A History of the World in 6 Glasses
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Started reading July 3, 2018
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50,000 years ago
Daniel D Geller
Hunters and gatherers migrated out of africa
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12,000 years ago,
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farming
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Africa around 150,000 years ago, water had been humankind's basic drink.
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new beverage derived from barley and wheat, the cereal grains
Daniel D Geller
Farmers
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no beer before 10,000 BCE,
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widespread in the Near East by
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4000...
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I...
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(Ancient beer had grains, chaff, and other debris floating on its surface, so a straw was necessary to avoid swallowing them.)
Daniel D Geller
Cool dude
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Such grains provided an unexciting but reliable source of food. Although unsuitable for consumption when raw, they
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can be made edible by roughly pounding or crushing them and then soaking them in water. Initially, they were probably just mixed into soup.
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Cereal grains, it was soon discovered, had another unusual property: Unlike other foodstuffs, they could be stored
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for consumption months or even years later, if kept dry and safe.
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Fertile Crescent there is archaeological evidence from around 10,000 BCE of flint-bladed sickles for harvesting cereal grains,
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hunter-gatherers had previously led semisettled rather than entirely nomadic lives,
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the ability to store cereal grains began to encourage people to stay in one place.
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In one hour he gathered more than two pounds of grain, which suggested that a family that worked eight-hour
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days for three weeks would have been able to gather enough to provide each family member with a pound of grain a day for a year.
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the first permanent settlements,
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Mediterranean from around 10,000 BCE.
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A typical village consisted of around fifty huts, supporting a community of two hundred or three hundred people.
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The first was that grain soaked in water, so that it starts to sprout, tastes sweet.
Daniel D Geller
Grain discovery
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The cause of this sweetness is now understood: Moistened grain produces diastase enzymes, which convert starch within the grain into maltose sugar, or malt.
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Gruel that was left sitting around for a couple of days underwent a mysterious transformation, particularly if it had been made with malted grain: It became slightly fizzy and pleasantly intoxicating, as the action of wild yeasts from the air fermented the sugar in the gruel into alcohol.
Daniel D Geller
What does this mean
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beer was not necessarily the first form of alcohol
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fermentation of fruit juice (to make wine) or water and honey (to make mead) would have occurred naturally
Daniel D Geller
First form of alcohol
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The more malted grain there is in the original gruel, for example, and the longer it is left to ferment, the stronger the beer. More malt means more sugar, and a longer fermentation means
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more of the sugar is turned into alcohol. Thoroughly cooking the gruel also contributes to the beer's strength.
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more sugar for the yeast to transform into alcohol.
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brewers always carried their own "mash tubs" around with them,
Daniel D Geller
For best results
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at least seventeen kinds of beer, some of them referred to in poetic terms that sound, to modern ears, almost like advertising slogans:
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Beers used in religious ceremonies also had special names. Similarly, early written references to beer from Mesopotamia, in the third millennium BCE, list over twenty different kinds,
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It seems most likely, however, that both bread and beer were derived from gruel. A thick gruel could be baked in the sun or on a hot stone to make flatbread; a thin gruel could be left to ferment into beer. The two were different sides of the same coin: Bread was solid beer, and beer was liquid bread.
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Since writing had not been invented at the time, there are no written records to attest to the social and ritual importance of beer in the Fertile Crescent
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Neolithic period, between 9000 BCE and 4000 BCE.
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From the start, it seems that beer had an important function as a social drink.
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using straws suggests that it was a ritual that persisted even when straws were no longer necessary.
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When several people drink beer from the same vessel, they are all consuming the same liquid;
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sharing a drink with someone is a universal symbol of hospitality and friendship. It signals that the person offering the drink can be trusted, by demonstrating that it is not poisoned or otherwise unsuitable for consumption.
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And when drinking alcohol in a social setting, the clinking of glasses symbolically reunites the glasses into a single vessel of shared liquid. These are traditions with very ancient origins.
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To Neolithic drinkers, beer's ability to intoxicate and induce a state of altered consciousness seemed magical.
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beer was a gift from the gods;
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beer was accidentally discovered by Osiris, the god of agriculture and king of the afterlife.
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The practice of raising a glass to wish someone good health, a happy marriage, or a safe passage into the afterlife, or to celebrate the successful completion of a project, is the modern echo of the ancient idea that alcohol has the power to invoke supernatural forces.
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beer might have played a central role in the adoption of agriculture,
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Farming was, according to this view, adopted partly in order to maintain the supply of beer.
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most likely that beer drinking was just one of many factors that helped to tip the balance away from hunting and gathering and toward farming and a sedentary lifestyle based on small settlements.
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beer was
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safer to drink than water,
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