Showing posts with label beer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beer. Show all posts

October 15, 2012

Beer - brewing


At the simplest level, malting and brewing represent the conversion of the starch of barley into alcohol. Brewers are interested in achieving this with maximum efficiency, in terms of highest possible alcohol yield per unit of starch. At the same time, though, they insist on consistency in all other attributes of their product—foam, clarity, color, and, of course, flavor.

from these....[barley]



to THIS!



When we speak of barley in a brewing context, we are primarily concerned with its grain, the seeds growing on the ear in the field: it is these that are used to make beer. Barley grains are hard and difficult to mill. Try chewing them if you will—but have a good dentist on hand! They also don’t taste particularly pleasant, drying the mouth and leaving a harsh, astringent, and extremely grainy aftertaste. Indeed, beer brewed from raw barley is not only troublesome in processing but also has a definite grainy character.

It must have been pure serendipity when the process of malting was discovered some 100 centuries ago, but out of such happenstance has sprung up a mighty industry responsible for converting this rather unpleasant cereal into a generally satisfying malt.




[Source: Tap Into the Art and Science of Brewing]




September 28, 2012

Beer





Since Oktoberfest is just right around the corner, here’s something to booze you up...

Beer, surely, is a gift of God, one that brings together yeast and vegetation (in the shape of barley and hops) in a drink that has been enjoyed for 8,000 years, a beverage that has soothed fevered brows, nourished the hungry, and coupled friendly and unfriendly alike—it’s even seen men off into battle. “No soldier can fight unless he is properly fed on beef and beer,” said John Churchill, the first duke of Marlborough (1650–1722), a great British tactician and a forebear of the even more celebrated Winston.

Queen Victoria (1819–1901) was another who recognized the merit of beer: “Give my people plenty of beer, good beer and cheap beer, and you will have no revolution among them.” With these sentiments, the redoubtable monarch echoed the enthusiasm of the Athenian tragedian Euripides (484 – 406 BC):

The man that isn’t jolly after drinking
Is just a driveling idiot, to my thinking.

Cheers!!!


[source: Tap Into the Art and Science of Brewing]