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Wort vs beer

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So I lead to the question “is NA beer really beer then?” I think alcohol has to be included in the definition of beer. There were a couple breweries who survived prohibition making na beers. Now if beer was illegal but they were allowed to brew na beers, then na beer didn’t fit the legal definition. At least at that time.
 
So I lead to the question “is NA beer really beer then?” I think alcohol has to be included in the definition of beer. There were a couple breweries who survived prohibition making na beers. Now if beer was illegal but they were allowed to brew na beers, then na beer didn’t fit the legal definition. At least at that time.
I agree with this, but I also believe that a lot of NA beer does contain a very small percentage of alcohol.
 
I've often heard that phrase that goes something like "Brewers make wort. Yeast make beer." So would you be able to consider wort "beer" just by adding yeast to it when the yeast haven't even done anything yet? I think that beer is the product of what yeast do to the wort. The esters, the alcohols, the various flavor compounds, the biotransformation or whatever. Simply adding dead yeast to a beer that never end up fermenting it or adding viable yeast that just haven't done anything yet does not suddenly transform wort into beer. In fact, if you drank the wort before adding the yeast and then drank the wort after adding the yeast, they would taste 100% the same with zero detectable differences because there literally was no difference. On the other hand, tasting the wort at that point (regardless of whether there is yeast in it or not) and then comparing it to 4 weeks later after the fermentation was completely done, they would taste nothing alike. Beer is the result of wort having been fermented by yeast (and potentially other microorganisms as well) and I doubt anyone could convince me otherwise. Even non-alcoholic beer is usually just regular beer that has had most or all of the alcohol removed from it.
 
So I lead to the question “is NA beer really beer then?” I think alcohol has to be included in the definition of beer. There were a couple breweries who survived prohibition making na beers. Now if beer was illegal but they were allowed to brew na beers, then na beer didn’t fit the legal definition. At least at that time.

NA beer is generally defined by having 0.5% or less.

0% is alcohol-free beer.
 
I believe that's the definition in the UK. In the US and Japan, I'm pretty sure the definition of non-alcoholic is "under 1.0%."

I'm pretty sure it's 0.5%

I know with certainty that is the case in the state where I live.
 
I'm pretty sure it's 0.5%

I know with certainty that is the case in the state where I live.
Yeah, I looked it up. It's 0.5% in the US. In some countries it's 1.0%. Apparently in a lot of European countries such as Italy and Finland it's under 1.2%. Not sure why it's 1.2% and not 1.0% in those countries. In Norway it's 0.7%.

I'm not sure why I remember it being 1.0% in the US when apparently it's been 0.5% since the Volstead Act in 1919.
 
I've often heard that phrase that goes something like "Brewers make wort. Yeast make beer." So would you be able to consider wort "beer" just by adding yeast to it when the yeast haven't even done anything yet? I think that beer is the product of what yeast do to the wort. The esters, the alcohols, the various flavor compounds, the biotransformation or whatever. Simply adding dead yeast to a beer that never end up fermenting it or adding viable yeast that just haven't done anything yet does not suddenly transform wort into beer. In fact, if you drank the wort before adding the yeast and then drank the wort after adding the yeast, they would taste 100% the same with zero detectable differences because there literally was no difference. On the other hand, tasting the wort at that point (regardless of whether there is yeast in it or not) and then comparing it to 4 weeks later after the fermentation was completely done, they would taste nothing alike. Beer is the result of wort having been fermented by yeast (and potentially other microorganisms as well) and I doubt anyone could convince me otherwise. Even non-alcoholic beer is usually just regular beer that has had most or all of the alcohol removed from it.
There's a whole world of gueze and lambics that insist brewers don't even need to add anything to their wort to get beer.
 
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