Brewing Local - Stan Hieronymus

Brewing Local

American-Grown Beer

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
350 Seiten
2016
Brewers Publications (Verlag)
978-1-938469-27-5 (ISBN)
18,65 inkl. MwSt
Beer has never been a stranger to North America. Author Stan Hieronymous explains how before European colonization, Native Americans were making beer from fermented corn, such as the tiswin of the Apache and Pueblo tribes. European colonists new to the continent were keen to use whatever local flavorings were at hand like senna, celandine, chicory, pawpaw, and persimmon. Before barley took hold in the 1700s, early fermentables included corn (maize), wheat bran, and, of course, molasses.



Later immigrants to the young United States brought with them German and Czech yeasts and brewing techniques, setting the stage for the ubiquitous Pilsner lagers that came to dominate by the late 1800s. But local circumstances led to novel techniques, like corn and rice adjuncts, or the selection of lager yeasts that could ferment at ale-like temperatures. Despite the emergence of brewing giants with national distribution, “common brewers” continued to make “common beer” for local taverns and pubs. Distinctive American styles arose. Pennsylvania Swankey, Kentucky Common, Choc beer, Albany Ale, and steam beer—now called California common—all distinctive styles born of their place.



From its post-war fallow period, the US brewing industry was reignited in the 1980s by the craft beer scene. Follow Stan Hieronymous as he explores the wealth of ingredients available to the locavores and beer aficionados of today. He takes the reader through grains, hops, trees, plants, roots, mushrooms, and chilis—all ingredients that can be locally grown, cultivated, or foraged. The author supplies tips on how to find these as well as dos and don'ts of foraging. He investigates the nascent wild hops movement and initiatives like the Local Yeast Project. Farm breweries are flourishing, with more breweries operating on farms than the US had total breweries fewer than 50 years ago. He gives recipes too, each one showing how novel, local ingredients can be used to add fermentables, flavor, and hop-like bitterness, and how they might be cultivated or gathered in the wild. Armed with this book, brewers in America have never been better equipped to create a beer that captures the essence of its place.

Stan Hieronymus is a professional journalist and amateur brewer who has made beer his beat since 1993. The editor at Realbeer.com, Stan has written hundreds of articles for periodicals, written Brewing with Wheat (2010), Brew like a Monk (2005), and For the Love of Hops (2012) for Brewers Publications and contributed to several other publications, including 1001 Beers You Must Taste Before You Die. His travels have taken him to breweries in every state in the country as well as behind the scenes in internationally famous breweries such as De Sint-Sixtusadij Westvleterten and Private Weissbierbrauerei G. Schneider & Sohn. Hieronymus lives in St. Louis, Missouri with his wife, Daria.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Foreword

Introduction: The Importance of Being Local



Part I – Local, Now and Then

1 Beer From a Place

2 Tiswin to Choc

3 King Corn



Part II – Where Beer Is Grown

4 Cultivating Beer

5 Foraging for Beer

6 Foraging for Yeast



Part III – From Farms, Gardens, Fields, and Woods

7 Grains

8 Trees

9 Plants

10 Roots

11 Mushrooms

12 Chiles



Part IV – Brewing Local

13 History + Local = Recipes

Le Pamplemousse Enorme

1835 Albany Ale

Kentucky Common

Your Father's Mustache

Indigenous: All-American Chile Corn Lager

The Great Pumpkin Ale

Rosemary Pumpkin Belgian Ale

Sweet Potato Ale

D.A.M.'s Bloom BRU Kölsch

Our Mother the Meadow

Single Tree: Hickory

Dead Leaves & Burdock

Birch Sap Black Bière de Garde

Paw Paw

Pecan Porter

Cucumber Crush

Beet Berliner Weisse

Beets, Rhymes, and Life

2015 Hibernal Dichotomous

Wee Shroomy

Golden Shroomy

Dark Old Ale



Appendix: Resources

Bibliography

Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort Boulder, CO
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 224 mm
Gewicht 567 g
Themenwelt Sachbuch/Ratgeber Essen / Trinken Getränke
Technik Lebensmitteltechnologie
ISBN-10 1-938469-27-5 / 1938469275
ISBN-13 978-1-938469-27-5 / 9781938469275
Zustand Neuware
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