required. Imagine my surprise, then, to find that the brewery didn't want to hire me as a full time beekeeper -- they wanted to hire me as a brewer, distiller, AND sometimes beekeeper. There'll be training of course, and I'll be one of several brewers & distillers working at their main facility, but apparently the specific combination of special projects my beekeeping boss had had me tackle had piqued the brewery's interest and may be setting me off on a whole new career direction.
   "And there's one other thing I think I'd like you to do" said the master distiller, my main contact, "I have this special project I want to get started. We just got this roaster no one knows how to use yet..."

   Life: some assembly required.

The 100 gallon still at the brewery/distillery I might get hired at
The commercial 100 gallon still which might be my new occupation (picture courtesy of the internet. I didn't want to look like a tourist-noob and take pictures during my interview)


this life is a test, it is only a test, if it were a real life, you'd have been given more instructions!
A sign I found hanging on the wall in a cafe in a small seaside town on the coast




See Also: my official report on the interview (it's friends-only but if you're interested I'll add you)
In Unrelated News: I was supposed to ship out to Nigeria in two days for beekeeping aid work. That has been postponed due to current unsafe conditions in country, and could be scrubbed completely if it can't be rescheduled in the window before I begin working at the brewery ):
aggienaut: (Pope)

   With all the polling going on in the various corners of lj, esp for competition related things, I was wondering, does anyone know if anyone's written a programme that automatically tracks polls? And makes graphs out of the data maybe?

   So I've been tracking the latest LJ Idol poll. Trying to look at it about once an hour and note the vote totals of the some five individuals*, the lowest and 10th lowest (since the bottom ten are getting eliminated) in a spreadsheet on excel.
   When it comes to making a graph out of it I can make a line graph with each person as a separate line and vote numbers as the Y axis, but I can't figure out how to make the X axis time rather than subsequent iterations of my checking standing. Fortunately the iterations are relatively consistent but there's a few big gaps.
   Anyone have any advice on the arcane secrets of graph making? All the graph making options excel gives seem pretty incomprehensible. /=


Picture of the Day


Still Life



   So I received my barrel (did I mention I was getting a barrel). It's an adorable 5 gallon american oak barrel, charred inside a la a whiskey barrel. I've been trying to decide what to put in it. I've been told by several experienced distilling/brewing people that the higher surface to volume ratio of a barrel of this size will give the effect in two weeks of years of aging in a normal 53 gallon barrel. (=


Also in other administration news, one of my favourite people got this lj a paid account <3 apparently they were tired of me complaining about my limited icon options :D


* well the highest and 2nd highest, who happen to be individuals. In the unlikely case that someone replaces them in those positions I'm not sure if I'll follow the new 1st and 2nd or keep following these two. Thats unlikely anyway I think. The other three are myself of course and two of my favourite idolists. (=

aggienaut: (Fire!)

   Beer tasting. I go every Tuesday to the beer tasting at the local Bevmo (for those from Far Away Lands, Beverages & More is like a grocery store sized liquor store).
   At first I thought it was a hoot that half the people new my name and half of THEM knew my taste in beer (so I'd come walking up and people would be like "ooh we're having lagers today you're not gonna like it!"). That was only the beginning.
   Regulars started bringing cookies and brownies to the tasting that they'd baked themselves. I of course brought beer I'd brewed. We probably violated all kinds of FDA regulations.
   Once four guys who didn't know eachother beforehand got to talking at a Friday tasting and all decided to go straight from there to Vegas for the weekend (one had a room comped), and they did!
   Anyway, yesterday we reached a new level of silly. As I walked in, extremely late (wearing a santa hat), Jeff, the host, said "dude, you're late, we're out of beer!" to which I responded "thats okay, I'm kind of sick, wasn't really looking forward to drinking anyway" ... ie now I'm showing up at beer tasting with no intent to drink?! (though while I was there I bought another four pack of official best beeer ever* -- Goose Island Brewing "Bourbon County Brand Stout" (thick as tar, black as my heart & 13% ABV!).

   Oh and earlier in the day I emptied Bevmo's shelves of their (3) four liter jugs of Carlo Rossi Burgundy... O:)

* Not including Sam Adams Utopias, but thats on a whole new level, if you can find it for less than $200 please inform me immediately



   Yesterday we spent the day at work distilling tequila from agave juice. If you're interested in hearing more about that, see my post in [livejournal.com profile] homedistilling.
   Also, I went to Bevmo to get the aforementioned jugs of wine so that we can give making brandy a try today. (=



   And as long as I'm reporting real world happenings (in reverse order), this past weekend I actually got invited to a college party at UC Irvine and partied it up over there.
   And then totally almost forgot about my own work holiday party



Random: This was recently brought to my attention and I find it hilarious: They're Made of Meat?!

aggienaut: (Wasp)

   Last Saturday I hung out with my friends Katie D'Agostino, Nidia, Adrianna (Nidia's cousin), Marybelle & Cheyenne (& other such as Nidia's boyfriend Trevor). The occasion was Adrianna's birthday. We met at the Dave & Busters at the Block in Orange (a North County version of The Spectrum), and then proceeded to a bar off the Orange Circle in the City of Orange (in the County of Orange of course!).


   On Monday I worked at Bee Busters. Technician Jeremy was busy taking state-mandated inservice classes, technician Bobby was on vacation in Amsterdam, and boss Dave was busy distilling whiskey, so Ryan and I were the only truck on the road and were thus actually busy. Among other places we killed bees at La Tierra Elementry and Mission Viejo HS, both of which I attended, and Orange Coast College. We even went all the way up to Sherman Oaks for a call.

   Today (Wednesday) I worked again. This morning boss Dave looked at me sternly and informed me "Kris, you haven't been stepping up lately" causing me immediately to panic that I was in trouble, but he continued "you need to play more pingpong!!" We spent most of the day today either playing pingpong or watching the still. We also ordered pizza (I got jalepenos and pepperoni on my half!), and I didn't go out on any calls today.
   The bottem line is that Dave has no reason to employ me right now -- there's barely enough work to keep his current employees busy during this the bee off-season. But he employs me anyway because Bee Busters is about more than just the profit. (=

   Anyway, the reason the still needs to be watched is because the hotplate they're currently using causes the whole thing to fluctuate in temperature twenty degrees celsius up and down constantly, and it is supposed to stay within an optimum range of about five degrees. The optimum is around 80 I believe and its supposed to never exceed 90. So its an adventure.


   Tomorrow I have a job interview for the position of trial assistant with my friend Alex's mom's firm! O=

March 2026

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