Hegh
Well-Known Member
We need a nutritional anthropologist...
...waiting...
What, Deb didn't show up? It works for Alton Brown all the time!
...waiting...
What, Deb didn't show up? It works for Alton Brown all the time!
I think the whole smokey character to be over way over estimated.
Perhaps a little in the background, but it is actually rather difficult to make smoked malt. You have to pretty much put the malt in a smoker made for that purpose and smoke the sh** out of it. A kiln is not a smoker.
they carry it to the kiln covered with haircloth, where they give it gentle heats (after they speard it very thin abroad) till it be dry, an din the meanwhile they turn it often that it be uniformly dried. For the more it be dried (yet must it be done with soft fire), the sweeter and better the malt is and the longer it will continue.
At Elmley Castle (Worcestershire) in 1446, for example, alebrewers were proscribed from selling ale more than four days old.
I now think both the sourness and smokiness were over estimated.
I would think that if you are talking about hopped beers, those were probably not too much different either. I have no data to back this up, but if our taste buds haven't changed so radically, could our preferences in beer have changed that much?
Three letters B M C.
I wonder if BMC came first, and then people decided they desired it (based on price and marketing, and eventually self-imposed, self-taught "preference"), or if people's desire for BMC came first, and then the BMC itself. (I would say the first is truer.)
Honestly, I think those beers are entirely a construct of cheap corn, industrial automation, and shareholder driven profiteering. Removing the first two, and probably the third as well, I have a hard time imagining they drank anything like it 500 years ago. They are notoriously hard to clone right? I would imagine they would have been unlikely to spend so much time and labor trying to create something that tasted so much like pilsner + urine.
November 30, 2006 - Ambitious Brew Part One
We learn about the history of beer in the USA from Maureen Ogle, author of "Ambitious Brew - The Story of American Beer." Part one takes us from the Pilgrims to Prohibition.
http://media.libsyn.com/media/basicbrewing/bbr11-30-06.mp3
December 7, 2006 - Ambitious Brew Part Two
We continue our discussion about the history of beer in the USA with Maureen Ogle, author of "Ambitious Brew - The Story of American Beer." Part two takes us from Prohibition to the present day.
http://media.libsyn.com/media/basicbrewing/bbr12-07-06.mp3
A bunch of American beer history...
I have tasted midas touch and several beers brewed with wormwood and gruit. The worst was the wormwood, it left a bitter taste you could not wash out of your mouth, horrendous. The gruit and midas touch were almost as bad. Todays beers are better even when you let BMC into this. Beer is cooking, cooking is science and science has progressed, why would you think beer has not progressed? I am not 500 years old but some days I feel like it.
Ich am a Cornishman, ale I can brew
It will make one cacke, also to spew.
It is thick and smokey and also it is thin
It is like wash as pigs had wrestled there in
I have an interesting counter example to my own theory. In the middle ages they used to torture animals before killing them because they thought that pain and fear made the meat taste better. Now we know that it actually releases toxins into the meat and poisons it.![]()
In the middle ages they used to torture animals before killing them because they thought that pain and fear made the meat taste better.
I have an interesting counter example to my own theory. In the middle ages they used to torture animals before killing them because they thought that pain and fear made the meat taste better. Now we know that it actually releases toxins into the meat and poisons it.![]()
Another counter to your theory is the fact that back in the day (pre-refrigeration), "well hung" meat was aged in the open air, often to the point of smelling bad! They'd just cut off the rotted parts and go to town.
I think it's not unlikely that the meat produced by this method wouldn't be too palatable to today's consumers, even those who really love dry-aged meat.
This would point toward tastes changing over time to me.
Another thing to remember is that tastes change over distance; for example, in parts of Europe, people dig aperitif liqueurs like Aperol, Campari or Cynar. They're not so popular here in the US- people don't go for that type of bitterness (or we're not so crazy as to like a bitter artichoke liqueur) here.
I suspect that medieval beer was certainly infected by our standards, if it was kept for any reasonable length of time.
Wouldn't the failure to boil the wort after the mash mean that whatever water impurities and resulting diseases that the consumption beer was meant to avoid, may not actually have been avoided? Seems to me that the boil would have been a necessary process to ensure that the end product wasn't as "bad" as the water source it started from...
When you are hungry, almost anything is palatable...
I don't doubt that beer back then was consistent at the same brewery. I imagine that the brewers used the same proven procedures each time. I highly doubt it was the same beer as we have today though. And I doubt it tasted as good in general (although I still don't see why people brew Lambics either...)
In the old poem Piers Ploughman, written in the 1300's a little before
Chaucer, a corrupt priest says that he would have no more conscience about
taking silver than he would about taking a "drought of good ale". FWIW.
You could interpret that as meaning only that there was such a thing as
good ale, or it might mean that good ale was so rare that he would take
some without a thought.
Jim![]()