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To: SunkenCiv

Dogfish makes quite a few ancient ales. Very interesting to sample, most taste unlike anything you’ve ever had before.


6 posted on 12/25/2013 3:02:33 PM PST by NittanyLion
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To: NittanyLion
This stuff is interesting. Hawthorne is used to lower blood pressure.

Libations: Tapping into the Past and Dreading the Hangover
Volume 60 Number 6, November/December 2007 by Samir S. Patel

ARCHAEOLOGY's staff tastes the world's oldest booze.

Early Neolithic people in Jiahu, a village in China's Henan Province, invented the earliest known alcoholic beverage. As the staff of this magazine and your guides to the world of archaeology, we felt it was our place--nay, our duty--to tell you how the stuff tastes.

Archaeochemist and ancient wine expert Patrick McGovern of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology analyzed residue in the pores of 9,000-year-old potsherds found in Jiahu. Using high-powered acronyms like GC-MS, HPLC-MS, and FT-IR, he determined the pots once held ancient booze made with rice, honey, and hawthorn fruit. No one has any idea about the process used to make it, but McGovern recruited the crafty brewers at Dogfish Head in Milton, Delaware, to help reconstruct a palatable version.

The resulting concoction, called Chateau Jiahu, is a thick, lightly carbonated brew the color of cloudy cider. We swirled it around in little plastic cups and took a whiff: hints of rice and sake, a scrumpy aroma from the applelike hawthorn, and the malted scent of a barley-rich beer. The first taste was puzzling--were all those flavors having a street fight or dancing a waltz?

While it was strong, meady, and heavy as a brick, several of us went back for seconds to search for other flavors in its complex bouquet.

"It's growing on me," said Ken Feisel, our art director.

"I think it's perfectly pleasant!" enthused senior editor Eric Powell, halfway through his second cup.

All agreed it was interesting, unusual, and worth trying, but that the yeasty aftertaste--the "fuzz on your tongue," Feisel called it--was the beverage's most significant drawback. Fortunately, we ran out before we could report on how a Neolithic Chinese hangover might have felt.

Might have been just the stuff for Genghis Khan's type A warriors to take the edge off after a day of mayhem.

8 posted on 12/25/2013 3:32:10 PM PST by TigersEye (Stupid is a Progressive disease.)
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