Yes
need to know what companies buy empty bee bottles and cans
It depends on the beer, but typically, yes. If you are talking the same beer from the same company, most of the time the price is going to be very close. Bottles are slightly more expensive to make, and cost more to transport. But the cost of setting up a machine to actually can the beer is very expensive, so most small breweries use bottles.
No, but the glass bottles it came in were.
you can use many different things once i saw a green house mad of green water bottles
veggies, broom handles, beer bottles, anything the right shape
Use reusable glass bottles.
ok, first of all the correct grammar is 'does beer expire? and yes it does It expires even faster with heat and light. Keep it cool and out of sunlight. That's why they try to use dark bottles. Preserves the taste.
This instructable is for those who don't know how to properly use a fork.A fork is a tool with a lot of possible uses:*Eating*opening bottles of beer*science projects*decoration
Beer bottles from PET, soaps, drugs, paper, paints, inks, nylon, objects from polyvinyl chloride and many others.
A Mr.Beer kit makes 2.1 gallons. Most of their kits come with 8 1-liter bottles, but you can use any size bottle you want. If you use 12 ounce bottles, you'll get about 21 out of each batch, or just under 1 case of beer. Lots of additional information can be found at: see related links
Definitely. That's the most economical way to go, since cases of fresh unused bottles typically cost an average of $20 US. I am constantly expanding my collection of different shapes and sizes of empty bottles to use for bottling my homebrew. The most important thing is to clean them thorooughly. I typically rinse with hot water when I empty the bottles, then let the bottles sit for a few hours with hot water in them. After emptying the water, I let them drip-dry upside-down in an empty beer case with a layer of paper towel on the bottom. When it comes time to bottle my brew, I use BTF iodophor to sanitize my bottles in and out, the same way I do my other brewing equipment. Be careful, though. Bud bottles are twist-off. You can cap twist-off bottles with crown caps, but be sure to get a perfectly tight seal without dimpling the cap; otherwise you run the risk of the top popping off during carbonation. Cheers and happy brewing!