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Five things our research uncovered when we recreated 16th century beer (and barrels)


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Five things our research uncovered when we recreated 16th century ***** (and barrels)

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

It’s true that our 16th-century ancestors drank much more than Irish people do today. But why they did so and what their ***** was like are questions shrouded in myth. The

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who set out to find some answers.

As part of a major study of food and drink in early modern Ireland, funded by the ********* Research Council, we recreated and analyzed a ***** last brewed at

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in 1574. Combining craft, microbiology, brewing science, archaeology, as well as history, this was the most
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ever undertaken. Here are five things that we discovered.

1. People didn’t drink ***** because the water was unhealthy

It’s often assumed that lack of access to clean water led people to drink ***** instead. We know this isn’t true for many reasons, not least because brewers needed a constant source of fresh water to make the best *****.

Water was certainly viewed as less healthy, but not because of any understanding of microbial contamination. According to a system of medicine and treatment used at the time,

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, water was a “cold” drink that affected digestion, causing fluctuations and windiness. Meanwhile, ***** was “warm and comforting”, balancing the “humors” and quenching thirst.

2. ***** was a payment for work

***** was taken as medicine, often mixed with curious ingredients. Treatments for conditions such as flux or bed wetting, for example, required ground ****’s hoof or grated stag’s ****** to be taken with a drink of *****.

People drank at work, commonly receiving drink as part of their wages. The quantities were staggering. At Christchurch Cathedral in Dublin, masons received up to 15 pints per day when undertaking heavy work.

More typical was a range of five to ten pints, as was the case at Dublin Castle. There, servants imbibed up to 2,700 calories a day in ***** alone, the cost of which exceeded what the household spent on bread.

3. ***** had some different ingredients then

In many ways, 16th-century ***** would be recognizable today. The key ingredients were malt (made from barley or oats depending on the region), water, yeast and hops.

The addition of hops, a Dutch innovation, spread throughout Europe in this *******. This resulted in a longer lasting drink, accelerating the development of the brewing industry as we know it today.

But there are differences between pre-modern and modern beers, relating primarily to the nature of the ingredients. Four centuries ago, cereals were grown as

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.





A landrace has a wide range of characteristics distinct from those of standardized modern varieties, through adaptation to their regional climate, soils and topography. Shrinking cultivation of these landraces meant that sourcing heritage ingredients was challenging.

The variety of barley we chose was

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. This is the only landrace barley still grown commercially, thanks to the conservation efforts of
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, Scotland.

The experiment was a unique opportunity to examine the significance of these varieties to the taste and quality of drinks in the past, and the benefits of saving heritage crops for future generations.

4. Making ***** required skills in short supply today

Industrial brewing today produces the same ***** every time. Brewing in the past, using simpler equipment and in a more open environment, was much more challenging. Brewers were deeply in tune with their working conditions and didn’t have modern devices such as thermometers.

They used their senses and knowledge to make adjustments as they worked. As the project team learned the hard way, small mistakes could be disastrous, resulting in spoiled ***** and accidental porridge.

Recreating the technology of the past also highlighted the wider craft skills, such as coopering (making barrels), wicker-weaving, woodworking, and coppersmithing, that went into making all the equipment needed to make a pint. Much like heritage crops, these skills are in worrying decline.

Our oak fermenting barrels and mash tuns (a vessel used in brewing) were made by

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, at the time one of the last two master coopers in England. He has since retired. We had to go all the way to Portugal to find
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who could build a large freestanding boiler.

5. Even everyday ***** was strong

One enduring misconception is that people were able to drink so much in the 16th century because their ***** was relatively weak. Based on little evidence, it is assumed that ***** of around 2% alcohol by volume (abv) was the most common drink of the working classes. But we know this so called “small *****” was widely rejected by workers, as well as by physicians, dietary writers, and government officials, who all deemed it dangerous to health.

Our experiment showed that a typical ***** of middling strength actually had the potential to be around 5% abv, comparable to modern lager. This means people could have been extremely inebriated from merely what they drank alongside work. Unsurprisingly, there were loud and frequent calls for drinkers to show moderation.

Those calls often came, however, from the same people who liberally supplied their workers with *****. This suggests that the context in which people drank was very important. If having a pint or two at breakfast and dinner was acceptable, even expected, many more at the village alehouse was seen as more troublesome.

To learn more about brewing a ***** from 1574, visit our online

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is coming soon. Details will be on our
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Provided by
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Five things our research uncovered when we recreated 16th century ***** (and barrels) (2024, April 20)
retrieved 20 April 2024
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