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How to make 5,000 year old beer I Pleasant Vices episode 3

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2018
  • In episode 3 of the Pleasant Vices series food historian Tasha Marks is joined by brewer Michaela Charles and beverage consultant Susan Boyle to make Ancient Egyptian beer.
    To find out more about ancient brewing, read Tasha’s article on the British Museum blog, or visit her website www.avmcuriosit... to see what else she’s been up to.
    Pleasant Vices is a four-part series on aphrodisiacs, beer, sugar and chocolate. Each is hosted by Tasha Marks with invited guests and each has an accompanying recipe film. To accompany this episode Tasha is making a cocktail using the flavours of Ancient Egypt which will be available from Monday on this channel.
    With thanks to the Alpha Beta brewery and Pitt Cue restaurant for allowing us to film in their beautiful premises. To find out more visit them here: alphabetabrewer...

Komentáře • 229

  • @britishmuseum
    @britishmuseum  Před 6 lety +57

    For everyone looking for the recipe, you can find out the ingredients and more about the vessel here:
    blog.britishmuseum.org/a-sip-of-history-ancient-egyptian-beer/

    • @michaelacharles943
      @michaelacharles943 Před 6 lety +19

      Thank you so much for posting that, I really wanted to get online and add it! Im not sure our actual brew sheet is there but I am more than happy to make it available. M

    • @SnerualTrepelol
      @SnerualTrepelol Před 6 lety +6

      please do! I'd love to try this at home but i'm very curious to the yeast. Did you add any culture or was the yeast on the dates enough?

    • @lambertsimnelales5878
      @lambertsimnelales5878 Před 6 lety +6

      I am also very curious as to the yeast strain that was used, if you could share that, I am certain that the avid home-brewing community would find it to be of great interest.
      Cheers

    • @JoshuaFinancialPL
      @JoshuaFinancialPL Před 6 lety +3

      another vote/request to know about yeasts. I bake with wild yeast - it's present on the grain. i happily have access to grain from individual farms, ground to order in a water-driven stone mill. lately I've been getting a new culture from zero to bread-ready in less than 24 hours. although i've never brewed i'm looking forward to trying this. my guess is your whole grain had plenty of wild yeast on the bran (fast culture growty), PLUS the yeast on the dates and the added sugar of the dates (raising the potential abv)

    • @davidschwartz8125
      @davidschwartz8125 Před 6 lety +1

      If you could make it available my wife and I would like to try this for ourselves.

  • @helenel4126
    @helenel4126 Před 6 lety +175

    The British Museum should negotiate with a brewer to make and bottle these! The Museum's financial needs would be satisfied and then some!

    • @oh-yt9ug
      @oh-yt9ug Před 2 lety +2

      Would be interesting to try

    • @TheAtHamptonDotCom
      @TheAtHamptonDotCom Před rokem

      The british museum should return all their war loot and burn to the ground

    • @desmass1
      @desmass1 Před rokem

      White people stealing more African culture

    • @Tcamp95818
      @Tcamp95818 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I made this at home the best I could by how they said here. It's lightly sweet . If you let it age a bit longer the alcohol gets up 14%.

    • @mistertibbs472
      @mistertibbs472 Před 4 měsíci

      "Pharoah's Rest"

  • @Joekool88
    @Joekool88 Před 6 lety +51

    Brewing starts at 5:33
    Tasting starts at 9:29

  • @romulan3169
    @romulan3169 Před 6 lety +151

    The woman on the right looks like her sweater textures didn't load in LOL

    • @arandomevent
      @arandomevent Před 6 lety +3

      Hahah I'm sure it looks much better in person, but on camera my eyes kept straining to focus :D I'm glad somebody else had this thought, I was definitely laughing at myself for it lol.

    • @BothHands1
      @BothHands1 Před 5 lety

      😂 😂 😂

    • @MrAranton
      @MrAranton Před 3 lety +1

      This is what a pond with lots of algae in the water and autumn leaves on the surface looks like to me when I'm not wearing my glasses.

  • @dahn3124
    @dahn3124 Před 6 lety +46

    Dogfish Head Brewery in Delaware has a line of ancient beers that are interesting and very tasty. They teamed up with a biomolecular archaeologist to determine ingredients used in ancient recipes from around the world. Theoborma is by far my favorite and it was made by analyzing pottery fragments found in Honduras.

    • @theresakennedy7339
      @theresakennedy7339 Před 4 lety

      I had a really bad reaction and felt like my stomach was going to explode followed by horrible bowels after drinking their dogfish's egyptian beer I purchased in Atlanta. I thought I was going to die and couldnt move for days.

    • @martinarbe1
      @martinarbe1 Před 3 lety

      This is really interesting

    • @TXRnBBeauty11
      @TXRnBBeauty11 Před 2 lety

      I just looked it’s hard to get!

    • @donnprivate8090
      @donnprivate8090 Před rokem

      Thanks for sharing I'd been trying to find Ta Henket but after reading this don't mind if I never do

  • @michaelacharles943
    @michaelacharles943 Před 6 lety +24

    Hi all, thank you all so much for viewing our video and sharing it with us. we had a blast. Yes, we would love to share a recipe with you. we have one written out and we WILL be putting a link up to it, watch this space!

    • @KitAlda
      @KitAlda Před 6 lety +2

      Has it been shared yet?

    • @bustersgirl23200
      @bustersgirl23200 Před 5 lety +1

      Hi! Where is the recipe posted? Thanks!

    • @BothHands1
      @BothHands1 Před 5 lety

      Loved you girls in this video, would like to see more in the future!

  • @murdelabop
    @murdelabop Před 6 lety +24

    I suspect rather than just throwing the hot mash and the cold mash together they would add the hot mash to the cold mash slowly, bit by bit, to bring the temperature up slowly. This is effectively what modern brewers do, and it makes the sacharification process much more efficient.

    • @jeremiahstone5285
      @jeremiahstone5285 Před 2 lety +2

      I think this must work the way it does bc there is a temperature gradient and the 2 mixtures don't mix together right away to equalizer the temp. But what if they actually mashed first around 145 or so then strained out the liquid containing enzymes, then added more water and heated up 175 or so for gelatinization, then combined them assuming both mixtures cooled enough first that you hit a good mash temp after combining

    • @murdelabop
      @murdelabop Před 2 lety +1

      @@jeremiahstone5285 That could be. I've seen recipes that call for something like that. IIRC, I think what you're talking about is called "batch sparging" in the brewing industry. I've seen recipes that call for 3 batches, and produce different beers from each of the three batches.

  • @poozizzle
    @poozizzle Před 5 lety +7

    As a home Brewer I love how simple this recipe is. Can't wait to try it out!

    • @stooncol619
      @stooncol619 Před 3 lety

      How did it goes?

    • @poozizzle
      @poozizzle Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for the reminder! I'll get back to you soon. You should try it was well and we can compare notes!

    • @duayinepu2103
      @duayinepu2103 Před 3 lety +1

      @@poozizzle fellow homebrewer, I've been DYING to find a functioning recipe for this, as I haven't been able to reproduce this on my own.

  • @Kees247
    @Kees247 Před 5 lety +3

    After years of homebrewing with commercial yeast I got a Kveik (centuries old re-used mixture of yeast from Norway) to ferment with. I used the raw ale method of a maximum temperature of 75 degrees Celsius. The Kveik ferments in less then 36 hours at 30-39 C. The taste of this beer is very good at this stage. Even without carbonation. This Kveik can be dried for storage and used over and over again. In the past when someone had one that turned sour they would get some from their neighbours to start over. The taste of these beers is easier to get used to because there is no or almost no hops involved.

  • @dorianphilotheates3769
    @dorianphilotheates3769 Před 3 lety +2

    I drank with the Pharaohs - indeed I have - and I must say, these Egyptian beer reconstructions are pretty bang on!

  • @mectrom
    @mectrom Před 5 lety +9

    The British Museum needs to make an ancient boardgames and beer day. 😍

    • @EastEndBen
      @EastEndBen Před 2 měsíci

      yes! senit and barley beer would be good fun

  • @Nono-hk3is
    @Nono-hk3is Před 6 lety +21

    When shall we three meet again?
    When the beer is done, of course!

  • @rameyzamora1018
    @rameyzamora1018 Před 6 lety +41

    Whiskey is medicinal; wine is aphrodisiac; beer is a food!!

  • @radioboys8986
    @radioboys8986 Před 2 lety +1

    watching this while drinking a nice glass of home brew
    see making Egyptian brew as a interesting winter project, thank you

  • @the-chillian
    @the-chillian Před 6 lety +5

    A small brewery near San Francisco made a batch of beer by the Sumerian recipe awhile back. I've always regretted not being there for it. But I did get to try homemade Eritrean beer at one point, and it was probably very similar to this. They used different flavors, but it was also made from a multigrain mash.
    I'm more familiar with the Sumerian style, but from the description I figured their beer could have been invented by accident during one unusually rainy summer. It's made from cakes, themselves made from malted barley. So suppose it's normally dry in the summer and one night you forget to put the cover back onto the pot where you store your barley. Normally that's not a big deal in the summer; it's dry. But then it rains. Maybe you don't notice for a few days, and by the time you do the barley has sprouted. "[Sumerian swear word]!" you say. But you can't let it go to waste, so you dry it out over a fire so it becomes hard enough to grind, and make your barley cakes as usual. But what happens when you set them out to cool? It rains again? Now your cakes are soaked. At a loss for what else to do with them, you toss them into a pot, that maybe has more water in the bottom. A few days later: Beer.
    Turns out to be not so bad. Not great, but not bad. Plus, being slightly alcoholic, you find you don't feel so terrible about the wasted food anymore. But you want it to taste better, so you work on it until you find a more complete method that results in something more palatable.
    A complicated hypothesis, but I always thought it a bit odd that they started with cakes they'd have to bake first, rather than the malted barley directly.

  • @joeykauhi7938
    @joeykauhi7938 Před 2 lety +3

    This was giving me Hocus Pocus vibes when they were mixing the ingredients. So cool.

  • @TatyanaValdaBelindaHill
    @TatyanaValdaBelindaHill Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you for posting this! I don't even like beer, but I am so keen on making something like this. So interesting - a real way of connecting with past cultures.

    • @TatyanaValdaBelindaHill
      @TatyanaValdaBelindaHill Před 4 lety

      Northward Bound I was thinking that. I think it’s the hops, why I don’t like ordinary beer. :)

  • @Sekei..
    @Sekei.. Před 6 lety +2

    Excellent episode, I've brewed regular modern beer twice now, and I think it might be time to challenge myself with something new.

  • @annettecboehm
    @annettecboehm Před 6 lety +11

    Really enjoyed this episode! And I'll join the other commenters in asking for the recipe! :) Also, more information about the terra cotta vessel please. Would love to try making this.

    • @michaelacharles943
      @michaelacharles943 Před 6 lety +3

      Hi there, thanks for watching and enjoying the video. We had to make a vessel with as low a porosity as possible. To do this we fired red ware to its highest temperature in a single firing. This vitrifies it. We did observe some weight loss on the combined vessel and contents over the first night but this was probably the initial absorption. hope that proves helpful.

    • @jeremiahstone5285
      @jeremiahstone5285 Před 3 lety

      Did mine in a bucket. The main points for earthenware would be temperature control and having a built in yeast culture. And I used a wild yeast strain that I cultivated by taking a couple grapes from my backyard and placing them in sugar water for a few days

  • @bobaldo2339
    @bobaldo2339 Před 5 lety +6

    "In heaven there is no beer. That's why we drink it here." - Frankie Yankovic

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Před 5 lety +1

      "You can still get gas in Heaven
      And drink in Kingdom Come" - Mark Knopfler, "Cleaning My Gun"
      (That was the line _I_ immediately thought of...)

    • @joeykauhi7938
      @joeykauhi7938 Před 2 lety

      "Beer is proof God loves us, and wants us to be happy" - Not Ben Franklin

  • @jonnevirta4730
    @jonnevirta4730 Před 5 lety +6

    I seek ancient sumerian beer.

  • @CraftyWanderess
    @CraftyWanderess Před 6 lety +5

    I'm loving this series!

  • @davidledieu2399
    @davidledieu2399 Před 4 lety

    Golf clap with the greatest respect! Very well played! Super excited to play with this method. Thank you.

  • @Jabrwock
    @Jabrwock Před 6 lety +41

    Recipe? Not seeing it on Tasha's blog or on the BM's blog. I'd love to try making this at home, although I doubt I could find a handy terracotta fermenting pot. :D

    • @sail2byzantium
      @sail2byzantium Před 6 lety +14

      I concur. The British Museum should post the recipe / instructions. Even if I would have to find a terracotta fermenting pot somewhere. . .

    • @FlesHBoX
      @FlesHBoX Před 6 lety +3

      Would definitely love to have a recipe for this one.

    • @collin3012
      @collin3012 Před 6 lety +2

      4th on the recipe

    • @123cheetacat123
      @123cheetacat123 Před 6 lety +3

      I dont no poo aboot breawin beer but that beer sound great and would luv to try it out, altho iam not sure if they will post the rec. Just cause who ever heard of a museum teachin beer ideas, maybe they should post them ! :)

    • @saundrayork767
      @saundrayork767 Před 6 lety +2

      Please Ma'ams, may we have the recipes?

  • @mencken8
    @mencken8 Před 8 měsíci

    What an excellent job of translating archæological research into an ancient practice. What must be clearly understood by a contemporary viewer is that references such as “enzymes,” “starch,” “sugar,” and “yeast” have no referents to those who brewed using these methods. The people making this “BC. beer” were operating from methods deduced experientially.

  • @TillyOrifice
    @TillyOrifice Před 3 lety

    What an excellent video! It left me better informed and thirstier. Well done to all concerned.

  • @BothHands1
    @BothHands1 Před 5 lety +1

    Love these ladies!! More like this pls!

  • @xiaopeimei4170
    @xiaopeimei4170 Před 4 lety +2

    “What are you doing @quarantine?” Me: Drinking and Brewing Ancient Egypt’s BEER 𓃟𓃟𓃟

  • @theefishlippedone
    @theefishlippedone Před 5 lety +1

    Good stuff, as a homebrewer I love the connection with 5k ago

  • @alflurin
    @alflurin Před 6 lety +7

    Nice upload. I would have been interested to know a bit more about the brewer's opinion and technical insight.

    • @michaelacharles943
      @michaelacharles943 Před 6 lety +5

      fire away if you have any questions. I'm happy to answer if I can. Michaela

  • @Dicyroller
    @Dicyroller Před 6 lety

    truly thank you. That was a great joy to watch. I know I want to try it for myself.

  • @cpeithman999
    @cpeithman999 Před 5 lety +1

    "Peasant Vices"? Lol. Those are my favorites!

  • @arandomevent
    @arandomevent Před 6 lety

    Thank you very much for this, I am a fan of ancient beers and brewing methods, mostly because I don't like hops at all. The thought of what the spice packet added to the taste is tantalizing!!
    I'm glad to know that some of the beer was brewed in steel, as that is much easier to locate than a terracotta amphora LOL. I may also just use glass, which I already have. This certainly inspiring!!

  • @willinnewhaven3285
    @willinnewhaven3285 Před 6 lety +2

    What fun.

  • @Thom726
    @Thom726 Před 3 lety

    I would love to try it!! You guys are so lucky to actually taste it!

  • @Tcamp95818
    @Tcamp95818 Před 4 měsíci

    I made it the same but i made all the mash hot let it cool down. I then added yeast rose water dates and pomegranate. My take on it anyway it was delicious. I got 14% alcoholic in it and it keap 2 weeks in refrigerator.

  • @1701EarlGrey
    @1701EarlGrey Před 4 lety +1

    Wait a minute, didn't Egyptians had wells, so they don't have to drink from the Nile? Didn't one of hieroglyphs described shaduf - wooden crane used to draw water from a well? Am I wrong here? Also in myth of The Eye of Re, Thoth used wine or red colored beer to deceive angry goddess of Sekhmet who acquire a taste for human blood? I heard both versions - which one is true ? Other than that, this is cool video - Ancient Egypt and beer are one of my favorite things and I wonder; can you buy beer made in this style ?

  • @brianasciak1668
    @brianasciak1668 Před 6 lety +4

    i think that the tricky part getting the terracotta , soon do my own beer

  • @loganmodine
    @loganmodine Před 4 lety

    Great panel - very interesting.

  • @robinlillian9471
    @robinlillian9471 Před 5 lety +1

    The beer made by the Ancient Egyptians was also much lower in alcohol. Modern yeasts were developed to make much stronger beer.

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Před 5 lety +3

      I was thinking it's probably because modern grains are much higher in sacharides.

  • @FlorentDiverchy
    @FlorentDiverchy Před 6 lety +1

    Cheers!

  • @Syrkyth
    @Syrkyth Před 6 lety +2

    Hmm, I wonder if the higher than expected ABV is a result of the modern ingredients? Modern dates, I would expect, are holding more sugar capacity than ancient varieties? Never mind grains that likely looked half-again smaller and held less nutrient content.
    I wonder too at the strain of yeast from the ancient period. Would it have been as efficient at processing sugars?

    • @michaelacharles943
      @michaelacharles943 Před 6 lety +3

      The higher abv is due to the complete lack of a boil. There is no halt point to the enzymes converting the sugars. left to its own devises absolutely every scrap of starch is converted firstly to sugar and then to alcohol. The use of a yeast, repeatedly, ensures that it is suited to the breweries specific conditions and also becomes increasingly efficient. We know these things, seems that the Egyptian did too!

    • @Syrkyth
      @Syrkyth Před 6 lety

      If the beer had higher ABV than expected would it potentially been consumed in a watered down form? I can only imagine that a workforce moving +1000lb stones would have been . . . entertaining to watch if they were drinking 6% all day =D
      Or would the everyday worker have consumed something akin to medieval small-beer? I keep forgetting these are examples of brews found in tombs and the common peoples burials were simple pit burials.

  • @CarlosRodriguez-dd4sb
    @CarlosRodriguez-dd4sb Před 6 lety +4

    It's interesting to see the genius of ancients. I feel we often underestimate their knowledge and ability.

  • @psammiad
    @psammiad Před 6 lety +3

    Please tell me the British Museum sells this stuff! Worth noting our modern grains are very different from Ancient Egyptian grains - modern varieties are much bigger and more packed with calories. Ancient grains would've been closer to their wild ancestors. Possibly that's why there was a lot more alcohol.

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Před 5 lety

      I was thinking the same thing about the grains and alcohol content.

  • @fletch7809
    @fletch7809 Před 5 lety

    Loved this.

  • @s.gallagher4851
    @s.gallagher4851 Před 3 lety

    I'd love to try some of this!

  • @morehumanity
    @morehumanity Před 3 lety

    really enjoyed this

  • @jesnoggle13
    @jesnoggle13 Před 4 lety

    5:04 “the crux of pleasant vices” nice.

  • @OutOfNamesToChoose
    @OutOfNamesToChoose Před 6 lety +6

    Where did the majority of the yeast come from? Was it the grain or the dates?
    As for the ABV, do you think that the ancient Egyptians would have waterd down their beer just enough to keep it sterile without being too intoxicating?

    • @susxox
      @susxox Před 6 lety +23

      We harvested the yeast from a previous brew, the evidence that we have supported that method. We don't believe water was added to the beer after fermentation, as that could have contaminated the beer. Recent studies have shown that the process of fermentation eradicates pathogens not just the heating of the water to make the beer.

    • @OutOfNamesToChoose
      @OutOfNamesToChoose Před 6 lety +2

      susan boyle Thank you so much for answering my question. It's amazing that brewers have been selective in cultivating yeasts for so long.

    • @gingercore69
      @gingercore69 Před 6 lety +1

      2 things to say, first... Egyptians liked getting drunk or stoned... There are arcgeologic evidence of them using drugs, that paint drug use in a good way... So, i dont think they were against the intoxicating part of beer...
      Second... Might not be THEIR method, but you can harvest yeast from fruitskins... Grapes usually have lots of it... Its that "silky dust" that usually can be found on the grape skin... So, if you want to, you can use that if you want to :3

    • @mangusfl
      @mangusfl Před 6 lety

      in Europe the yeast often was controlled by bakers so it would be very likely is started in Egypt or maybe far before as our history book are as only as recorded by what is written or said and that was often by the winners so totally tainted

  • @sarahharthcock2101
    @sarahharthcock2101 Před 9 měsíci

    I chased down your info, but never actually saw a recipe. Bits and pieces that left out whatever you girls did. Not enough info to duplicate...my attempt is fermenting. I hope it wasn't a lot of money wasted. Thanks for the inspiration. I have learned a lot more about making beer than I knew before, and I doubt I would have looked it up without your video.

  • @coaady
    @coaady Před 6 lety

    This video was great!

  • @quetzal1627
    @quetzal1627 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for the interesting video. Is there much difference to mesopotamian beer?

  • @inessamaria2428
    @inessamaria2428 Před 5 lety +1

    The beers seem to be delicious.

  • @TheMrlkjhgfdsa
    @TheMrlkjhgfdsa Před 7 měsíci

    Does anyone know how they pre-inoculated the terracotta vessel with the yeast?

  • @michaelthomas2804
    @michaelthomas2804 Před 6 lety

    Very cool!

  • @ClancyWoodard-yw6tg
    @ClancyWoodard-yw6tg Před 9 měsíci

    But how exactly did they serve the beer? Did they use like a dipper and dip it into your cup?

  • @oneshotme
    @oneshotme Před 6 lety

    Enjoyed!!!

  • @tarjei99
    @tarjei99 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for sharing!

  • @JimFortune
    @JimFortune Před 6 lety +1

    So how many takes did you do of the tasting? I'll bet the video got better and better with successive takes! ;->

  • @wickandde
    @wickandde Před 2 lety +1

    I thought the ancient Egyptian beer was a thick liquid food, not like modern day beer

  • @MrMichkov
    @MrMichkov Před 2 lety +1

    Any ideas why this method has such a high efficiency? You mention it a couple of times but never go into the details.

  • @lukasdon0007
    @lukasdon0007 Před 6 lety +1

    The carbonation seems anachronistic, considering they wouldn't have had the type of glassware necessary to keep those pressures. It's only very recently that we've been able to store carbonated drinks.

    • @susxox
      @susxox Před 6 lety +10

      we believe they drank the beer super fresh so the co2 would be present, and the beer would at least have been somewhat a spritzy but not in a forced carb/ bottle conditioned way.

  • @drake.707
    @drake.707 Před 2 lety

    I want to hear Susan Boyle sing.

  • @mh8168
    @mh8168 Před 6 lety +2

    Step 1: Make beer
    Step 2: Wait 5,000 years

  • @noraolabi
    @noraolabi Před 3 lety

    what ever happened to the recipe that was going to be shared?? almost 3 years later and I'm still here!

  • @mangusfl
    @mangusfl Před 6 lety +1

    I knew that beer was invent in Egypt and i knew it was common in English medieval life but i did not know it was given to all the workers so thank you for correcting history

  • @rudirincewind6449
    @rudirincewind6449 Před 3 lety

    Three Woman arond a Kettle: witsches 😏
    Good job Ladys!
    Prost from Frankfurt Germany 🍻

  • @RHOOWL
    @RHOOWL Před 5 lety

    interesting...it's been my experience that the more people add descriptors to something they taste it's because they are searching for a reason to like the product. I'm not suggesting the process is wrong (super cool in fact). I'm suggesting their recipe might have got them in trouble in ancient Egypt lol.

  • @mhansl
    @mhansl Před 4 lety

    It is utterly disappointing that I can not now go out to pick up a 6-pack of British Museum Ancient Beer Iterations #1 through #3.

  • @bonsummers2657
    @bonsummers2657 Před rokem

    Is this wild-fermented? No 'yeast' added?

  • @GavinTheEnchantedHunchback

    It's been four years but I'll ask again - any chance we can see that recipe sheet please?

  • @knight10666
    @knight10666 Před 3 lety

    was it a 1:1 ratio of cold mash to hot mash? and how did you know it was done fermenting?

  • @princekai1
    @princekai1 Před 6 lety +1

    The womans shirt on the right makes it look like her shirt texture hasn't fully loaded.

  • @MrUncleTings
    @MrUncleTings Před 6 lety

    Now, my question is how do you make the ceramic pot rofl will there be a tutorial

  • @thisismyCoolFace
    @thisismyCoolFace Před 6 lety

    Great, now I'm a fan of two Susan Boyles.

  • @xluttex
    @xluttex Před 10 měsíci

    did ya find these recipes
    when you took the rest of Egyptian culture back home to your island?

  • @mikeletterst9882
    @mikeletterst9882 Před 2 lety +1

    Sumerians invented the first beer 🍺 cheers

  • @pdragone99
    @pdragone99 Před 3 lety

    Tried to recreate this figuring out the quantities of the various ingredients, and failed miserably. Is there the exact recipe somewhere on the internet? I’d like to do this properly.

  • @thedebateroom
    @thedebateroom Před 2 lety

    Can hops be added to this brew or do hops HAVE to be boiled?

  • @mgk284
    @mgk284 Před 2 lety

    5::33 brewing

  • @Balthazar97638
    @Balthazar97638 Před 6 lety +7

    It would take 5000 years to made 5000 year old beer.

  • @PaulHarris-sl1ct
    @PaulHarris-sl1ct Před 3 měsíci

    What good is an eternal afterlife without beer

  • @Dano-uf8ys
    @Dano-uf8ys Před 5 lety

    I'm confused, you say they couldn't drink the water but the beer, which is low in alcohol content is made from water and malt with hops.

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist Před 5 lety +1

      P.S. Wikipedia would suggest that it is precisely the addition of hops that makes it safer to drink.
      *shrugs*

  • @bonsummers2657
    @bonsummers2657 Před rokem

    Living prudently, consuming prudently, fundamental beer is NOT a vice. It's an optimal beverage for doing well in life, including while working, consumed in prudent moderation.

  • @nokiot9
    @nokiot9 Před 6 lety

    This was a cool one! I've always wondered about stuff like this. Did you guys not use rye so you wouldn't be hallucinating and whatnot? I dunno how long it takes ergot to form up but if that process is that efficient it'd probably do it pretty fast.

    • @98Zai
      @98Zai Před 6 lety +1

      Ergot is a fungus that grows on the grain in place of a seed, it's not something that forms during fermentation. Even bread can be tainted by Ergot. You don't really hallucinate unless there is huge amounts of Ergot, you'd suffer spasms, heart palpitations and possible limb loss long before that. LSD is just a single component of the thousands of compounds in Ergot, and veeery refined.
      Fun trivia; in Swedish it's called Mjöldryga, which means flour-stretch or -dilute. Farmers apparently saw it as a welcome addition since the Ergot fungus is much bigger than the usual grain seeds.

  • @awesomepumashoes
    @awesomepumashoes Před 3 lety

    Why did they have no mention of sanitation?

    • @kayturs
      @kayturs Před 3 lety

      What sanitation would have been around back in the ancient days?

  • @TheAtHamptonDotCom
    @TheAtHamptonDotCom Před rokem

    It takes 5 minutes into the video for three British women to figure out that people like things to taste good.

  • @brunoonoahu
    @brunoonoahu Před 2 lety

    You had me at "This whole episode is about alcohol"......and how exactly do I become a Drinks Researcher please......

  • @baronzemo420
    @baronzemo420 Před 3 lety

    11:00 They misspelled "iteration."

  • @SnerualTrepelol
    @SnerualTrepelol Před 6 lety

    Hello, is there gonna be an item on the yeast you used for the beer? There's nothing in the blog, video or in the recipe about it

  • @seanmcguire7974
    @seanmcguire7974 Před 4 lety

    😂I thought the middle girl was wearing one of those food caps

  • @VincentGonzalezVeg
    @VincentGonzalezVeg Před 3 lety

    The residue would make a good granola base

  • @RATSKETCHES
    @RATSKETCHES Před rokem

    You have to drink this when you watch a documentary about eygpt.

  • @mrdeurknopp
    @mrdeurknopp Před 6 lety +1

    7:07 vindaloo for dinner last night

  • @ph0sgene967
    @ph0sgene967 Před 6 lety +1

    Recipe?

  • @luiscotto2197
    @luiscotto2197 Před 5 lety

    Did I miss the ingredient list?

  • @thebathsaltsnail2683
    @thebathsaltsnail2683 Před 3 lety

    The funniest thing is that Egyptians let their kids drink beer because It used to be non-alcoholic

  • @steven_003
    @steven_003 Před 6 lety

    This makes my thirsty. xD

  • @lobsterfrog
    @lobsterfrog Před 2 lety

    why am i watching this i just want to pass a course in uni

  • @wrex2468
    @wrex2468 Před 4 lety

    What temperature was the second mash heated to?

    • @duayinepu2103
      @duayinepu2103 Před 4 lety

      I've been trying to make this myself and I'm getting very close to getting a similar recipe all set up. I'm assuming hot enough that touching won't hurt, but not hot enough for it to be steaming. I'm looking at it in the video and it doesn't seem to be steaming. Cheers.

    • @knight10666
      @knight10666 Před 3 lety

      the blog said not more than 80 Celcius because of the pottery containers they were in.