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From: John Lock <[email protected]>
Organization: The Beer Info Source (Atlanta, GA)
Newsgroups: rec.food.drink.beer,rec.answers,news.answers
Subject: rec.food.drink.beer FAQ [1/3] (revised 16-MAY-1997)
Followup-To: rec.food.drink.beer
Reply-To: John Lock <[email protected]>
Summary: This document contains answers to frequently asked questions
        and other informative data about beer.  It also contains
        pointers to other reference material and archives for
        further research. This is the first of three parts.
Keywords: rfdb drink beer faq
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Archive-name: beer-faq/part1
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Copyright: (c) 1994-1997 John A. Lock
Maintainer: John A. Lock <[email protected]>
URL: http://www.beerinfo.com/rfdb/

rec.food.drink.beer FAQ (C)
***************************

This is the general FAQ for rec.food.drink.beer.

It condenses a vast repository of beer knowledge represented by the
subscribers to r.f.d.b. I depend on the participants of this group to
provide the feedback I need to make this a living document. Please e-mail
comments, additions, corrections, etc. to John Lock <[email protected]>.
If your browser supports forms, you can use the feedback form.

The Charter for rec.food.drink.beer is posted to the newsgroup twice every
month and available on the Web at
<URL:http://weber.u.washington.edu/~cverver/rfdbcharter.html> or from the
archives.

Cheers, Prost, Salud, Skaal, Slainte, Stineeyammous, Gan Bei, etc!

John A. Lock <[email protected]>

**********************************************************************
This document is available through the following means:

*  Posted every two weeks to Usenet newsgroup rec.food.drink.beer

*  On the Web at <URL:http://www.beerinfo.com/rfdb/>

*  Via e-mail using the request form at
  <URL:http://www.beerinfo.com/rfdb/request.html>

*  Via anonymous ftp to ftp.stanford.edu in /pub/clubs/homebrew/beer/rfdb
  as rfd-beer.faq

*  Via e-mail by sending the following message lines to
  [email protected]:

  connect ftp.stanford.edu
  chdir /pub/clubs/homebrew/beer/rfdb
  get rfd-beer.faq
  quit

**********************************************************************
Versions are also available at various news.answers mirrors and FAQ sites:

*  North America:

  Internet FAQ Consortium -
       <URL:http://www.faqs.org/faqs/beer-faq/>
  America Online -
  <URL:ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/rtfm/usenet-by-group/rec.food.drink.beer/
  >
  UUNET -
       <URL:ftp://ftp.uu.net/usenet/news.answers/beer-faq/>
  George Washington University -
       <URL:ftp://ftp://ftp.seas.gwu.edu/pub/rtfm/rec/food/drink/beer/>

*  Europe:

  Oxford University -
  <URL:http://www.lib.ox.ac.uk/internet/news/faq/rec.food.drink.beer.html>
  Utrecht University -
  <URL:http://www.cs.ruu.nl/wais/html/na-bng/rec.food.drink.beer.html>
  Universitaet-GH Paderborn -
       <URL:ftp://ftp.uni-paderborn.de/pub/FAQ/rec/food/drink.beer/>
  Swedish University Network -
  <URL:ftp://ftp.sunet.se/pub/usenet/rtfm.mit.edu/usenet-by-heirarchy/rec/
  food/drink/beer/>

*  Asia:

  Hong Kong SuperNet -
       <URL:ftp://ftp.hk.super.net/mirror/faqs/beer-faq/>
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       <URL:ftp://nctuccca.edu.tw/USENET/FAQ/rec/food/drink/beer/>
  Pohang University -
  <URL:ftp://hwarang.postech.ac.kr/pub/usenet/news.answers/beer-faq/>

*  Africa:

  The Internet Solution -
       <URL:ftp://ftp.is.co.za/usenet/news.answers/beer-faq/>

**********************************************************************
REC.FOOD.DRINK.BEER FAQ

POSTED TO THE NEWSGROUP EVERY 2 WEEKS
**********************************************************************

Copyright (C) 1994-97 by John A. Lock. All rights reserved. This document
may be freely distributed in its entirety provided this copyright notice
is not removed. It may not be sold for profit nor incorporated in
commmercial products without the author's written permission.

CONTENTS
********

This FAQ is divided into sections which loosely encompass the variety of
Frequently Asked Questions that appear concerning beer. These are preceded
by a quick index section to aid in finding answers to specific questions.

The Quick Index section
    A listing of the most frequently asked questions.

Section 1 - Definitions of common terms regarding beer itself
    Some popular items are beer definition, styles, and marketing
    terms...

Section 2 - Definitions of common terms for the brewing industry
    Topics such as alcohol strength, Reinheitsgebot, and CAMRA...

Section 3 - Beer handling and sensory issues
    Typical answers cover proper storage, serving temperatures, tasting
    methods, off flavors...

Section 4 - Miscellaneous topics
    Includes homebrewing and specific brand issues...

Section 5 - Beer resources
    Where to find good beer, the r.f.d.b. archives, and pointers to other
    Net resources...

Section 6 - Acknowledgements

Section 7 - Maintenance History

FINDING INFORMATION
*******************

You can search for information in a number of different ways:

First, read the whole thing. You may find this entertaining, but it's
certainly not the fastest way to get an answer to a question.

Second, you can use the "Search" or "Find" function of your newsreader,
browser, or editor to locate a specific topic. This can be very useful
since the questions cover fairly broad topics and your specific answer may
be buried inside a broader response. For example, if you wanted to know
about serving temperatures, you wouldn't find that topic specifically
addressed in the questions. However, upon searching for "temp" you would
find several such references.

Third, there is the quick index to the questions which you can use to jump
directly to a specific question/answer, again, using your search function
to find the text. See the Quick Index for an example.

And last, if your viewing the HTML version on The Web, you'll find useful
pointers imbedded throughout the document. Just follow your nose
(figuratively speaking :^)!

**********************************************************************
QUICK INDEX TO FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
**********************************************************************

This is a list of Frequently Asked Questions appearing in r.f.d.b. Each
question is keyed using a simple code. The answer to question Y in FAQ
Section X is labeled X-Y and so on. To find an answer to any question
quickly, use your "search" or "find" function to find X-Y.

For example:
    To find the answer to question 2-7 "What is CAMRA?", search for 2-7
and you
    will be positioned at the answer. To return to this index, search
backwards
    for 0-0.

If you're viewing the HTML version of this document on The Web, just
follow the links from question to answer and back.

0-0. Top of List

FAQ Section 1 - Definitions of common terms regarding beer itself
    1-1. What is beer?
    1-2. What are ales?
    1-3. What are lagers?
    1-4. How are they different?
    1-5. What are lambics?
    1-6. What is "bock" beer?
    1-7. What is "porter"?
    1-8. What are "dry" beers?
    1-9. What are "ice" beers?
    1-10. What are "cold-filtered", and "heat pasteurized" beers?
    1-11. What is "draught" (draft) beer?
    1-12. How is specific gravity related to beer?
    1-13. What does "Dubbel" mean on a beer label?

FAQ Section 2 - Definitions of common terms in the brewing industry
    2-1. How is alcohol strength measured?
    2-2. Why is beer stronger in Canada than the U.S.?
    2-3. How are "ale", "malt liquor", and "barleywine" related to
    strength?
    2-4. What is the Reinheitsgebot?
    2-5. What about the new "Draught-flow" (tm) system (AKA the "widget"
    or "smoothifier")?
    2-6. What is "Real Ale"?
    2-7. What is CAMRA?
    2-8. What are the categories of brewers/breweries?
    2-9. What is a brewpub?

FAQ Section 3 - Beer handling and sensory issues
    3-1. How do I judge a beer?
    3-2. What is good/bad/skunked/spoiled beer?
    3-3. How should I store beer?
    3-4. How long does beer keep?
    3-5. Is beer considered a vegetarian/kosher/organic product?

FAQ Section 4 - Miscellaneous topics
    4-1. What is Zima and/or clear beer?
    4-2. What do the different Chimay packages/colors mean?
    4-3. What does the "33" mean on the bottles of Rolling Rock?
    4-4. Does Coors support Nazi organizations?
    4-5. Can I make my own beer....is it legal?
    4-6. How do I make it?
    4-7. WIMLIACLDAB? BTABFCTW!.....What was that?
    4-8. Is Guinness good for you?
    4-9. Where are Sam Adams beers made?
    4-10. Why does American beer suck?

FAQ Section 5 - Beer resources
    5-1. Where can I get more beer info and tasting tips?
    5-2. Where can I get good beer?
    5-3. I'm going to "some city", what brewpubs/bars are good?
    5-4. Can I get beer in the mail?
    5-5. Where can I get details on making my own?
    5-6. Where can I get recipes?
    5-7. What is r.f.d.b. about?
    5-8. Where are the archives?
    5-9. What is in the archives?
    5-10. I don't have ftp, can you e-mail files to me?

FAQ Section 6 - Acknowledgements

FAQ Section 7 - Maintenance History

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: DEFINITIONS OF COMMON TERMS REGARDING BEER ITSELF

------------------------------

Subject: 1-1. What is beer?

    Beer is an alcoholic beverage made from malted grains, hops, yeast,
    and water. The grain is usually barley or wheat, but sometimes corn
    and rice are used as well. Fruit, herbs, and spices may also be used
    for special styles. In the distant past, the terms "beer" and "ale"
    meant different things. "Ale" was originally made without using hops,
    while "beer" did use hops. Since virtually all commercial products
    now use hops, the term "beer" now encompasses two broad categories:
    ales and lagers.

------------------------------

Subject: 1-2. What are ales?

    Ales are brewed with "top-fermenting" yeasts at close to room
    temperatures, 50-70F (10-21C). Ales encompass the broadest range of
    beer styles including bitters, pale ales, porters, stouts, barley
    wines, trappist, lambic, and alt. The British Isles are famous for
    their ales and it is a popular style with homebrewers and
    micro-breweries.

------------------------------

Subject: 1-3. What are lagers?

    Lagers are brewed with "bottom-fermenting" yeasts at much colder
    temperatures, 35-50F (2-10C) over long periods of time (months). This
    is called "lagering". Lagers include bocks, doppelbocks, Munich- and
    Vienna-style, Maerzen/Oktoberfest, and the famous pilsners. Pilsner
    beer originated in the town of Pilsen, now in the Czech Republic and
    was the first non-cloudy beer. Most popular beers produced by the
    large North American breweries were originally of the pilsner style.
    These have diverged a great deal from the original style and succeed
    now by the force of the mass-marketing prowess of the brewers rather
    than any remarkable qualities of the beers themselves.

------------------------------

Subject: 1-4. How are they different?

    The differences tend to be based on tradition more than anything
    inherent to either style. The major traditional differences are a
    result of the varying lengths of fermentation and temperature used
    for the two beer types. They can also vary in style and degree of
    hopping and in the types of malt used, but these differences are very
    arbitrary and exceptions abound.

    Ales generally undergo short, warm fermentations and are intended to
    be consumed soon after completion. The result of relatively warm
    fermentation is that a lot of by-products of yeast metabolism besides
    alcohol and CO2 get left in the beer. These usually manifest
    themselves as "fruity" or "buttery" flavors which vary in degree and
    flavor with the strain of yeast used and the temperature and duration
    of fermentation. Accordingly, ales exhibit their most complex flavors
    when served at warm temperatures, around 50-60F (10-15C).

    The trick with lager yeast is that they can survive, metabolize, and
    reproduce at lower temperatures. Lager yeast can assimilate compounds
    which ale yeast cannot, fewer by-products are made, and the stuff
    that does get made drops out during lagering. The result is a very
    clean, sparkling beer. Lagers are best served at slightly cooler
    temperatures than ales, 40-50F (5-10C).

    Of course there are notable exceptions:

    California Common
         The best known example is "Steam Beer" which is a trademark of
         the Anchor Brewing Co. It employs lager yeast fermented at ale
         temperatures which gives it some fruitiness usually associated
         with ales.

    Koelsch and Alt
         Ales that undergo a cold secondary fermentation and storage
         period resulting in only a hint of ale-like fruityness. Koelsch
         is usually associated with the city of Cologne, Germany while
         Alt is indigenous to Duesseldorf.

    Cream Ale
         Alternately, an ale fermented at lager temps or vice-versa. It
         has also been made by blending a conventional ale with a
         conventional lager after fermentation. Most examples are only
         slightly more interesting than mega-brews; a touch more body, a
         touch more fermentation flavor.

------------------------------

Subject: 1-5. What are lambics?

    Lambics are a type of ale brewed in parts of Belgium by exposing hot
    wort (unfermented beer) to the outside air. Indigenous, wild yeasts
    and other microorganisms settle on the exposed surface of the wort as
    it cools and begin spontaneous fermentation. They are often sweetened
    with fruit flavorings and generally prized the world over.

------------------------------

Subject: 1-6. What is "bock" beer?

    Bock is a style of lager beer which originated in Germany. It was
    traditionally brewed in the fall, at the end of the growing season,
    when barley and hops were at their peak. It was "lagered" all winter
    and enjoyed in the spring at the beginning of the new brewing season.
    Bocks can be pale (helles) or dark (dunkles) and there are
    double(doppel) bocks which are extra strong.

    Bocks are usually strong beers made with lots of malt yielding a very
    full-bodied, alcoholic beer. A persistent myth has been that bock
    beers are made from the dregs at the bottom of a barrel when they are
    cleaned in the spring. This probably seemed logical because of the
    heavier body and higher strength of bocks. From a brewing standpoint,
    this is clearly impossible for two reasons: 1) The "dregs" left after
    fermentation are unfermentable, which is exactly why they are left
    over. They cannot be fermented again to make more beer. 2) Any
    attempt to re-use the "dregs" would probably result in serious
    bacterial contamination and a product which does not resemble beer as
    we know it.

------------------------------

Subject: 1-7. What is "porter"?

    From: The Guinness Drinking Companion by Leslie Dunkling (1992)
    Guinness Publishing; ISBN 0-85112-988-9 "In the London Ale-Houses and
    taverns of the early 18th Century it was common to call for a pint of
    "Three threads", meaning a third of a pint each of ale, beer, and
    twopenny (the strongest beer, costing twopence a quart). A brewer
    called Harwood had the idea of brewing a beer that united the
    flavours of all three. He called this beer "Entire". This was about
    1720.

    Harwood's Entire was highly hopped, strong, and dark. It was brewed
    with soft rather than hard water. Within a few years Entire was also
    being referred to as "Porter" (short for porter's ale) because the
    porters of the London street markets were especially fond of it.
    Porter that was extra strong was known as "Stout Porter", and
    eventually "Stout"."

------------------------------

Subject: 1-8. What are "dry" beers?

--

    "Dry" beer was developed in Japan. Using more adjuncts (like corn and
    rice) and genetically altered yeasts, these beers ferment more
    completely and have less residual sweetness, and hence less
    aftertaste.

------------------------------

Subject: 1-9. What are "ice" beers?

    The making of "ice" beers, in general, involves lowering the
    temperature of the finished product until the water in it begins to
    freeze and then filtering out the ice crystals that form. Since water
    will freeze before alcohol, the result is higher alcohol content. The
    ice forms around yeast cells, protein particles, etc. so these get
    removed as well; leaving fewer components to provide taste and
    character.

    This process is not new to brewing, having been developed in Germany
    to produce "eisbocks". Apparently they were produced by accident
    during the traditional spring celebration with bock beers. Spring,
    being the capricious season that it is, probably sent a late cold
    snap around one year causing some of the spring bocks to partially
    freeze. People drank it anyway and liked the change in flavor.

    In its current incarnation, the process is an offshoot of the
    concentrated fruit juice industry. It was developed by orange growers
    to reduce the costs of storage and shipping by concentrating the
    fruit juice through freezing and removal of some water. Labatt
    Breweries claims to have pioneered this process for brewing and most
    of the large North American brewers quickly followed suit in the
    usual marketing frenzy.

    The main difference between these "ice" beers and true eisbocks is
    taste and character. Any beer brewed using this method will only be
    as good as the brew with which you start. In other words, if you
    start with a bland, flavor-impaired, adjunct-laden beer and remove
    some of the water, you end up with a bland, flavor-impaired,
    adjunct-laden beer with more alcohol. OTOH, if you take a rich,
    malty, traditionally brewed bock and remove some of the water, you
    end up with an eisbock.

------------------------------

Subject: 1-10. What are "cold-filtered", and "heat pasteurized" beers?

    Cold-filtering is a way of clarifying beer with a shortened lagering
    time. Beer (lager particularly) becomes clearer with extended storage
    which allows proteins and other particles to coagulate and settle out
    of suspension. The beer can then be drawn off and bottled. One way to
    reduce the time required is to chill the beer causing these molecules
    to "clump" and be easily filtered out. The up-side is that the time
    from brewing to finished product is shortened, thereby boosting
    productivity. The down-side is that cold-filtering also removes many
    components which contribute flavor and body to beer.

    Heat Pasteurized is a redundant phrase since pasteurization means
    heating to kill microbes.

    Some beers are bottle or cask conditioned, meaning that live yeast
    are still in the beer in its container. Most mainstream beers are
    either filtered, to remove all yeast and bacteria, or pasteurized to
    kill all yeast and bacteria. This makes for a more stable product
    with a longer shelf-life.

    Pasteurization is more expensive and tends to alter the flavor.
    Filtration is cheaper, leaves a clearer beer, and has less effect on
    flavor.

    The "ice" beer process (see above) enhances filtration schemes
    because more stuff can be filtered out more quickly using less
    filtration material which shows up directly on the old bottom line.

------------------------------

Subject: 1-11. What is "draught" (draft) beer?

    Technically speaking, draught beer is beer served from the cask in
    which it has been conditioned. It has been applied, loosely, to any
    beer served from a large container. More recently, it has been used
    as a promotional term for canned or bottled beer to try to convince
    us that the beer inside tastes like it came from a cask. See also
    "Real Ale".

John
<URL:http://www.beerinfo.com/>