Beer predates wine as one of the oldest known alcoholic beverages (only mead surpasses it in age), and the discovery of the fermentation of grain is closely linked to the transition from a nomadic society to a settled agricultural society during the Neolithic Revolution.
The fermentation of starchy carbohydrates is a more complicated matter, however, than the transformation of grape sugars into alcohol, as a grain’s starch must be converted into sugar before fermentation can begin. Thus, the aim of the brewing process is twofold: the brewer must first derive the wort, a sugar-rich liquid, from malted grain and then the brewer must ferment the wort. Typically, the raw ingredients required for this process are water, yeast, hops, and a starch source. Hops, the dried flower clusters that provide flavor and bitterness to beer, have both preservative and antiseptic qualities that inhibit bacterial growth. This simple formula was detailed as early as 1516, in the Bavarian Purity Law (Reinheitsgebot), which codified the three ingredients authorized for beer production as barley, hops, and water. The action of yeast in fermentation was at the time undiscovered, and wheat, a component of Hefe-Weizen and white beer styles, was reserved for the production of bread.
In the modern brewing process, the first step is to create the malted barley, or malt. Barley—the cereal grain of choice for most beers—is steeped in water for approximately two days to promote germination of the grain. Once the grain begins to germinate, or sprout, it is transferred to compartments with controlled temperature and moisture levels. As the sprout grows to nearly an inch in length, the enzyme amylase is produced. Amylase converts the starchy carbohydrates of the grain into the fermentable sugars
Suggestion for further improvement - the CMS specifies for certified level that the colours of liqueurs should be known. Would be good to add a column to the above list!
is the answer to the question:
What is the minimum proof of British Naval Strength rum?
114? because it says that 110 is correct.
Thanks a lot.
James,
To answer your question ec.europa.eu/.../list.html
There is something in the EU called a TSG or 'Traditional Specialty Guarantee'. As you can see from the link. Kreik, Faro, Lambic/Geuze and Vielle Geuze and Vielle Kriek are all TSG - protected like PGI. So yes, Lambic is specifically Belgian as are it's many amalgamations.
Some rearranging in the beer section about gueuze might eliminate some possible confusion. Gueuze is brewed with aged hops, not bottled with aged hops. The hops are aged to remove any flavor character or bitterness or to lambic wort, but still retain their preservative qualities.
www.bjcp.org/.../style17.php
www.cantillon.be/gueuze-en
Secondary fermentation results in the bottle naturally as a result of the blending process. "...gueuze is a blend of two or more lambics of different ages, with the younger beer providing the sugars needed for refermentation in the bottle." Oxford Companion to Beer, "gueuze," p. 411.
This from the Oxford Companion to Beer entry on Brettanomyces (attributed to Chad Michael Yakobson, pub. 2012): "The genus of Brettanomyces has five species, of which two are currently used in brewing, Brettanomyces bruxellensis and Brettanomyces anomalus [. . . .] Brewers show little regard for scientific nomenclature and instead brewers will often refer to a species by its strain name, which confusingly is usually the old nomenclature that yeast scientists no longer use. Strains such as Brettanomyces lambicus and Brettanomyces claussenii are actually Brettanomyces bruxellensis and Brettanomyces anomalus, respectively."
Anyone have insight on this? Would it be more accurate to say, "Lambic beers, a unique specialty of Belgium, are spontaneously fermented in open-top containers with native wild yeasts, such as the species, Brettanomyces bruxellensis, and one of its many strains, Brettanomyces lambicus"?