MdV: Merchant du Vin beer e-newsletter – Wednesday April 30, 2008: The Story Behind the Beer.

 

MdV & fine beer in the news

Fine beer & benchmark imports continue to gain more attention in the media: on April 12, ’08, Orval was “Top Belgian Beer,” in Japan’s Nikkei Plus One newspaper; The Tasting Panel magazine featured Traquair House Ale, from Scotland, in the April ’08 issue; the May ’08 All About Beer magazine mentioned Samuel Smith’s Oatmeal Stout in their “Fade to Black,” article; we spotted Ayinger Hefe-Weizen and Samuel Smith’s Oatmeal Stout in the last two issues of new magazine, “Beer.”  And congratulations to Westmalle Trappist Brewery for their bronze medal in the 2008 World Beer Cup.

 

A full current news listing is always on our news page;

you can also check local beer tastings, dinners and festivals on our national events page 

and read previous html versions of this newsletter at our

e-news archive

If you are interested in beer glassware, clothing and collectables we also have an online e-store . . . and we have recently added a couple new items.

 

 

Beer Chat from the Beer Court Jester: The Story Behind the Beer: Samuel Smith’s

 

Beer has a deep and rich history; it is produced by a perfect blend of agriculture, art, science, and magic.  Beer is fun, interesting and often even compelling.  Beer is a topic for great songs, a fulfilling hobby, a symbol of companionship, an icebreaker, a real treat to the senses . . . and sometimes, a beer is the high point of a day.

 

In addition to the pleasures of beer, there are also some great beer stories.  Many are the tales of the homebrewer who was told by friends time & time again: “you should sell this!”  There have been traditional regional beer styles that had almost disappeared (like oatmeal stout, reintroduced to the world by Samuel Smith’s in 1980).  There are new styles, produced by brewers who push flavor boundaries.  There are monks who brew beer, family recipes, wild yeast, and a trout who returned a gold ring to a princess. (If you don’t know the Orval story, it’s in an archived e-news, right here: http://www.merchantduvin.com/pages/1_about/enews_archive/E_news_July_21_2004_Orval_Trappist_ale.htm/ )

 

Produced from a huge range of ingredients and regional techniques, made with skill and inspiration, beer follows traditions and seasons.  It pairs with classic or with innovative foods.  Beer culture is fun, and we suggest that some knowledge about a brewer can enhance the enjoyment of drinking beer.  Here is a little history and info about Samuel Smith’s, brewing beer in Tadcaster, Yorkshire, England since 1758.  The beers are highly respected and in wide distribution, the Samuel Smith’s is a true pioneer in the craft brewing world. So open up a Sam Smith’s and have a look; next time you are buying, selling or drinking a Samuel Smith’s, your enjoyment may be enhanced by these notes:

 

“Est. 1758”: Every drop of beer brewed at Samuel Smith’s is made with water from the brewery well.  In fact, the brewery has the original well-digger’s receipt in their archives, and it is that 1758 receipt that establishes their founding date.  (In 1758, George Washington was 26; Benjamin Franklin was 52, and Abraham Lincoln would not be born for another 51 years.)

 

“Yorkshire Squares”:  Samuel Smith’s is the only brewery that ferments all ales in open-topped vessels made of stone, known locally as “Yorkshire Squares,” and they make the only stone-fermented beers available in the US.  Yorkshire Squares are certainly not the easiest or cheapest fermentation vessel to use, but they provide the perfect environment for the Samuel Smith yeast strain due to their shape & configuration.  And as brewers will confirm, happy yeast makes great-tasting beer.  (We have on our website a detailed scholarly article by Mr. Peter Robinson, from the Brewery History Society Journal, regarding Yorkshire Squares; it’s about 1600 words: http://www.merchantduvin.com/pages/5_breweries/samsmith_yorkshire.html )

 

“Local delivery by horse-drawn wagon”:  In the town of Tadcaster, local pubs are still supplied with Samuel Smith beer by a horse-drawn brewery wagon.  The brewery has a wagon barn and a stable on the premises, where Shire draft horses are kept.  Rather than a marketing ploy, local delivery by horse-drawn wagon is a firm commitment to tradition: years ago, when trucks and trains became available, they were clearly better for more distant beer deliveries and the brewery began to use them.  But locally, horses worked well – they never stopped making sense . . . and with the current prices of fuel, they make even more sense!

 

Look for more Samuel Smith stories in the next issue, including the early introduction of organic beers, English pub culture, the American beer scene when Samuel Smith’s first came in to the US in 1978, and some exciting upcoming news.

 

Brewing Terminology: “Gravity” Made Simple:

What does the term “gravity” mean to beer folks?  Some of us who might not know may have figured out from context that it has something to do with the beer’s strength . . .

Water with sugar dissolved in it is heavier than plain water.  The liquid in a brewkettle (called wort) contains barley-derived sugar, which the yeast later consumes to produce alcohol and carbon dioxide.  Sugar is the yeast’s food. 

So, unfermented wort with lots of sugar, or a high Original Gravity (O.G.) is more likely to produce a beer with higher alcohol.  To oversimplify for clarity, more barley = more sugar = more yeast food = more alcohol.

The numbers come from using plain water at 60 degrees F as a reference.  Water = Specific Gravity 1.000.  O.G. for beer worts might range from 1.040 all the way up to 1.100.  After fermentation, Final Gravity or Terminal Gravity might range from 1.006 - 1.020.  Why the change? The yeast consumed sugar from the sweet (and heavy!) wort and produced alcohol (lighter than water).  And the change indicates how much alcohol was produced, so brewers who know the OG and the FG can determine the alcohol in the finished beer.

What about OG in the Balling scale, measured in degrees Plato?  Simple -- just a different reference scale: multiply Plato times 4 and move the decimal  3 places left to get Specific Gravity; divide SG by 4 and move the decimal  3 places right to get Plato.  OG 1.048 = 12 Plato.  14 Plato = OG 1.056.

 

 

 

Merchant du Vin, America’s Premier Specialty Beer Importer Since 1978

http://www.merchantduvin.com