Creating Flavor | The Art of American Craft Beer: The sure cure for cenosillicaphobia

I am a firm believer in the people. If given the truth, they can be depended upon to meet any national crisis. The great point is to bring them the real facts, and beer.

Abraham Lincoln

Two months at sea and hopelessly north of their course to the Virginia colony, the desperate passengers and crew of the Mayflower were running out of beer. As in Europe, beer was a trusted drink instead of the perpetually contaminated water. Besides that, Captain Jones worried about sustaining his crew with beer on the trip back across the Atlantic Ocean. In 1620 the ship docked in Cape Cod; but the passengers balked at leaving the ship, saying, “were hastened ashore and made to drink water, that the seamen might have the more beer.”

Leery of and unaccustomed to drinking fresh water, the Pilgrims sent their leader, William Bradford, to demand that the captain of the Mayflower share the beer onboard. Captain Jones rejected their request, but during the winter the Pilgrims returned to the ship trying to survive the cold, bitter weather; The captain shared some of his beer with the Pilgrims on Christmas Day.

Drinking beer doesn’t make you fat;
It makes you lean … against bars, tables,
chairs and poles.

Author Unknown

Brew, American Style

The Pilgrims quickly learned from the American Indians how to craft beer using resources in their new environment. Flip, a popular brew of the colonists, was made from a pumpkin mixture beer and a dash of rum. Early American brewers also used ground ivy (a weed) or black or red spruce shoots instead of hops. Molasses and ripe persimmons were alternative sugars in the beer recipe.

William Penn wrote that in his colony of Pennsylvania, the beer was made of “Molasses well boyled, with sassafras or pine infused into it.” By the middle of the 17th century English and Dutch beer crafters opened personal and commercial breweries in the colonies. George Washington, Patrick Henry, Samuel Adams, and James Madison promoted the brewery business. Washington created beer at Mt. Vernon; His handwritten recipe is on display at the New York Public Library. Business was booming so well that Washington, Henry, and other revolutionaries tried to organize a boycott of beer imported from England, bringing them close to a Boston Beer Bash instead of the Boston Tea Party. As Commander of the Continental Army, George Washington ordered a quart of beer as daily rations for his troops.

Beer is proof that God loves us
and wants us to be happy.

Benjamin Franklin

Winds of Change

In the mid1800s German immigrants living in Denmark made an exodus to America to escape war, bringing with them their desire for all-malt lager beer. The new beer drinkers also brought novel brewing methods and different yeasts that produced a crisp lager product. German immigrants influenced beer preferences in the United States. By the 20th century, American cities were filling up with neighborhood breweries serving newly crafted recipes.

All beer was craft brewed until 1865, when
mass production of beer replaced small breweries. By 1960 light lager beer dominated sales and beer production from craft breweries plummeted. There were less than 50 craft commercial brew makers.

Fritz Maytag (grandson of the home appliance founder) was determined to revitalize San Francisco’s Anchor Brewing Company. Craft brewing appealed to him as he set his sights on creating darker, hardy beer. His success was the pivot point for the crafting business as breweries rebounded in number and production of beer.

In the 1970s home brewing became popular, and many entrepreneurs launched profitable businesses. President Jimmy Carter signed into law a bill that declared it was legal to home brew wine and beer in 1978. Today there are over 7000 breweries in the U.S. with over 1, 000 opening
up this past year.

Two beer, or not two beer?
That is the question.

Shakesbeer


In a study, scientists report that drinking beer can be good for the liver. I’m sorry, did I say scientists? I meant Irish people.

Tina Fey


Craft Beer Bits

The main ingredients in craft beer are malted grain (usually barley), yeast and hops. Craft breweries are independent, small creators of beer. Other beer bits are:

  • Most Americans live within 10 miles of a craft brewery
  • Hops are the flowers or seed cones of the hop plant, Humulus lupulus.
  • Malt is germinated cereal grain.
  • Crafted beer is 90% water
  • The saying “rule of thumb” comes from beer crafters sticking their thumbs into the mix to test the temperature for adding yeast.
  • Hops are poisonous to pets
  • Snails and slugs like the crafted brew. Put some beer in a shallow pan to get rid of them.
  • Craft beer has high levels of silicon, which is good for the body
  • The amount of malt influences the color of beer
  • Washington, California, Oregon, and Colorado are home to the most craft breweries
  • The United States is the second largest hops producer in the world (Germany is first).
  • Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and Barack Obama were beer crafters
  • The standard growler is 64 ounces
  • Frosted glasses make beer foam
  • Cities with the most brew pubs are Chicago, Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, and New York
  • A brewpub is a bar that is owned by a brewery and serves beer directly to consumers. By law, an establishment can only be called a brewpub if it sells 25% or more of its beer on-site. Brewpubs have a unique appeal for many consumers because they dispense beer directly from the brewery’s storage tanks.
  • Cenosillicaphobia is the fear of an empty glass. Crafted beer has been said to be a remedy for this ailment.

Phyllis Maclay

Phyllis Maclay is a published writer of articles in Country Woman Magazine, Parent Magazine, Easy Street Magazine, and Lancaster, Pennsylvania, newspapers. Originally from Pennsylvania, Phyllis moved to Aiken from South Texas. She has published children’s plays and her novel, A Bone for the Dog, a chilling story of a father trying to rescue his little girl, is available at Booklocker.com and through her FB page. Her story, Sweet Brew and a Cherry Cane, appears in the anthology Nights of Horseplay by the Aiken Scribblers.

Picture of Phyllis Maclay

Phyllis Maclay

Phyllis Maclay is a published writer of articles in Country Woman Magazine, Parent Magazine, Easy Street Magazine, and Lancaster, Pennsylvania, newspapers. Originally from Pennsylvania, Phyllis moved to Aiken from South Texas. She has published children’s plays and her novel, A Bone for the Dog, a chilling story of a father trying to rescue his little girl, is available at Booklocker.com and through her FB page. Her story, Sweet Brew and a Cherry Cane, appears in the anthology Nights of Horseplay by the Aiken Scribblers.
Picture of Phyllis Maclay

Phyllis Maclay

Phyllis Maclay is a published writer of articles in Country Woman Magazine, Parent Magazine, Easy Street Magazine, and Lancaster, Pennsylvania, newspapers. Originally from Pennsylvania, Phyllis moved to Aiken from South Texas. She has published children’s plays and her novel, A Bone for the Dog, a chilling story of a father trying to rescue his little girl, is available at Booklocker.com and through her FB page. Her story, Sweet Brew and a Cherry Cane, appears in the anthology Nights of Horseplay by the Aiken Scribblers.

In the know

Related Stories

The Beginnings of a New County | Cabinet of Curiosities | Palmetto Bella

The Beginnings of a New County | Cabinet of Curiosities

2021 is a special year for the residents of Aiken County — not only is it a new year of hope after a year of chaos, but it’s also the 150th anniversary of Aiken County’s founding. In January of 1871, state legislator Charles D. Hayne (Barnwell District) proposed an act to create a new county with Aiken as its seat. On March 10, 1871, the act was formally enacted by the South Carolina state legislature. While Hayne was not the first person to promote the idea of a new county, he was the one to get the bill through the state legislature successfully. Names for the new county included the

Read More »
To Keep Christmas Well | Palmetto Bella

To Keep Christmas Well

“…and it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Christmas well …” It is among the closing lines from Charles Dickens’ classic story, “A Christmas Carol.” It may be one of the best remembered and most cherished sentences in the book. “To keep Christmas well,” I suspect, implies different things to each of us. But in the language of the day when this book was written, it meant to observe, or to honor, or to celebrate something. To actively remember. Perhaps in this year of rather lopsided “celebrations” — with their often double-edged experiences and wobbly sense of imbalance — I have found myself searching for

Read More »
Story of Hanukkah | Palmetto Bella

Story of Hanukkah

Hanukkah is the Jewish Festival of Lights, celebrated to commemorate the rededication of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem after Judah Maccabee’s victory over the occupying Greek army in 165 BC. In the land of Judah, ruling Syrian King Antiochus ordered the Jewish population to reject all their religious beliefs and practices and worship Greek gods. For fear of the occupying Greek military that enforced King Antiochus’ decree, some Jews obeyed that command, but the majority chose to rebel against it. Thus were sown the seeds of what would ultimately become the celebration of Hanukkah. Fights broke out in a village near Jerusalem when Greek soldiers demanded that the Jewish villagers

Read More »
Rocking Around the (Metal? Holly?) Christmas Tree | Cabinet of Curiosities | Palmetto Bella

Rocking Around the (Metal? Holly?) Christmas Tree | Cabinet of Curiosities

Have you ever watched A Charlie Brown Christmas television special and wondered about the metal Christmas tree lot that Charlie Brown visits? Did you know that cutting down a holly tree almost became illegal in our area? Let’s explore this curious affinity for metal Christmas trees and an early effort to save the holly tree in the latest episode of the Cabinet of Curiosities! The History of Christmas Trees When imagining our ancestors and how they may have spent Christmases a few hundred years in the past, many of us picture a happy family around a large, decorated tree, with a blazing fire in the hearth and children playing at

Read More »