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Books > Food & Drink > Beverages > Alcoholic beverages > Beers
Explore the history of brewing and beer culture in Louisville,
Kentucky.
Montana's brewing history stretches back more than 150 years to the
state's days as a territory. But the art of brewing in Montana has
come a long way since the frontier era. Today, nearly forty craft
breweries span the Treasure State, and the quality of their output
rivals the best craft beer produced anywhere in the country. Maybe
it's because there's also a little piece of Montana in every glass,
as the state's brewers pride themselves on using cold mountain
water and locally sourced barley harvested from Montana's ample
fields. From grain to glass, " Montana Beer: A Guide to Breweries
in Big Sky Country" tells the story of the brewers and breweries
that make the Treasure State's brew so special.
Jonny Garrett, cofounder of the YouTube sensation Craft Beer Channel, travels in search of the deeper cultural impact of brewing—how it has become one of the world’s most important inventions and shaped our lives for millennia.
What’s the oldest and most consumed alcoholic beverage on earth? Beer, of course. And it might just be one of our more important inventions.
Since its creation thirteen thousand years ago, our love of beer has shaped everything from religious ceremonies to advertising, and architecture to bioengineering. The people who built the pyramids were paid in ale; the first fridge was built for beer, not food; bacteria was discovered while investigating sour beer; Germany’s beer halls hosted Hitler’s rise to power; and brewer’s yeast may yet be the answer to climate change.
In The Meaning of Beer, award-winning beer writer Jonny Garrett tells the stories of these incredible human moments and inventions, taking readers to some of the best-known beer destinations in the world—Munich and Oktoberfest, Carlsberg Brewery’s historic laboratory, St. Louis and the home of Budweiser—as well as those lesser known, from a five-thousand-year-old brewery in the Egyptian desert to Arctic Svalbard, home to the world’s most northerly pub.
Ultimately, this is not a book about how we made beer, but how beer made us.
These days beer could not be more popular. New craft breweries open
by the week; most pubs routinely serve several draught real ales;
supermarkets stock an astonishing range of the best beers from all
over the world, and BrewDog raises millions by crowdfunding. Even
Majestic Wines now sells beer.But until now, though people have
always written evocatively and passionately about this delicious
beverage, no-one has collected all the best beer writing into one
volume - even though the same job has often been done for wine.Now
the award-winning beer writer Adrian Tierney-Jones has put that
right, with this endlessly entertaining anthology, packaged as a
beautiful small-format hardback perfect for the gift market. In it
you'll find great writing celebrating good ale from A.E. Housman
and Ernest Hemingway to Inspector Morse, Ian Rankin and Ice Cold in
Alex, as well as the best beer writers of today like Peter Brown
and Evan Rail, and the funniest, most delicious celebrations of
beer in fiction and poetry.
Considerations in the construction of a brewery are given voice
here in detail; they include: site selection, wells and water,
engines and boilers, machinery, malt mills, conveyers, mash tuns,
pumping apparatus, hoppers, coolers, refrigerators, fermenting
tuns, hop and yeast presses, cooperage and more. This is a reprint.
Originally published in 1880.
First published in London 1903. A detailed and comprehensive
treatise interspersed with sundry anecdotes and reminiscences in
the author's own inimitable style. Contents Include: History of
Drink - Drinks Ancient and Modern - Some Old Recipes - Glorious
Beer - All Ale - A Discourse on Spirits - Cups Which Cheer - Punch
- Strange Drinks - Champagne - Old and New Wines - Cocktails -
Cider - Cordials and Liqueurs - Hangover Cures - Temperance - Index
of Recipes etc.
Presenting both the concerns and problems of beer consumption as
well as the emerging evidence of benefit, Handbook of Beer Health
and Disease Prevention offers a balanced view of today's findings
and the potential of tomorrow's research.
From a beverage of warriors to a cheap and affordable commodity,
beer has been a part of our consumption for nearly 8000 years. Like
most alcoholic drinks it has been prone to abuse and in some
counties the per capita consumption of beer has led to considerable
health risks.
However, just as wine in moderation has been proposed to promote
health, research is showing that beer -- and the ingredients in
beer -- can have similar impact on improving health, and in some
instances preventing disease. For example, some cancers like
bladder cancers and the incidence of cardiovascular disease are
reported to be lower in moderate beer drinkers. Furthermore there
is a considerable body of emerging evidence to show that the
anti-oxidant capacity of beers is high. It has been argued by some
that the total antioxidants ingested in some beer drinkers equates
that consumed by red wine drinkers.
The key to this, of course, is understanding and this volume
presents a collection of the most current writings on the subject
of beer and it's potential in health.
Winner of the 2009 Best Drinks and Health Book in the World -
"Gourmand World Cookbook Awards
"*The most comprehensive coverage of the broad range of topics
related to the role of beer and beer ingredients in health
*Addresses the impact of beer and beer ingredients on cancers,
cardiovascular disease, anti-oxidant benefits, and other health
related concerns Presents a holistic view from beer brewing to the
isolation of beer-related compounds. *Appropriate for scientists
and researchers from a variety of fields and industries from beer
production to health-care professionals *Consistent organization of
each chapter provides easy-access to key points and summaries
*Self-contained chapters written by subject matter experts
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