Beer
Beer is one of woman's greatest inventions,[1] after before the wheel.
- Were you looking for the Saloon bar?
History of beer
Beer is one of the world's oldest and girliest beverages, possibly dating back to the 6th millennium BCE, and is recorded in the written history of ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia. The earliest Sumerian writings contain references to beer, according to Wikipedia (so you know it's true).[citation NOT needed] Beer was extremely useful in providing the people of Earth with fluid that was less likely to kill them than the drinking water of the day, and was an important source of nutrients (the action of the yeast adds nutrients to the beer — note that filtering, as in most modern beers, removes those nutrients). It also served the dual purpose of getting people drunk enough to appreciate the good things in life, rather than the hardships of living in a world without modern technology.[note 1]
Beer is claimed to be the third most popular drink after water and tea. So if you discount health fads that only let you drink water, and the English, it is the most popular drink in the world. It is possible that beer as essential in the formation of civilization itself.[2] The argument (which is actually really debated by real scientists[3]) goes that while early agriculture does not necessarily give you more food than hunting and gathering, it gives you a lot more grain. And grain means booze (which is also a lot easier to brew if you have some place to stay at). Hence — so the hypothesis goes — booze made us settle down.[4] Which is opposed to people nowadays who turn to booze after settling down.[note 2]
Long before beer was associated with manliness, beer making was a historically woman's job
Beer and God
—not Benjamin Franklin [citation NOT needed] |
Abbey beers are widely considered to be among the best beers in the world. They were craft beers before it was cool. The most famous are the beers brewed by the Trappist monasteries. A beer needs to be certified by the International Trappist Association before it can be labelled as such. A prime requirement for this is that the monks must take a significant and active part in the brewing process and that it's a non-profit enterprise (income only being used to maintain the monastery or donated to charities).
So if you decide to become a monk, make sure you pick a monastery with a good brewery!
Know your beer!
Beer can be split into — at least — two distinct types. Ale was developed first. It is made with top-fermenting yeast (because the yeast floats near the surface during fermentation) and ferments at around room temperature or a little cooler. The process of storing ale in cold conditions caused natural selection to develop bottom-fermenting yeasts that produced the second distinct type, lager. We have, obviously, the Germans to thank for this.[5] Of the two, ales have a more complex flavor while lagers have a smoother and cleaner taste. There's also lambic, which despite what the Boston Beer Company says can only really be made in certain parts of Belgium on account of the bizarre menagerie of microbes living there. But because there's so little of it – and because it doesn't taste like beer at all – it doesn't count. However, beer can be brewed using "wild yeast" almost anywhere and in fact before people knew much about microbes, that was the way all beer was brewed. However, due to obvious reasons the taste and quality of your beer will depend a lot on the place where you brew it, what you do to the beer and even the local weather at the time of fermenting. Most mainstream consumers and breweries can't handle the huge amount of variation that entails and as such beer brewed with "wild yeast" remains a niche product albeit an interesting one. A few hybrid styles also exist, including steam beer, which uses lager-type yeasts but ferments at ale temperatures. Steam beer is also known as California Common Beer, since Anchor Brewing Company cynically trademarked the name "steam beer". It then turned its "steam beer" on its head by making it a quality craft style, whereas the historical steam beer was the common, inexpensive and none-too-cultured local brew of the San Francisco area.[6]
The rule of thumb is that the types are served near the temperature where they are brewed. So ale tends to be served warmer —well, cellar temperature or just below. 10-14°C (52-55°F)—and lager is served cold, 2-7°C (35-45°F). Australians serve beer below 2°C; at this temperature your taste buds do not function and no discernible flavors, including diacetyl, can be detected. This is possibly done intentionally, as when it's warmed up you regret being able to taste it. The breweries have gotten away with this for years by making advertisements mocking the British for drinking their beer warm, showing that parochialism can be used to trump science. For what it's worth, the biggest beer brewing company of Nicaragua also likes to advertise "cerveza bajo 0"[note 3]. British-based Wychwood Brewery has attempted to counter these advertisements with their campaign mocking cold lager with the line "Whats the matter lagerboy, afraid you might taste something?"[7]
American beer
Beer was brought to what's now the United States by the first settlers of Roanoke and Jamestown, and the Pilgrims famously landed north of their target because their provisions, "especially beer", were running dangerously low. Homebrewing was very common in early America, though the difficulty of obtaining ingredients was a constant problem. Malt was difficult and expensive to import and barley was hard to grow locally in early colonial days, and hops were variable and increasingly hard to obtain enough of, since settlers relied on harvesting wild hops in the forest. As a result, colonial brewers resorted to many substitutes, including molasses, spruce, and pumpkin (the latter not as a flavoring, as today, but a main source of fermentable sugars — pumpkin beer was not favored but was made for lack of better ingredients). [8]
Over time it became easier to obtain sufficient ingredients to brew enough beer to supply demand — though the quality of the finished product was ever variable in the days before Pasteur figured out what made fermentation tick. As a result, beer-based cocktails were common and much enjoyed in the Colonies — largely, it is thought, to cover the taste of failed batches. Such cocktails, often called flip, tended to include egg, spices, and be finished off by sticking a red-hot poker in the tankard to froth up the beverage. [9]
In the mid-1800s, German immigrants brought the new style of beer, lager, to the United States. Lager suited American tastes because it is best served cold, so it is more refreshing in warmer climates, and because its lighter, thinner taste was easier to drink a lot of at a sitting (prior to Prohibition, Americans tended to drink heavily compared to today). Responding to demand for a lighter brew with less body, the larger brewers such as Anheuser-Busch began experimenting with adjuncts, replacing some of the malt in their brews with simpler sugars to thin the resulting beverage.[10]
Consequently, light pilsner became very popular in the States, almost to the exclusion of any other style of beer.[10] This led to contemporary American beer being "like making love in a canoe — fucking close to water" according to infallible beer experts and Canadians (who also brew watery beers, such as Molson). This has turned around somewhat, however, since around the start of the 1990s when brewpubs and microbreweries started to pop up and many Americans rediscovered the virtues of other kinds of beer.
Reinheitsgebot — half a liter of canned myth
If you ever had a German beer in your hands, first of all let us here at Rationalwiki congratulate you on your taste. Second of all, you might have noticed a small note saying something along the lines of "Gebraut nach dem deutschen"[note 4]See the Wikipedia article on Reinheitsgebot." sometimes with an added year (1516 being the most common). If you speak German, you will know that this roughly means "Brewed according to the purity law of (year)". However, as we here are in the bubble bursting business, we will also have to burst this bubble. First of all the Reinheitsgebot which was enacted in Bavaria in 1516 is violated by virtually all beers that are commercially available in Germany today.[note 5] Secondly the Reinheitsgebot does not say what you think it says. And thirdly, the quintessentially "Bavarian" beer, "Weißbier"[note 6] was outlawed by the Bavarian Reinheitsgebot of 1516. But let's start from the beginning.
As this article already mentions further above, the process by which malts, hops, and water turn into beer was not entirely understood for most of the history of both beer and mankind. While some astute brewers did in fact guess that the "stuff"[note 7] that was left over after brewing and that could not be accounted for as a remainder of any of the ingredients could have something to do with it, most had simply no clue. And as brewing with wild yeast is — as mentioned above — a chancy business as sometimes the beer would simply spoil or fail to ferment. Thus — and to add flavor — all types of shenanigans were done to the beer to make fermentation start. From peeing into the mixture to adding all types of herbs[note 8] to adding a bit of left over beer[note 9] from a previous batch almost everything and anything was tried from time to time to get the desired results. However, the dukes of Bavaria did not like that and as they deemed order a necessity for their state they made a law that regulated what a beer had to be and conveniently limited the grains that beer could be made from to the — otherwise undesirable — barley. Hence the duke had a law proclaimed that said in early modern high German:[11]
“”Wir wöllen auch sonderlichen / das füran allenthalben in unsern Stetten / Märckthen / unn auf dem Lannde / zu kainem Pier / merer stückh / dann allain Gersten / Hopfen / unn wasser / genommen unn gepraucht sölle werdn. |
Which in good English boils down to "Beer shall be made exclusively from: Barley,
Now, if you are a careful reader, you will have noticed: Wait, where's the yeast? Exactly. Hence we have cleared up our first mystery: as all contemporary beers that are produced in any notable quantity in Germany add yeast to the mixture at some point (as opposed to using wild yeast) none of them follow the 1516 law.
So if the 1516 law is outdated due to the progress of science, why mention it? Well, appeal to tradition, duh! There is, however, another reason why the 1516 law is still mentioned. German law defines a lot of edible (or in this case, drinkable) products as containing or not containing certain things. And beer is no exception. While wheat and yeast were thankfully added as permissible ingredients, this is not the only thing that happened to German beer purity since 1516. You see, there is a small footnote in German food laws[note 10] that more or less goes like this: "You can put in whatever you want, as long as you cannot detect it in the finished product". Hence a brewery can add all kinds of stuff to their beer in the production process if only they later remove it in such a way as to no traces being detectable. Substances that are used include agents that keep the protein from coagulating, kieselgur
Craft beer
"Craft Beer" is a term for beer that is not brewed by Anheuser-Busch InBev
The Belgians never stopped brewing craft beer, but few people outside Belgium and its immediate vicinity (France, Netherlands, Luxembourg, parts of Western Germany) took notice of this until fairly recently.
Similarly Franconia
Greed
Beer is so good that certain cliques of people keep it to themselves and tell other cliques of people that it is bad for them. For example, in many parts of the world, people under a certain age are denied the wonderful beverage and told that it is bad for them. The Nazis of Germany denied the pleasure to Jews and the white men of America denied beer to slaves.
See also
For those of you in the mood, RationalWiki has a fun article about Beer. |
- Alcohol
- Cider
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Notes
- One could argue that this is still the case today. Sometimes I feel I can't just live without tricorders, faster-than-light-travel, teleportation, and instant cures for cancer, so I have another beer.
- Yes that's a "boring married life" joke…
- Beer below/under zero degrees Celsius
- or "bayerischen" which is an anachronism as Bavaria at the time was spelled with an "i" and it should hence be "bairischen"
- Except for — ironically — a handful of Belgian lambics and very few others. And even those are only available in specialist stores
- Or Weizen; that is a beer made with wheat instead of barley
- A German Brewer's term to refer to it is indeed "Zeug" which means stuff
- some of the hallucinogenic, poisonous or both
- this one actually works, it works better the more Zeug there is contained in the beer
- Not literally a footnote, but you get the point
- extract of hops
- Though some of these conglomerates try to imitate craft beers, such as "Blue Moon", owned by MillerCoors.
- Or taste like crap to you
- Craft beers tend to be priced "elitist" and a retail price of $5 a bottle is nothing out of the ordinary
References
- Brooks, L. (March 5, 2021). The Conversation. "Women used to dominate the beer industry – until the witch accusations started pouring in"
- Types of beers
- Did Man Once Live by Beer Alone? Robert J. Braidwood, Jonathan D. Sauer, Hans Helbaek, Paul C. Mangelsdorf, Hugh C. Cutler, Carleton S. Coon, Ralph Lenton, Julian Steward, Leo A. Oppenheim. American Anthropologist, vol. 55, pp. 515-526, 1953
- Our 9,000-Year Love Affair With Booze. National Geographic Magazine, February 2017
- Realbeer.com
- http://drinks.seriouseats.com/2011/03/beer-history-lost-beer-styles-pennsylvania-swankey-kentucky-common-steam-beer.html#continued. Either way you do it, it's delicious.
- https://www.wychwood.co.uk/shop/gifts/classic-lager-boy-poster/
- Gregg Smith, Beer in America: The Early Years—1587-1840: Beer's Role in the Settling of America and the Birth of a Nation
- Gregg Smith, Beer in America: The Early Years — 1587-1840: Beer's Role in the Settling of America and the Birth of a Nation
- Maureen Ogle, Ambitious Brew: the Story of American Beer
- German Wikipedia
- Aufseß
File:Wikipedia's W.svg a village of less than 1500 people has four operating breweries