Jump to content

New Booze Regulation Comes Into Effect Wednesday


Recommended Posts

Posted

Ah.....Thailand  , the hub of dissipation. 

 

Always was , always will be.

 

I will laud and hail it until the kwais come home

Posted
1 hour ago, JoePai said:

This is brilliant news, for once we shall be able to buy real beer and not the rubbish fizz, the likes of Leo, Singha, Chang they have tried to force people to drink

You can buy it now already. Prost!

 

weihenstephaner-weihenstephaner-kristal-

Posted

 

27 minutes ago, webfact said:

According to the new ministerial regulations, people aged 20 years and over and juristic persons can apply for a license to make alcoholic beverages for their own consumption, not for sale or barter.

 

So, you still need a licence to do homebrew?

 

 

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
35 minutes ago, webfact said:

but the household production capacity is capped at 200 liters per year.

 

That is a WHOLE 4 LITRES per week. Who is going to go to the trouble of doing that, even monthly @ 16 litres.

  • Thumbs Up 1
  • Haha 1
Posted
33 minutes ago, worgeordie said:

Is showing pictures of alcohol ,now legal , ? I thought it was illegal .......

regards Worgeordie 

This is basically liquid bread. Like breakfast. 

  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
1 hour ago, webfact said:

limited at 200 liters per year and such producers must send the samples of their alcoholic beverages to the Excise Department for quality checks.

image.png.300c06b9d44485e3c7906ba4b1fed3be.png

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted (edited)

Do they really think all the Thai farmers who have always made sato (Thai sticky rice wine) or distill fermented rice to make lao khao or "medicinal" whisky will actually register?  I have never seen any evidence that the government cares about that unless some idiot doesn't know how to separate the methanol (BP 64.7) and ethanol (BP 78.4) alcohols when distilling his lao khao.

 

Just invest in some brewer's yeast for your Sato – Thai Rice Wine or your fermented rice and you eliminate all but traces methanol (you will always get some when you ferment anything).  If you have a moonshine still with a thermometer to tell you at what temperature the distillate is condensing at you can easily make sure the distillate you collect for drinking is ethanol, not methanol.

 

Here is a fancy moonshine still from Amazon, Premium Copper Moonshine & whiskey Alembic Still 3 L w/thermometer aprox 1Gallon.

 

Personally, when I finally move to my wife's farm to live home made sato is going to be on my menu.  You can buy bottles of filtered and sterilized sato at places like 7-11 but it the taste is horrible, unlike the taste of fresh sato.

Edited by HarrySeaman
Posted
8 hours ago, JoePai said:

Yes

I'd be keen to know where I could buy supplies for a small home brewing op. Sold at the supermarkets back home and a lot of fun, would save me a fortune on father-in-law's daily Leo supplement bill.

Posted
8 hours ago, JoePai said:

Yes

Can you make home brew in Thailand?
 
 
The 1950 Liquor Act states beer can only be made in a factory or brewpub. A 2000 Finance Ministry regulation says for producers to gain legal status, they must make more than 100,000 liters per year and be a limited company with capital of at least 10 million baht.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.


  • Topics

  • Latest posts...

    1. 0

      Golly! Did you know you can hold annuities in your IRA account?

    2. 20

      Waiting for Tears.

    3. 3,199

      Cheapest good weed now ? I found 350 thb/gram but not cheaper yet, any idea ?

    4. 8

      Maxim Ride App Drivers

    5. 18

      Pattaya's Traffic Mayhem Threatens Tourism: City Battles for Solution

    6. 117

      British lawyer latest to fall in Laos alcohol poisoning tragedy

    7. 117

      British lawyer latest to fall in Laos alcohol poisoning tragedy

  • Popular in The Pub


×
×
  • Create New...