Nope. I enjoy attending others' brew days. If they do something I wouldn't, I might offer advice. If they don't take it, I just give them a little Edmund Fitzgerald and move on.
I think Kombat's general idea that palates have changed to meet with more desirable beers is a solid one. I think anyone from the old days would find a beer they liked much better today as a result of knowledge and skill refining. Then again, we also intentionally inoculate our beer with brett when we are looking for that quality. But at this point it's intentional.
tl;dr
Anyone else have this problem?
So, Kombat, tell me, which of these or the various other poetic accounts of ale convey this disgust you are so certain about?
based solely on the numerous literary praises [beer] was still something people yearned for.
Example: fermenting in a carboy and then using a bucket with too much head space for secondary.
"For a quart of ale is a dish for a king" - William Shakespeare A Winters Tale (1623)
"Who cares how time advances? I am drinking ale today." - Edgar Allan Poe
(1848)
"But if at church they would give some ale. And a pleasant fire our souls to regale. Wed sing and wed pray all the live long day, Nor ever once from the church to stray." William Blake
The last one was written prior to Blakes death in 1827. So, Kombat, tell me, which of these or the various other poetic accounts of ale convey this disgust you are so certain about?
so, wast it? yes?
Are you sure about that? Yes!
How can we ever really know? Literature.
so, was beer every bit as good then as it is today? Possibly, possibly not. But I can assure you they enjoyed it every bit as much.
Permit me to draw on my old Discrete Mathematics studies and employ a rudimentary Proof by Contradiction.
If I'm wrong, then the only logical conclusion is that beer has not improved at all in several centuries, and was perfected several generations ago. None of the brewing advances in the past millennia (water treatment, mash pH, fermentation temperature control, studies of yeast health and pitch rate, fining and filtration, forced carbonation) have improved the actual flavour of the beer, but rather have been pursued purely for other motivations (such as reducing production costs or increasing batch yields of otherwise identical beer).
This is obviously false, therefore my original assertion that today's beer is superior to the beer of the middle/dark/prehistoric ages is proven.
Thousands and thousands of pages of prose were written praising men and women of the day (in the context of lust and passion), even though, for the most part, they had atrocious hygiene by today's standards, and generally smelled bad and were hairier (including the women, if you know what I mean).
Do you think William Shakespeare could not appreciate the superior aesthetics of Kate Upton versus Marie Antoinette?
They praised it because it was the best they had, at the time. They also thought baroque music was the peak of musical entertainment, and oil paint smeared on some canvas was the top of the art world. That doesn't mean they wouldn't soil their frilly britches if they ever saw an Ansel Adams print or watched "Avatar" in 3D.
... improvements in beer were made because of the desire for a better profit.
Thousands and thousands of pages of prose were written praising men and women of the day (in the context of lust and passion), even though, for the most part, they had atrocious hygiene by today's standards, and generally smelled bad and were hairier (including the women, if you know what I mean).
Do you think William Shakespeare could not appreciate the superior aesthetics of Kate Upton versus Marie Antoinette?
They praised it because it was the best they had, at the time. They also thought baroque music was the peak of musical entertainment, and oil paint smeared on some canvas was the top of the art world. That doesn't mean they wouldn't soil their frilly britches if they ever saw an Ansel Adams print or watched "Avatar" in 3D.
If all you had to choose from was nasty brown water that would literally make you sick and possibly kill you, bud light would taste like the heaven.
Originally Posted by DSorenson
... improvements in beer were made because of the desire for a better profit.
ftfy
Which is still the case even in this century, and will always be the case for centuries to come.
hygeine by todays standard is driven hard by employment and supported by air conditioning.
I suspect William shakespear would have thought Kate Upton were ill and disfigured given the general shape of women historically.
Oil paint smeared on some canvas still is the top of the art world, billions of dollars in trade proves it.
None of this proves that beer was subpar and drank only because they were no better options.
But that doesn't mean that - given the chance - they wouldn't have found today's beer far superior.
I didn't say there were no better options (for example, maybe wine was pretty good back then). I'm simply saying the very best beer from 800 AD would be vastly, vastly inferior in flavour to virtually any beer produced in 2014. But since drinking 2014 beer was not an option in 800 AD, and 800 AD beer was all they ever knew, they developed a palate for the flavour and maybe even thought it was pretty good. But that doesn't mean that - given the chance - they wouldn't have found today's beer far superior.
I would concede to say that palate have changed to meet with more varieties of beer through evolutionary changes in barley, hops, and yeast strain selectivity. But to convey that 1000 years ago palates were so unrefined that they could tolerate sh!t is absurd. I have no doubt that advances in brewing have taken beer to places that people were not able to go 1000 year ago but based solely on the numerous literary praises it was still something people yearned for.
Fact is, it's improved. The reason is irrelevant. A 1700's man would think a 2014 woman looked and smelled like an angel.
Social conventions of the time equated a little chubbiness with wealth. However, outright obesity was still considered unattractive, and athletic builds were held in even higher esteem.
Surely you're not serious, are you? Are James Cameron, Steven Spielberg, and Michael Bay drawing millions of people into art galleries for hundred-million-dollar opening weekends of their latest art exhibitions? Are there 57 channels on my TV devoted to the art world? (Is there even one?) There are multiple channels devoted to music and movies, but nothing on traditional painting. And you seriously wrote that it's the "top of the art world?" How many millions of people tuned in to watch the Grammies? The Oscars? The Emmys? Heck, even the Tony awards? Now how many people give 2 sh*ts about an art auction?
"Top of the art world." OK.
I didn't say there were no better options (for example, maybe wine was pretty good back then). I'm simply saying the very best beer from 800 AD would be vastly, vastly inferior in flavour to virtually any beer produced in 2014. But since drinking 2014 beer was not an option in 800 AD, and 800 AD beer was all they ever knew, they developed a palate for the flavour and maybe even thought it was pretty good. But that doesn't mean that - given the chance - they wouldn't have found today's beer far superior.
Maybe we're getting a little off-topic here. I could be wrong.
Hops may not have been used in beer for "thousands" of years. It might only be hundreds of years, or a thousand-ish. So it would make sense that beer from 400BC was surely less hoppy, and maybe less aromatic than it is today. So it had to be different, but would a drinker from that time be disgusted by the hop aroma of an American IPA? Would William Blake or William Shakespeare be turned off by something as run of the mill as Sierra Nevada Pale Ale? But hops are more prominent now.
Crystal malt is a relatively new invention, isn't it? And an ale without crystal... that means no Irish reds, no pales. So crystal malt makes beer different and probably "better."
If ancient beer tasted anything like DFH Midas Touch, it was gross.