actually yes, believe or not there is something called a PAMoholic. You can't just do it straight from the can though. you have to do some elaborate process with some multi-million dollar equipment. sounds crazy, but there's a lot of crazy people
Yes, you can get drunk the same like when you drink any kind of hard liquor.
You get drunk if you consume too much too quickly.
Difference In Grain and Rubbing AlcoholIf memory serves me correctly, grain alcohol is derived from the fermentation of various grains, with the most common being from corn, and it's safe to consume. On the other hand, rubbing alcohol contains isopropyl alcohol (which is a chemically made alcohol), and usually contains additional water and sometimes glycerine, and isn't intended to be substituted for either grain or wood alcohol. To drink it would make one very ill and may even be lethal, or cause blindness. In other words grain alcohol is not equal to rubbing alcohol. period.steph says no.
Ethyl alcohol (C3C2OH) known as ethanol in the IUPAC nomenclature is called grain alcohol as it is traditionally produced for distillation to pure alcohol by the fermentation of grain derived sugars. The name separates it from methyl alcohol (C3OH) called methanol which is derived from the fermentation of cellulose as is sometimes called wood alcohol.
Called Grain Alcohol, drinking alcohol, ethyl alcohol or pure alcohol
Grain alcohol is a mixture
where can i buy grain alcohol in virginia
No, 90% isopropyl alcohol and grain alcohol are not the same. Isopropyl alcohol is a type of alcohol used for cleaning and disinfecting, while grain alcohol is a type of alcohol often used for consumption purposes in beverages. They have different uses and properties.
Grain alcohol is ethanol made from fermenting grain. Depending on its intended use, it is sold diluted with a specific amount of water. If it is not intended for human consumption (drinking) but is intended as a solvent, fuel or some industrial use, something is added to it to make it poisonous and it is called denatured alcohol. Once denatured, it can no longer be made safe to drink by normal means.
Bear because Barly is a grain
Barley
"Pure alcohol is 200 proof." Not generally true. You would think so, except that practical issues with distilling mean that the product known as "pure grain alcohol" is 190 proof (5% water cannot be distilled out of the product) in many states, and in some states, for legal reasons, "PGA" is actually 151 proof because higher proof is not legal to sell. It is difficult to maintain alcohol at 200 proof because, when exposed to air, it self-dilutes to a lower proof.