Posted on 08/11/2002 3:28:50 PM PDT by vannrox
Saturday, 3 August, 2002, 10:06 GMT 11:06 UK
Did King Tut sup on the Old Kingdom recipe?
A Japanese beer maker has taken a 4,400-year-old recipe from Egyptian hieroglyphics and produced what it claims is a brew fit for the Pharaohs.
The Kirin Brewery Co. has called the concoction Old Kingdom Beer.
It has no froth, is the colour of dark tea and carries an alcohol content of 10% - about double most contemporary beers.
Sakuji Yoshimura, an Egyptologist at Waseda University in Tokyo, helped transcribe the recipe from Egyptian wall paintings.
Kirin spokesman Takaomi Ishii said: ''It has a taste very different from today's beer. It tastes a little like white wine.''
Research purposes
The beer is based on barley, but does not use hops, which give modern beer its bitter taste, Mr Ishii said.
Drinkers will have to stick to normal ales. Old Kingdom is not for sale
However, don't expect the brew to be drawn from a pump in your local.
Kirin has no plans to sell Old Kingdom commercially, and said it developed the beer for research purposes.
The 36 litres (eight gallons) brewed in the current batch will be presented at a conference of the Master Brewers Association of America in Texas in October.
Evidence of beer making in Egypt dates back to the 10th century BC.
In 1996, British beer maker Scottish and Newcastle sold a limited edition, 1,000-bottle batch of beer brewed according to an ancient Egyptian recipe.
A bottle of its Tutankhamen Ale sold for £50 ($78).
$468 a six pack? That's an expensive buzz.
After the liberal nazi's get done taxing cigarettes to $10.00 a pack, watch out for beer.
$468 a six-pack might be a deal someday
Akbar's Bar & Museum
Just 5 Kilometers west.
Stop and quench your thirst.
Give your camel a rest.
First ya toot and come in,
Then say your 'How ya doin's.'
Have a dram o' Kingdom,
Peer amid the ruins.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.