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This is a question The B3TA Detective Agency

Universalpsykopath tugs our coat and says: Tell us about your feats of deduction and the little mysteries you've solved. Alternatively, tell us about the simple, everyday things that mystified you for far too long.

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 12:52)
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Pub quiz
At a pub quiz in Chalk Farm a few years back, the final result was tied between our team and the one next to us, so the quizmaster asked a tiebreaker question: "What happens if cows wander into a field where sugar beets grow?"

I'd never heard of this before, but I managed to work out the answer from first principles, and we won. The other team's answer? "They explode"...
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:21, 45 replies)
Was the answer 'the sugar beet gets trampled and eaten'?

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:22, closed)
that kind of goes without saying...
...but then what happens?
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:24, closed)
The cows get put back in their field, digest the sugar beet and shit it out again.

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:25, closed)
What's notable about a cow's digestive system?

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:33, closed)
It's made of
solid gold.
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:34, closed)
I feel like Stephen Fry in a room full of Alan Davieses

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:34, closed)
Their arses actually work backwards.

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:34, closed)
You're close with the "working backwards" bit

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:36, closed)
If you stretch it all out over a football field
The RSPCA get really annoyed.
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:35, closed)
but if you fry it with onions it's delicious

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:35, closed)
they chew, swallow, vomit up cud and then chew it again and swallow it again sending it to a separate stomach?
which in turn goes to the other stomachs before being shat out?
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:36, closed)
You're extremely close
What happens to the material in a cow's stomach (any of them)?
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:37, closed)
MacDonalds
put it in their apple pies.
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:38, closed)
It's softened?

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:41, closed)
It ferments
and as andythepieman spotted below, when sugar ferments it turns to alcohol...so basically if you feed sugar beets to cows they make their own booze and get drunk
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:43, closed)
I reckon this is a myth

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:46, closed)
find me a cow

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:48, closed)
I'm in Cornwall
there's fucking thousands of them. Fermentation take a while. Home made booze isn't alcoholic until its fermented for a while and needs yeast too.
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:50, closed)
Well it won us the quiz
and I can't find anything on Google that disproves it
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:55, closed)
Well, if it's true
we should be drinking alcoholic milk.
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 17:11, closed)
Yeah, but would we call it alcomilk or milkohol?
This NEEDS to be answered
(, Fri 14 Oct 2011, 9:35, closed)
Nope
I heard this about cows eating windfall apples and having to call a vet. He thought his cows had BSE cos they were staggering around. Apparantly the apples had fermented because cows digest things slowly and they were alll rat arsed. I wonder what a cow with a hangover looks like?
(, Fri 14 Oct 2011, 9:57, closed)
But where do they get matches from
and how do they strike them with cloven hooves?
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:47, closed)
They all clearly have sex with your mum

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:25, closed)
Hahahaha

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:29, closed)
Rory, glad you're back!
have you disabled the parental lock on the internet again?
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:34, closed)
i dun wrkd ot al bi meslve

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:39, closed)
I'm sure the correct
answer is 'the price of diesel goes up'.

I say this not from a technical point of view, but because every fucking thing else seems to make the cunting price of diesel go up.
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:24, closed)
Haha

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:34, closed)
They get hyperglycemia.

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:32, closed)
they get drunk
Have a sing song and firebomb world of leather
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:37, closed)
Ding, we have a winner
Award yourself an undetermined number of points
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:38, closed)
Can i redeem them
Behind the bar?
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:44, closed)
You can try, but the barman's a punchy thief.

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:45, closed)
absolutely
direct the barman to this thread to collect them
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:46, closed)
Fantastic
I'll have a pint of mild in a half pint glass please and a pickled egg
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:47, closed)
Gah, I'd kill for a pint of mild
/midlander living in the south blog
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:47, closed)
Gaz Scarpe he's the London based real ale expert round here

(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 16:51, closed)
I call bollocks.
A quick google tells me that it is possible to safely feed livestock (including cows) sugar beet. If it got them pissed I doubt these people would be suggesting it:
www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/livestock/beef/facts/sugarbeets.htm
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 17:55, closed)
Of course its bollocks
Sugar beet has been part of animal silage for centuries. You need yeast to ferment sugars, and yeast doesn't like living in acidic stomachs.
(, Thu 13 Oct 2011, 19:46, closed)
But it works with the monkeys and elephants eating molasses...
...I saw it on TV when I was a kid. Giggled like a loon, so I did
(, Fri 14 Oct 2011, 9:37, closed)
Apples have natural yeast...
one of those city-tv-chefs-living-in-the-countryside-and-fliming-it-for-telly jobs made cider from apples (duh) and they said that apple skin has on it/contains a wild type of yeast
(, Fri 14 Oct 2011, 12:16, closed)
Yes...
...if you mill and press your apples and leave them nice and quietly in a vat, that is what will happen.

But a cow's gastric juices are strongly acidic, and yeast won't work under those conditions.
(, Mon 17 Oct 2011, 20:11, closed)
The key word in that link being 'processed'
Not raw - so not quite the same thing
(, Fri 14 Oct 2011, 14:05, closed)
Buried in the page though is this:
"Cattle and sheep can consume unprocessed whole sugar beets."
It then goes on to explain who you may want to chop them up a bit to stop the animals choking.
I'm willing to believe that apples which have started to ferment may continue to do so whilst in a ruminant's stomach and, so, make them drunk.
Ruminants use bacteria in their stomachs to, for example, help break down cellulose into simpler sugars -- they don't make beer. This does not produce alcohol and bacteria which break down cellulose would not ferment sugar into alcohol.
[I only really googled this since the OP insists that nothing found on google disproves the theory. Simple common sense tells us this is extremely unlikely.]
(, Fri 14 Oct 2011, 14:30, closed)

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