Brew Day! One of my favorite hobbies is crafting my own personal blends of craft brews, whether its beer, wine, or mead. Today I'm pulling out my brew pot for science's sake and experiment with something different in beer, natural and sustainable hops alternatives. Beer, or something similar to beer, has been make as far back as we have history. The hops that are found in beer provide an important role, they act as a preservative to the precious liquid and stave of mold and other contaminants. Prior to the 13th century, though, hops were rarely seen in ale recipes. Instead, gruit was used to help preserve and flavor ales and beers of the time. Gruit is a generic term for one or more of a combination of plants and herbs including mugwort, yarrow, and sweet gale when used for brewing. By the 15th century hops had made its way into brew pots thanks in part to taxes levied against gruit crops. By the 16th century, hops had become the staple in br...
What came first beer or bread? I don't know but I do know that you need yeast for both. Brewing our own beer, wine, and mead is a hobby that my Love and I share. It is rewarding to craft something that helped make modern man and has a little bit of a rebel side. Many historians point to brewing as the turning point of human history. The grain fields that filled ovens with bread and tankards with grog required year-round care, transforming us from nomadic tribes to a settled society. By making our own we are being a part of brewing's long history. Making Alcohol Water + sugar + yeast + time = alcohol. That's it. Yeasties get comfy in a room temperature tank of water and binge on sugar. The sugar is converted into two waste products, carbon dioxide gas and alcohol. As long is there is no competition from other types of micro-baddies the yeast will reproduce and, over the course of a week or two, consume and convert all the sugar into carbon dioxide and alcohol. You could...