Fizzics makes cheap beer taste expensive

Fizzics makes cheap beer taste expensive

Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Fizzics makes cheap beer taste expensive”.
Hey, it’s been popper here with The Verge, I’m checking out the physics, it’s a new gadget that helps anyone create the perfect, pour get that foam head on top of your beer as if it was coming right out of the draft. So you put in a bottle or a can – and this uses a medical grade – sound wave, oscillator and a very specific and controlled flow to give you bubbles under 30 microns, which apparently improves mouthfeel. You can see it’s got a little bit of foam, but when I’m really ready for my head, I back this off and I straighten out and I go backwards now, I’m getting on top some sweet sweet foam. These are tiny, really tightly packed bubbles and the idea the inventors had was to use that sound, wave oscillator and keep the bubbles as small as possible under 30 microns. I don’t know what a micron looks like, but it definitely improves the flavor. I think this is a Miller Lite, which is a pretty classy beer. Oh yeah tastes expensive now, so I’ve probably had you know four or five beers at this points like almost 4:15 in the afternoon, and the difference is usually that it’s kind of creamier, smoother, there’s more of a sort of aroma. The beer is generally a little bit less, you know kind of accurate and sharp and I would say it makes a good beer tastes kind of great and a pretty bad beer tastes pretty good. So the physics just kicked off its IndieGoGo campaign.

If you are one of the early backers for the crowdfunding, you can get it for around one hundred and nineteen dollars and then when it goes to retail, the goal is to sell it for about one hundred. Ninety nine bucks, I have to say, as a guy who drinks a lot of beer, this would definitely elevate my home game without hurting my budget. Can I tell the difference between a beer that was poured from here in a hand, pour absolutely doesn’t make this Miller Lite so fantastic that I would drink it regularly? Probably not .