- Jan 13, 2009
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Does anyone else like to brew their own beer or wine?
Maybe this doesn't seem like a pepper topic at first, but think about it. In the Middle Ages, the drinking water could easily kill you with all the germs. And people didn't know that boiling it would make it better until Louis Pasteur discovered it (in the 1800s I think). So most people in Northern Europe drank beer instead of water. Southern Europeans drank wine instead of beer.
Now before you go thinking everyone was stumbling around drunk all the time, consider that most of the "everyday beer" was small beer (less than 3% alcohol usually) and small beer is made from reusing the grains you already used to make a batch of regular beer. So since it's the second time through, the small beer turns out considerably weaker.
I've never made a batch of small beer, but I do enjoy making regular beer as well as mead (wine made from honey 8nstead of grapes).
Does anyone else like to do this or is interested in learning more?
Maybe this doesn't seem like a pepper topic at first, but think about it. In the Middle Ages, the drinking water could easily kill you with all the germs. And people didn't know that boiling it would make it better until Louis Pasteur discovered it (in the 1800s I think). So most people in Northern Europe drank beer instead of water. Southern Europeans drank wine instead of beer.
Now before you go thinking everyone was stumbling around drunk all the time, consider that most of the "everyday beer" was small beer (less than 3% alcohol usually) and small beer is made from reusing the grains you already used to make a batch of regular beer. So since it's the second time through, the small beer turns out considerably weaker.
I've never made a batch of small beer, but I do enjoy making regular beer as well as mead (wine made from honey 8nstead of grapes).
Does anyone else like to do this or is interested in learning more?