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Old 09-18-2006   #1 (permalink)
Michaelangelica's Avatar
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Smile Beer

Why beer?
Good question.
Why do we have it?

I don't know.
I just thought it might make an interesting thread
History, science, sociology, psychology, road safety, chemistry, nutrition, home brew, preferences, drugs, stories etc???

For those in Tasmania - a Phd sociology student wants volunteers to drink beer for his thesis.!!!!
Media.Office@utas.edu.au
and
BEER CAN REDUCE RISK OF HEART DISEASE: STUDY (The World Today: 12/09/2006)
http://www.abc.net.au/worldtoday/con...6/s1739322.htm


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Old 09-18-2006   #2 (permalink)
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Re: Beer

My understanding...

Water quality back in the day was very poor, and bacteria caused a lot of deaths. As a way around this, the process of fermentation came into greater use, and those who drank more beer lived longer due their drinking of fermented beer (w/o bacteria) instead of local water (w/bacteria).
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Old 09-18-2006   #3 (permalink)
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Arrow Re: Beer

When my meds have run out,
and I'm startin' to pout,
there is less for to fear,
if I crack open a bier.


Not only is bier a substitute for water, it contains a lot of calories, and it's medicinal.


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Old 09-19-2006   #4 (permalink)
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Re: Beer

As in the middle age in most of the monastery there were breweries, maybe beer was a reason to become a monk and there were so many monks in the middle age that now everyone has at least one ancestor who had a brother as a monk and therefore we all have the urge to have a beer in our blood...
I don't think I would defend this thesis anywhere else unless here in the watercooler.

But serious have you already hought about how drunk the monks must have gotten every night? Maybe this explains some visioins some of them had


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Old 09-19-2006   #5 (permalink)
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Re: Beer

There is also evidence that beer brewing goes back to Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, more than 5,000 years BC (and potentially before that, but the evidence doesn't warrant such as a conclusion).

Wiki has pages for both "beer" and the "History of Beer." Check 'em out!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_beer
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Old 09-22-2006   #6 (permalink)
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Smile Re: Beer

http://www.unogateway.com/vnews/disp...1370fd74ac4cer

A beer a day may keep the doctor away: Brew could benefit health


Patrick Doty
September 22, 2006

“Sometimes when I reflect back on all the beer I drink I feel ashamed. Then I look into the glass and think about the workers in the brewery and all of their hopes and dreams. If I didn’t drink this beer, they might be out of work and their dreams would be shattered. Then I say to myself, ‘It is better that I drink this beer and let their dreams come true than be selfish and worry about my liver.’”

These words, written by the wise Jack Handy of SNL fame, are what I think about every time I drink beer. I’m just taking one for the team. But recent studies have claimed that beer isn’t as bad for your health as you may think. Sure, it will maim your liver when consumed in obscene quantities, but when you really look at what beer is and how it is made, moderate consumption can be beneficial to your health.

Alco-heal

More than 100 studies have found alcohol to consistently reduce the risk of heart-related ailments by 25 to 40 percent,


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Old 09-22-2006   #7 (permalink)
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Smile Re: Beer

This guy nearly qualified for a Darwin Award
http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky...t/15569781.htm
Quote:
Posted on Fri, Sep. 22, 2006
email this
print this
HE HAD BEER, THEN HE HAD BEAR


Officials at the Beijing Zoo said they won't punish a drunken Chinese migrant worker who jumped into a panda enclosure, was bitten by the bear and retaliated by chomping down on the animal's back, state media said Wednesday.

The Beijing Morning Post said Zhang Xinyan drank four jugs of beer at a restaurant near the zoo before visiting Gu Gu the panda on Tuesday.

"He felt a sudden urge to touch the panda with his hand" and jumped into the enclosure, the newspaper said.

The panda, who was asleep, was startled and bit Zhang, 35, on the right leg, it said. Zhang got angry and kicked the panda, which then bit his other leg. A tussle ensued, the paper said.

"I bit the fellow in the back," the newspaper quoted Zhang as saying. "Its skin was quite thick." Other tourists called a zookeeper, who got the panda under control by spraying it with water, reports said.

Newspaper photographs showed Zhang lying on a hospital bed with blood-soaked bandages and a seam of stitches running down his leg.

The Beijing Youth Daily quoted Zhang as saying that he had seen pandas on television and "they seemed to get along well with people."

"No one ever said they would bite people," Zhang said.


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Old 09-22-2006   #8 (permalink)
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Re: Beer

We have threads about Beer and "Put-Out Day."

This forum needs girls but BAD.

TFS


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Old 09-24-2006   #9 (permalink)
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Smile Re: Beer

Quote:
Originally Posted by TheFaithfulStone
We have threads about Beer and "Put-Out Day."

This forum needs girls but BAD.

TFS
I agree.

but are the wimps winning?
Lemon flavoured ! low alcohol beer!!
Is this blasphemy?

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article...372662,00.html

Quote:
The Sunday Times - Britain

The Sunday Times September 24, 2006

New brews launched as drinkers lose taste for strong ale
Marc Horne
BRITISH drinkers are snubbing strong continental lagers, forcing brewers to launch weaker versions of them.

Lagers such as Stella Artois and Beck’s, which contain about 5% alcohol, will soon be sold alongside weaker sister brands with an alcohol content of 3-4%.

Beck’s Green Lemon, a citrus-flavoured beer containing 2.5% alcohol, is to be launched shortly. And Budweiser recently announced Bud Silver, a 4% beer that will be sold in a pint bottle with a “gripper” handle so as not to appear to be a wimp’s drink.

The trend is being fuelled by a slump in demand for premium lagers


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Old 09-24-2006   #10 (permalink)
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Re: Beer

This quote brings me to the point why Belgian beers (like Stella Artois) are generally on the strong side compared to other "standard" beers or ales.

Different countries had different ways to deal with alcoholism : closing time for pubs like in the UK, prohibition like in the US or very high taxes. In Belgium we had a law in 1919 prohibitting the sale of "strong" alcohols or liquors in pubs (actually anything stronger than port wine). The tradition of "beer plus beer chaser" ("Bier und Schnaps" in German) disppeared completely.

Up to that time, beers were generally in the 3 to 4 % alcohol range. Now some brewers created the "specials", that went into the 5 to 6 % alcohol range. Starting the brewing proces with more solids allowed more differentiation in the tastes. In due course, 5° became the standard for lager (e.g. Stella Artois) and stronger beers (like the famous "abbey-beers") got a growning share of the market.

Sanctus's posting states that most medieval monastries had a brewery, but the beer they brewed for their own use was a very weak stuff (I have seen quite a number of recepies). Most of them also brewed strong beers, but they were (and still are in a small number of cases) intended as moneymakers. Indeed the monks ware smart enough not to count exclusively on donations from pilgrims or donations for masses for their material survival.


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