6 row has greater diastatic power than most grains including 2 row. 6 row is mostly used to convert adjunct grains like corn and rice, hence its what Bud and other "breweries" use so then can make "beer" cheaply. Also shiners use it to convert their corn mashes.
Beers in the 50's, for example, had better flavor & color than they do now.
In light of that, I'd question how much they used then versus now? Beers in the 50's, for example, had better flavor & color than they do now.
6 row has greater diastatic power than most grains including 2 row. 6 row is mostly used to convert adjunct grains like corn and rice, hence its what Bud and other "breweries" use so then can make "beer" cheaply. Also shiners use it to convert their corn mashes.
The idea that using corn and other adjuncts to brew beer in the U.S. is a recent invention in order to make beer cheaper is a myth. Brewers have been using corn and other non-barley fermentables since Europeans first landed in North America. For one thing, barley doesn't grow well in New England, and they certainly didn't have time to plant a crop, let it grow, harvest it, and malt it before they started making beer. Importing barley from Europe was prohibitively expensive.
When the breweries started back up after Prohibition they didn't suddenly decide to make cheap beer using corn. They were just using the same recipes they'd been using all along. While you and I might not care for Bud, using corn and rice in beer is not some evil corporate idea they invented.
I'm curious then, would there be any advantage to using a small percentage of 6-row in a regular recipe mash? Would that help you get better conversion from your 2-row and your specialty grains or is it only useful on corn and rice for some reason?
I'm curious then, would there be any advantage to using a small percentage of 6-row in a regular recipe mash? Would that help you get better conversion from your 2-row and your specialty grains or is it only useful on corn and rice for some reason?
True enough with prepared foods, cigs & such. But beer was definitely better by a bit compared to how much lighter they are now. I tried to get the recipe for Stroh's Bock but they never answered back?! Recipes for Bud, Stroh's, Blatz, POC, & a few others from back then would be great to try. My experiments with what I call hybrid lagers was an attempt to figure them out. So far, with 2 or 3 versions, I've gotten light & dark versions. The light one taste Euro or German to me. But not like the old school American ones. Gotta try some Bavarian malts next time maybe? The malt, hop & yeast balances were great in my opinion at that time.I've never tasted '50's beer, but I'll take your word for it. I've heard some interesting theories on this topic, though. One is that everything became more bland in the late '50's/early '60's with the advent of frozen TV dinners and canned and boxed meals, compared to the days when the wife/mother stayed home and cooked everything from scratch. More people started smoking cigarettes with filters because they were "smoother". Then in the '70's you had the "light beer is healthier" movement. It would be interesting to brew a Budweiser from the recipes they were using in every decade from the 1800's until today to see what the differences were. While I'm sure AB keeps a microscope trained on the bottom line, I'm sure they also respond to what their customers want, which ties closely to the bottom line.
Then I guess the term Pre Prohibition beer needs to be stricken from history, because the beer made Pre Prohibition is the same swill that Bud and Miller make.
The idea that using corn and other adjuncts to brew beer in the U.S. is a recent invention in order to make beer cheaper is a myth. Brewers have been using corn and other non-barley fermentables since Europeans first landed in North America. For one thing, barley doesn't grow well in New England, and they certainly didn't have time to plant a crop, let it grow, harvest it, and malt it before they started making beer. Importing barley from Europe was prohibitively expensive.
When the breweries started back up after Prohibition they didn't suddenly decide to make cheap beer using corn. They were just using the same recipes they'd been using all along. While you and I might not care for Bud, using corn and rice in beer is not some evil corporate idea they invented.
There are some contradictions here. This would also imply that rice grows better than barley in NE, which it certainly does not.
...using corn and rice isn't a new idea that AB suddenly came up with to cheat their customers. American consumer tastes have changed dramatically over time. We used to like heavier English style ales. Then the Germans came over and started brewing lagers. They became very popular, so all breweries started making lighter colored and flavored beers. Adding corn and rice is a good way to achieve that light, dry style. Believe me, no matter how cheap it is to make AB wouldn't make it if their customers didn't want it.
Yeah, they do have a way of driving customer demand. I just wish I know then what I now know about brewing to better describe what might've been used to brew beers back then. The only way I've ever been able to describe it is "that real beer flavor". I remember the tastes of them, but can't describe them to anyone else beyond that other than color.![]()
I doubt the colonists were using rice in their beer. They certainly used corn, pumpkin, whatever they could find that would ferment.
From what I've read of the history of it AB started using rice to stand out from Miller and Coors. Their customers liked it, as evidenced by the fact that AB sells a lot more beer than Miller-Coors. This "lighter beer sells better" thing has been going on since the 1800's.
There are some contradictions here. This would also imply that rice grows better than barley in NE, which it certainly does not.
Beers in the 50's, for example, had better flavor & color than they do now.
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I live in vermont, I started brewing there, started drinking there, ect... We have the most microbreweries per capita and a lot of them lead the charts over at beer advocate. Don't tell me beer tasted better 60 years ago