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A History Of Beer - Brewing Through The Ages © 2006
Clearance Items.
Wine and Beer Making Catalog

The brewing of beer is an ancient craft, believed by many archeologists to be over 10,000
years old. The first domesticated grains were wheat and barley, with archeological evidence
of these crops first being grown in Mesopotamia around 7000 BC. Beer making, as it depends
primarily on these grains, surely made its entrance to human history shortly after the
domestication of these important food crops. The first beer could have been accidentally
produced. Stored grain, becoming wet, could have fermented naturally, producing beer. And
the resulting brew undoubtedly both smelled and looked good to someone, who tasted it, and
experienced the first hangover in history.
Egyptian tomb hieroglyphics contain scenes of beer making from as early as 2400 BC. The
Egyptians used barley cakes, made by partly germinating the grain, crushing and mixing it with
water and drying it in the sun. The extract from these dried cakes was fermented by natural
means in fermenting vessels, producing a type of beer.
The first beer making process was very simple, given the limited technology of the time. The
grains would have been fermented only a short time and this beer would not have been
carbonated.
Since beer was a popular beverage among our ancestors, techniques improved over time. The
basic principles of brewing were developed in the Middle East and gradually spread to Europe.
In the first Century BC Roman Pliny reported that the north Europeans - the Saxons, Celts, and
Nordic and Germanic tribes drank ale. Indeed, many of the brewing terms used today are of
Germanic origin. And the history of beer in Europe was largely written by these hardy folk.
Beer making was kept alive as a craft by monasteries during the Middle Ages. By now
techniques had improved further. Nettles were used to flavor the beer, giving it a tart
flavor and aroma. The grain was heated over open wood fires. This resulted in the final
product having a very dark color, and smoky taste.
Germans started using hops, a relative of the nettle, to flavor beer around 1300. Hops were
imported into England, but met with much resistance. Acceptance in England was slow among
many, and as late as 1512 a churchman forbade the use of the "wicked pernicious weed, hops" in
the brewing of ale.
Brewing in these early times was a family chore. Throughout the middle ages, and before, part
of the tax paid by serfs was a quantity of beer, or ale, paid to the lord of the manor.
Gradually this changed. In villages, a family would emerge as having a superior beer recipe.
Neighbors would purchase beer from them, rather than indulge in the laborious process
themselves. In this way alehouses were born, the brewers selling their beer to fellow
villagers and travelers passing through. There developed literally thousands of different
types of beer, each alehouse producing its own distinctive brew.
Scientific instruments did not exist during these early days to control the quality of the
brew. By the fourteenth century an official post was created in many town - the al-conner, or
ale taster. His task was to taste the brew produced by an alehouse. If it didn’t meet
standards, he could downgrade the beer, reducing its price. He usually wore leather breeches
and sat on a wooden bench. A tankard of ale was poured on the bench, and he sat for half an
hour. If the bench stuck to his breeches, he ruled that the ale contained too much sugar, not
enough alcohol and was downgraded. If he could stand up unhindered, the beer was of good
quality.
In England, colleges brewed their own ale. This was continued through the 14th century. After
this time the practice gradually went away, by mid 18th century only four remained. Queens
College in Oxford brewed continuously for 600 years, until World War II.
Until the early fifteenth century beer was made by using a top fermenting yeast. The
fermenting yeast was allowed to overflow the fermenting container, or was skimmed off with a
wooden paddle or spoon. The Germans around 1420 developed a bottom fermenting yeast, which
produced a beer which would store for longer periods than the previous beers. As beer making
was primarily a winter occupation, and the beer was stored using ice procured from lakes,
rivers, and ponds during the winter, this was an important development. The German word
"lagern", meaning, "to store" caused these beers to be called "lagers". This is the primary
type of beer drank in Germany and US today. English ales are still produced using top
fermenting yeast.
The nineteenth century saw a general increase in scientific study and advancement. These new
technologies launched the Industrial Revolution, which touched every aspect of life, including
beer making. Heated rotating bins were developed to improve drying the malt, producing a
lighter, golden beer. Refrigeration enabled the brewing process to be scheduled year round,
instead of seasonal production. This also allowed beer to be shipped greater distances. A
direct result of this is the existence of the larger brewers today shipping their product all
over the world.
Also developed during this period were two important instruments for brewing - the sachrometer
and thermometer. With the thermometer the precise temperature of the beer could be determined
and controlled from start to finish. The sachrometer is a glass instrument which floats in the
liquid. By the level at which it floats, the graduations on the side of the instrument
indicate the sugar content of a liquid. It was now easier to ascertain when a brew was
finished fermenting, and the alcohol content could be determined accurately.
Most important was the research of Louis Pasteur in the 1860’s. Previous to Pasteur, it was
believed that fermentation was caused by organisms created spontaneously in the fermenting
brew. He proved that yeast were the creatures responsible for fermentation, and that they,
along with other organisms, were present in the air to which the fermenting brew was exposed.
The other organisms sometimes contaminated the fermenting brew, causing it to go bad. With
this knowledge, brewers could now isolate the best yeast cultures and have more control over
the brewing process.
Brewing has become very big business. During the late 1970’s the large brewers in the US
bought out or forced out of business many smaller, regional breweries, resulting in less
variety in beer types available. By the 1990’s, in response to consumer demand, smaller
microbreweries and brewpubs began operations, producing handcrafted local brews on a smaller
scale, mimicking the small alehouses of long ago.
Technology has also made brewing simpler for the home beer maker. Modern kits allow the home
brewer too easily and conveniently produce their own brew in their homes, like our ancestors
did many centuries ago, when home beer making was a family craft. The history of
brewing and beer making is a fascinating field of study.
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