Jump to content
SAU Community

Paulr33 Presents.... Drink The Rainbow (tm)


Recommended Posts

1. Get a bottle of vodka

Image004.jpg

2. Get 3-4 packs of Skittles

Image003.jpg

3. Drain about 1 cup (ish) out of the bottle

Image008.jpg

4. Open the Skittles and dump into a bowl

Image005.jpg

5. Remove the green and purple Skittles

Image006.jpg

6. Pour in the remaining colours

Image007.jpg

Image009.jpg

7. Shake it up

Image010.jpg

8. Leave for about 2 days

9. Open up and pour out contents over a strainer with a cloth (to filter out the gunk)

10. Pour remaining liquid into vodka bottle

11. Use for shots and party tricks

  • Replies 54
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

Also try buying a watermelon, cutting a hole big enough to pour vodka in, pouring in the vodka then putting the piece back in the hole and leaving to soak in the freezer for 48 hours

Man, thats the best watermelon ever :)

AND its healthy.....cause its got watermelon in it (hey come on, you have to justify it somehow right?)

yeah you gotta skip the bad colours otherwise it goes brown

ive checked mine again and its about half dissolved

the guys at work were talking about it

cos the russians do vodka with chilli etc

so we were talking about other random stuff you can do it with

Also try buying a watermelon, cutting a hole big enough to pour vodka in, pouring in the vodka then putting the piece back in the hole and leaving to soak in the freezer for 48 hours

Man, thats the best watermelon ever :pwned:

AND its healthy.....cause its got watermelon in it (hey come on, you have to justify it somehow right?)

best.invention.ever!

u are a legend!

ive smelt it today - it smells so good

ill leave it another day and see how it goes tomorrow

will give it a drain (defintely needs it) and then a taste test

i reckon it will be tops

fark its pretty potent!!!! smells strong

actaully speaking of which

ill will be havign one soon this month as my olds are away

so will be a get together at my place

but its in tullmamarine

should be a good crew tho

will let you know

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



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • If you haven't bought the ECU yet, I would strongly consider buying a modern ECU. Yes it is very easy to setup and tune, however it is lacking many of the features of a modern ECU. The pro plug in is something like 10 or 12 years old now? Can't remember exactly but it is very dated now. In that time the Elite was released and now we have the Nexus platform.  I would strongly consider not buying the ECU that is 3 generations old now (especially as it isn't a cheap ECU!). 
    • Im happy for it as long as it means reanult gets the boot 
    • Sorry I should have been more clear with the previous post.  The block is a sanding block - picture something like this https://motorguard.com/product/motor-guard-bgr161-bgr16-1-rigid-psa-sanding-block-2-5-8-x-16/ The guide coat is the paint It's two separate things I was talking about, there is no "block guide coat". 
    • Maybe more accurately, you aren't just dulling the existing paint, you are giving the new paint something to 'grab on to'. By sanding the existing paint, you're creating a bunch of pores for the new paint to hook on to.  You can lay new paint over existing paint without sanding it, might last a year or two then sad times. The paint will peal/flake off in huge chunks. By sanding it, the new paint is able to hang onto it and won't flake off.  Depends on the primer you are using. When you buy your paint, as the paint supplier what grit of sand paper to use before you lay down the primer.  Use whatever you like as a guide coat. Pick a colour that really stands out in contrast to the paint. So say your sanding/painting a currently white car, using a black guide coat would work well. You very lightly lay the black guide coat down, then as you sand the car with the large block, all the high spots and low spots will stand out as the black paint is sanded off (or isn't sanded off).  When you buy your paint, hit up your supplier for recommendations for what paint to use for a guide coat if you're unsure what would work well with your setup. 
    • Cheers thanks for the help mate I’ll see how we go with that one 
×
×
  • Create New...