- 24 Posts
- 49 Comments
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksto Kombucha Brewing@sh.itjust.works•Fresh Picked MullberryEnglish1·2 months agoHave you considered force carbonating? Its always consistent.
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksto Kombucha Brewing@sh.itjust.works•Fresh Picked MullberryEnglish1·2 months agoGreat looking carbonation
That sounds yummy and I bet it would come out a beautiful color
I’ll be watching for your post!
Get the pulp and make it! It’s really unique
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksOPto Kombucha Brewing@sh.itjust.works•Bubbly Mango Peach kombuchaEnglish1·9 months agoI do just mango a lot, its one of the best.
I usually use real fruit but not with ginger
I used a juice extract for this one so i can’t give you a great answer
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksOPto Kombucha Brewing@sh.itjust.works•Ginger Cayenne 🌶️English21·9 months agoNot too much you want it to be in the background versus the foreground.
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksOPto Kombucha Brewing@sh.itjust.works•Pumpkin Spice! My best work so far.English1·10 months agoI followed this recipe:
https://buchabrewers.com/pumpkin-spice-kombucha-recipe/
I made only a half batch incase i didn’t like it. I followed the recipe exactly and wouldn’t change anything BUT let me warn you, you will need to filter when pouring into a glass to drink, and it blocked my filter making this a little difficult due to the pumpkin puree. I do not strain any kombucha but it was needed to drink this properly.
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksOPto Kombucha Brewing@sh.itjust.works•Mango Peach has been bottledEnglish3·10 months agoI let them go for 1-2 weeks before refrigeration which seems to be longer than most people, but i like strong carbonation so i aim to over do it vs under do it.
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksOPto Kombucha Brewing@sh.itjust.works•Mango Peach has been bottledEnglish6·10 months ago6.75 bottles
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksto Kombucha Brewing@sh.itjust.works•Raspberry Fall HomebrewEnglish1·10 months agoLooks good, how sweet versus tart was it?
Do it and share it with friends and family! You will never regret it. Once you start and get the hang of things it’s easy and flexible.
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksOPto linux4noobs@programming.dev•Using Wireshark to verify encryption2·11 months agoOk thank you!
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksOPto linux4noobs@programming.dev•Using Wireshark to verify encryption2·11 months agoIm a little knowledgeable with this stuff but i do not know how to see the “handshake” itself, but maybe this is synonymous with what i am doing:
Right click any of the packets (TCP or SSH) > Follow > TCP stream
From there i can see some info about the ssh protocol and connection, as well as the 2 devices communicating (Operating systems used) followed by random gibberish which is the encrypted data.
When I analyze the TCP packet “frames”, they contain data including the motherboard manufacturer, but packets themselves look like its just gibberish.
Thanks by the way for trying to help me :)
Ponziani@sh.itjust.worksOPto linux4noobs@programming.dev•Using Wireshark to verify encryption2·11 months agoIt looks like everything is in 1 stream, maybe that answers your question? I am capturing traffic only on port 22 briefly while the rsync is running to look at the packets
The only thing missing is a random arrow
Good job