Read Microbrewed Adventures Online

Authors: Charles Papazian

Tags: #food

Microbrewed Adventures (50 page)

Sangiorgi, Davide, 159

Savannah Beer Co., 31

Scheer, Fred, 101

Scheldebrouwerj, 171, 172

Scherer, Russ, 47

Second St. Brewery/Pub, 42

Shibilski, Ken, 31

Shipman, Paul, 6, 9

Shipyard Brewing Co., 69

Sierra Nevada Brewing Co., 3, 4, 11–13, 43, 69, 105, 106, 107, 244

Silver Gulch Brewery, 88

Skypeck, Chuck, 101

Slow Food, 74, 231

Smart, Jerry, 31

Smets, Rick, 60, 61

Smith, Bill, 31

Smulowitz, Bill, 31

sorghum beer, 4, 185, 202–206, 362

Spital Brauerei, 141

Spoetzel Brewery, 31

St. Petersburg, Russia, 213, 214

Sterken, Stan, 181

Sterkens Brewery, 181

Stevens Point Brewing Co., 31

Stichting Museumbrouwerij, 173

Stolarz, Richie, 92–93

Stone Brewing Co., 4, 54, 63–66, 284

Stout Billy homebrew shop, 96

Strangebrew Homebrew Shop, 95

Swakapmund, Namibia, 207–210

Swedish Homebrewing Society, 164

 

Thomas, Dave, 33

Thousand Oaks Brewing Co., 11

Thurn und Taxis Brewery, 141–42

Tijuana Brewery, 188–89

Tippecanoe Homebrew Club, 100

Tropical Brewery, Havana, 198

Troutfish Brewery, 94

Tsingtao Brewery, 221

Turow, Ken, 90, 91

 

U Flecku, 189

Unionbirrai Microbirrifici, 154

 

Vermont Pub & Brewery, 9

Vernon Valley Brewery, 45

Victor, Alice, 31

Vinos Pizza Pub and Brewery, 102

Virungs Bryggeri, 168

 

Wagner, Steve, 63

Ware, Stick, 26

Washington, George, 90

Weissbier, 144

Westmalle Trappist Brewery, 180, 181

Widmer Brothers Brewing Co., 9, 144

Widmer, Kurt and Rob, 9

William S, Newman Brewing Co., 11

Willimantic Brewery and Main Street Café, 94

Windhoek Brewery, Namibia, 201, 208–210

Wine and Hop Shop, Madison, Wisc., 99

WIZARDS homebrew club, 95

Wolaver, Morgan, 81

Wolaver's Organic Beer, 81–84, 302

Wolf Canyon Brewpub, 42

Woodstock Brewery, 91

Wynkoop Brewery, 9, 47

 

Yakima Brewing Co., 17–19

Yanjing Brewery, 219

Yuengling, Dick, 32

 

Zaltitis, Karlis, 216

Zavatone, Otto, 26–27

Zhongce Bejiing Beer Company, 217

Zum Schluessel's Gatzweiler Alt, 143

Zum Uerige Alt, 143–144

M
any thanks to Guillermo Moscoso, who worked for Anheuser-Busch Inc., St. Louis, for first introducing to me the tale of the Brewery of the Monastery of San Francisco (Quito, Ecuador); Dori Whitney, editor of
The Brewer's Digest
, who uncovered the January 1966 issue that featured the brewery; and Lilian Bejarano, working on the restoration of the monastery, who graciously arranged for a tour of the brewery.

About the Author

Charlie Papazian
is one of the most prominent and recognized names in the world of beer and brewing. Since founding the Association of Brewers in 1978, which in 2005 merged with the Brewers Association of America to become the Brewers Association, he has guided the development of the American Homebrewers Association (AHA), the Great American Beer Festival and the World Beer Cup. He is the author of the bible of brewing,
The Complete Joy of Homebrewing
, and is the founding publisher of
Zymurrgy
(the magazine for homebrewers) and
The New Brewer
(the magazine for small, professional craftbrewers). He lives in Boulder, Colorado, with his wife, Sandra.

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

ALSO BY CHARLIE PAPAZIAN

The Complete Joy of Homebrewing, Third Edition

The Homebrewer's Companion

Homebrewer's Gold

Best of Zymurgy

Some of these stories have appeared in
Zymurgy
magazine in a slightly different form.

MICROBREWED ADVENTURES
. Copyright © 2005 by Charles Papazian. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

FIRST EDITION

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data has been applied for.

EPub Edition © April 2010 ISBN: 978-0-06-201856-4

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

About the Publisher

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1
Dates and references taken from
A Brief History of Mead
, originally published in
Mead and Other Honey Liquors
by Lieutenant Colonel Robert Gayre.

*
Note: Invert sugar #2 is not easy to find in America, but what seems to be an excellent substitute is very dark rapadura. This is dried and granulated pure cane sugar juice from Brazil. Sucanat is another type of cane juice sugar, but it is not as full flavored as rapadura. It's available at health-food stores or in the “natural sugar” section of your more natural-conscious grocery store.

*
Note: Invert sugar #2 is not easy to find in America, but what seems to be an excellent substitute is very dark rapadura. This is dried and granulated pure cane sugar juice from Brazil. Sucanat is another type of cane juice sugar, but not as full flavored as rapadura. It's available at health-food stores or in the “natural sugar” section of your more natural-conscious grocery store.

*
If you enjoy the character of German-style wheat beer, use German wheat beer yeast.

*
If you enjoy the character of German-style wheat beer, use German wheat beer yeast.

*
This is the ale yeast used by Birrificio Lambrate. A well-attenuating English-type yeast can also be used.

*
This is the ale yeast used by Birrificio Lambrate. A well-attenuating English-type yeast can also be used.

*
The juniper I used were laden with green berries. Juniper is not cedar. The needles on these branches were very thornlike and difficult to handle without gloves.

**
Of course you may use lager or ale yeast, but keep in mind this recipe attempts to be true to style.

*
The juniper I used were laden with green berries. Juniper is not cedar. The needles on these branches were very thornlike and difficult to handle without gloves.

*
Of course you may use lager or ale yeast, but keep in mind this recipe attempts to be true to style.

*
You might also experiment by trying this with barley malt processed in this same manner.

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