First it's important to understand what Tzu is, it's not a place to get rich quick. You know that Tsu pays it's ad revenue back to its users, but for the average user that amount will be tiny. Accept that you won't be retiring on the money. However, even if the amount is tiny the model is still fairer than other social networks that keep all the revenue for themselves. If you believe in that fairer model then you can move onto Tsu and try to make it work. How do you do make it work? Well here are my top 5 tips to making Tsu work for you.
Greendan's Greenplace
Saturday, 14 November 2015
Tsu New User: Top 5 Tips
First it's important to understand what Tzu is, it's not a place to get rich quick. You know that Tsu pays it's ad revenue back to its users, but for the average user that amount will be tiny. Accept that you won't be retiring on the money. However, even if the amount is tiny the model is still fairer than other social networks that keep all the revenue for themselves. If you believe in that fairer model then you can move onto Tsu and try to make it work. How do you do make it work? Well here are my top 5 tips to making Tsu work for you.
Wednesday, 1 April 2015
All Grain Brew
So, I only really needed two additional things to my usual brewing equipment: A big stock pot and a large bag.
The stock pot I found on eBay for £20. For the bag I took a shortcut and bought a sheet of Voile (£4) which I cut into a circle, no sewing, no seams to rip.
Really, I was aiming to step at around 67C, the reason I aimed for a temp of 70C was to allow the water to cool when the grains went in. I wanted to do a really simple brew using one type of grain and one hop, known as a SMaSH recipe (Single Malt and Single Hop). For this I was using Maris Otter grains, in they went.
Once they were in the whole thing has to be left to steep for between 60 to 90 mins, this allows the sugars from the grain to dissolve into the water. I left them for 60 mins, wrapped in a towel to help keep the temperature up. I was concerned about losing too much heat, but I only lost 2C in the end.
Once the steeping had finished (technically called Mashing) it's time to bring the whole lot up to boil. This took about 30mins on my hob. Once the wort was boiling I added the hops. I was using Fuggles as it's a hop I'm familiar with and I wanted to see what it tasted like in a SMaSH. 28g went in to boil for 60 mins.
This amount of hops should bring some bittering to the very sweet wort. With 15 mins of the boil left I added another 15g of hops for flavoring.
Once the boil was done I needed to cool the wort as quickly as possible. To achieve this I put it in our sink with cold water and ice.
The ice melted really fast and the water soon heated up. I discovered I could run the cold tap and the sink overflow at the back would take care of any excess, so I left the tap running for about 30 mins. I then needed to transfer the wort into a fermenter. I placed a colander with a sieve in it into the top of the fermenter and used a jug to transfer about half of the wort. After that I was able to lift the pot and pour the rest in. From 15l of water to start with I ended with 10.5l in the fermenter, not too bad. After that it was a simple case of sprinkling on the yeast and putting the fermenter in the beer cupboard for a couple of weeks. We'll have to wait and see how it turns out...
Saturday, 21 March 2015
Get a Brew on!
![]() |
Beer Kits, Sugar, DME |
-Some sort of sterilizer. A good cheap one is called VWP. There are better ones, but VWP is a good start.
So, the first and most important thing is to clean and sanitize everything that will come into contact with the beer. It's also good to clean everything in the surrounding area. At some point you'll need to put your nice clean and sanitized spoon down, it's good to have a clean place to put it.
Now is probably a good time to discuss the difference between 'clean' and 'sanitized'. Clean means it looks clean. Sanitized means you've killed all the bacteria. When I'm brewing I clean with water and a sponge. I then sanitize with Star San, which is a 'no-rinse' acid cleaner. I just spray it on the item to be sanitized and leave it. It is the single best product I use for Homebrewing and I'll write a post about it in the future.

![]() |
Cleaning |
![]() |
Sugar, DME and Beer Kit |
![]() |
Delicious Malty Drink |
![]() |
Bucket full of goo. |
![]() |
About 1.044 OG |
Hello World!
-Games
-Miniatures
-Miniature Games (that's games featuring Miniatures, not tiny games)
-Beer (mostly Homebrew)
-Tech (mostly Android)
-Interesting stuff I find in and around Norwich.
-The occasional film or computer game
-hopefully, some Sausage
In order to celebrate the launch of this blog and to make sure there is actually something here I'll be posting something new here everyday for the next 5 days!
That's 5 interesting things straight from my Brain to yours! You lucky, lucky people.
The Dark Angels
![]() |
Everything on the left is painted, everything on the right is not. |
A Chapter Master
A Librarian
5 Deathwing Terminators
3 Ravenwing Bikers
10 Space Marines
Which is just enough stuff to make you realize you need more stuff, hence the Starter Set. Good Old Games Workshop.
I was able to do some rummaging through some old boxes of Rogue Trader era stuff my parents had in their loft and was able to bulk out the Marines. I also had a old copy of Space Hulk, which was missing too many bits to be playable, so I stole the Terminators from that. It's really interesting to compare the quality of the old miniatures to the quality of the new miniatures. They are barely recognizable. The miniatures produces now are amazing quality, with tons of crisp detail. Back in the early 90's, there wasn't really much detail at all.
So, over the past year or so I've managed (mainly through ebay purchases) to expand the force significantly. I now added:
25 Terminators (10 from Space Hulk, 15 from eBay)
About 27 Marines (Scavenged from old stuff, and one Devastator Squad that I bought)
1 Dreadnought (paid for with vouchers I won from a painting competition)
1 Scout Squad (that I bought legitimately, from a local games shop)
2 Rhinos (That a friend gave to me from his parents loft, and I've scratch built Whirlwind Missile Turrets for)
2 Predators (eBay)
1 Belial (a birthday present)
So now I just have to try and finish painting it all. In the picture above, everything on the right either needs to be finished or started. I'm pretty slow when it comes to painting, mainly because I'm too pedantic (what if someone picks up this guy and judges my painting based on it!). I need to get over that and speed paint through the Marines. I reckon I could get them all done on one solid Saturday. I need to finish one squad of Terminators, they're almost done. Finish the Scouts, again they're almost done. Start the Ravenwing Bikers (never painted a bike before) and start the HQ Guys. Most of them can be sped through, but the HQ's will be painted to a high level, so will take a while...
Hopefully I can get this all finished by, say, Christmas. As long as I don't buy anymore stuff...
I'll be posting painting updates, so stick with me and we'll see how far I get.
Sunday, 8 March 2015
40k and what it is.
I mentioned previously that I play 40k. Or, to give it it's full name. Warhammer 40,000. If you don't know it's a minatures game based around armies fighting it out in the 41st Millennium. First published by Games Workshop in 1987 it has built an insanely detailed and complex background. Currently the main rulebook is in its 7th edition and there are 17 main armies to choose from, with many ways of bolting on extras and variations to those basic armies.
Of those armies I play two: The Dark Angels, a group of Space Marines who fight for the Imperium (Basically, humans) and Chaos Space Marines, who are the 'Baddies'. Although really in 40k, everyone is a baddie.
The reason I play these two armies are because they are what is available in the current 40k 'starter set' which is called Dark Vengeance. Which is the route I used to get back into 40k a couple of years ago. You can play games with Dark Vengeance out of the box, and it comes with a complete version of the rule book, but to progress further you will need an Army rulebook (called a codex) and additional models.
40k is really conceptually divided into three main streams. The Background (informally referred to as Fluff), the building and painting of minatures (called The Hobby), and the game (called, er, the game). You could enjoy one strand without needing the others, but I find its the interaction between them where the fun lies. Building and painting minatures is a hugely rewarding hobby in itself. The background, including what's in the codexes (that's how GW refer to codex in plural) and in the wider novels is deeply involving. And the game is rewarding, although there is a hugely steep learning curve and without the background playing it abstractly would not be as much fun.
Although I started 40k as a game, currently The Hobby is where I spend the most time, followed by the game, followed by the fluff.
All three combine to form a universe which the players feel ownership over. It feels much more like a role playing game (where GW have their historical roots) than a board game. An RPG in which you don't play a single character but control an entire army fighting in the Grim Darkness of the far future. Where the is only war.
And dice, millions of the buggers.