Found this to be an interesting Read

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berryman
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Found this to be an interesting Read

Post by berryman »

Happy Hound Brewery

“I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.”
― Thomas A. Edison
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alb
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Re: Found this to be an interesting Read

Post by alb »

Yeah, I enjoyed that. Thanks!
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serving marvelous food and magnificent beers from
Fool's Gold Brewing Co.
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mashani
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Re: Found this to be an interesting Read

Post by mashani »

What that article totally misses however, is that the long term storage - the laagering as such - was not simply about the clarity/etc... but about the discovery that *it doesn't fooking get sour like ale!*

Because sour bugs do not work at those temperatures.

Beer got sour back then. A lot. Except for very strong and/or intentionally sour/aged/blended beer and/or stupendously hopped beer (like 200 IBUs of hops actually all use in bittering) ales were pretty much consumed within a week or weeks of manufacture.

So when we talk about "clean" tasting beer, that is a major factor.

The clarity is just a nice side effect that we like a lot today because we have sanitation.
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alb
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Re: Found this to be an interesting Read

Post by alb »

mashani wrote:What that article totally misses however, is that the long term storage - the laagering as such - was not simply about the clarity/etc... but about the discovery that *it doesn't fooking get sour like ale!*

Because sour bugs do not work at those temperatures.

Beer got sour back then. A lot. Except for very strong and/or intentionally sour/aged/blended beer and/or stupendously hopped beer (like 200 IBUs of hops actually all use in bittering) ales were pretty much consumed within a week or weeks of manufacture.

So when we talk about "clean" tasting beer, that is a major factor.

The clarity is just a nice side effect that we like a lot today because we have sanitation.
There's a museum brewery about a mile and a half from my house, brewing as they did in the mid-1800's. Many of the brews are indeed sours. I recently had a sour porter that was kinda weird but delicious. The first lager produced in the area was in 1852.
Proprietress, The Napping Hound Tavern
serving marvelous food and magnificent beers from
Fool's Gold Brewing Co.
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