Beer Stories
Beer Stories
  • Видео 18
  • Просмотров 6 230
Beer in Belgium and Brazil - Lecture 13
This lecture looks at craft brewing outside of the United States with a focus on Belgium and Brazil, two countries that have profoundly shaped the landscape of corporate beer. In the two countries that gave us Anheuser Busch In-Bev, one finds a fascinating array of artisanal beers produced with great craftsmanship. I also want to reflect on how we evaluate beer. How do we know what is good and what is not so good?
Просмотров: 12

Видео

Beer, much safer than water
Просмотров 90623 часа назад
This video looks at why beer was often safer than water.
Craft beer’s stunning boom - Lecture 12
Просмотров 80День назад
This lecture looks at the stunning expansion of craft breweries in the United States starting with some of the most successful companies such as Sierra Nevada and The Boston Beer Company. In 1980, there were less than 100 active breweries in the United States. Today, there are 10,000.
Duff, symbol of coporate lager
Просмотров 70День назад
This video is a tribute to the Simpsons' spoof of corporate beer in the 1990s.
Better beer in Britain and the USA - Lecture 11
Просмотров 11614 дней назад
This lecture reviews important development in the history of beer such as the revival of homebrewing, craft production and grassroots activism to preserve traditional brewing methods in Britain and provide new options in the United States.
Cheapest beer on the planet, Bia Hoi
Просмотров 4114 дней назад
This video provides a brief look at Bia Hoi, an affordable beer in Vietnam.
The globalization of lager - Week 10
Просмотров 13721 день назад
In this lecture, we will review the globalization of beer and the consolidation of brewing on the global scale. Beer is big business. Companies like Heineken and Anheuser Busch, InBev are truly massive and today, China is the world’s largest beer market.
Corporate beer, WWII, Consolidation - Lecture 9
Просмотров 62928 дней назад
This video reviews trends in the American brewing industry from the end of Prohibition in 1933 to about 1980: canned beer, television advertising, consolidation, and increasingly light lager beers.
Prohibition and its Repeal - Lecture 8
Просмотров 2,9 тыс.Месяц назад
This video reviews the history of Prohibition in the United States, what happened, why it ended, and the ramifications. Prohibition, sometimes called “the Noble Experiment,” refers to the period in American history from 1920 to 1933 when it was illegal to manufacture, sell, and transport alcoholic beverages.
The birth of American lager - Lecture 6
Просмотров 812Месяц назад
This video provides an overview of beer’s history in the United States from colonial times to the late nineteenth century.
Science transforms beer brewing - Lecture 5
Просмотров 77Месяц назад
This video looks at scientific development in the history of beer during the nineteenth century. By the start of the 20th century, the world’s largest commercial breweries all employed full-time chemists to ensure the quality and consistency of their product. The science of brewing, in short, advanced enormously.
Porter, India Pale Ale, and Pilsner - Lecture 4
Просмотров 1232 месяца назад
This video looks at the history of beer in eighteenth and nineteenth century Europe with a focus on major examine the industrialization of brewing as well as the creation of a new beer styles: Porter, India Pale Ale, and Pilsner.
Ban the Booze! - Lecture 7
Просмотров 812 месяца назад
This video provides an overview of the American Prohibition Movement, its motivations, tactics, and stunning legislative triumph in 1919.
English ale and brewsters - Lecture 3
Просмотров 1262 месяца назад
This video discusses the history of beer in medieval England: women who brewed, major changes in the aftermath of the Black Death, and by the lecture’s end, England will have adopted the use of hops and men will be the primary producers of beer in the kingdom.
Beer and hops during the Middle Ages - Lecture 2
Просмотров 672 месяца назад
This video provides an overview of major developments in the history of beer and brewing after the collapse of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages. One major development from this time period was the gradual, but persistent adoption of hops in European brewing.
Beer in Mesopotamia and Egypt - Lecture 1
Просмотров 2142 месяца назад
Beer in Mesopotamia and Egypt - Lecture 1
How beer gets brewed
Просмотров 473 месяца назад
How beer gets brewed
The Almost Nuclear War: Lessons from the Cuban Missile Crisis
Просмотров 60Год назад
The Almost Nuclear War: Lessons from the Cuban Missile Crisis

Комментарии

  • @ShaheenGhiassy
    @ShaheenGhiassy 23 часа назад

    My tongue doesn’t understand brewing with coriander

  • @ShaheenGhiassy
    @ShaheenGhiassy 23 часа назад

    Final one :(

  • @eyes5877
    @eyes5877 День назад

    Fax brother! Spit your shit indeed!

  • @Adrian-cu6og
    @Adrian-cu6og День назад

    Baited into alcoholism.

  • @SeraSer4phic
    @SeraSer4phic День назад

    Nice bait. I really thought it was one of those funni skits about teehee alcoholism funni. I'm pleasantly educated.

  • @Leshyman
    @Leshyman День назад

    So real, speak your shit indeed fr fr on gawd

  • @Fr1ti4e88
    @Fr1ti4e88 День назад

    The Jews didn’t poison the beer wells but…

  • @GeraldindAddison
    @GeraldindAddison 7 дней назад

    It is only when the mind and character slumber that the dress can be seen.

  • @davidgold5961
    @davidgold5961 8 дней назад

    8:24 Yes, and that led to the birth of NASCAR. Powerful cars with stiff suspensions to hold a lot of weight (cases of moonshine) and fast enough to get away from the revenuers (IRS). They also had to be reliable because if you got caught, you’d be going to jail. And the suspensions had to handle dirt roads. 74% of roads in the US were still unpaved. And lastly, they had to look like ordinary cars, but they were far from ordinary. Naturally, after doing the moonshine runs for the day, they would race each other to see who built the faster car. The result was NASCAR.

  • @arlosmith2784
    @arlosmith2784 10 дней назад

    Prohibition didn't work in California. In San Francisco restaurants just had back rooms where liquor was served. The San Francisco police didn't care. Some wineries stayed in business selling "sacramental" wine. ⚖️👎

  • @KAS6558
    @KAS6558 10 дней назад

    Prohibition. I don't drink. But what a stupid idea. The unintended consequences were enormous and disastrous ended the freedom to make up our minds how to behave.

  • @FMKeb
    @FMKeb 11 дней назад

    OHH YEAH!

  • @jollyjohnthepirate3168
    @jollyjohnthepirate3168 12 дней назад

    It's the same lesson we refused to learn with our drug laws. If people wanted to use substances, they will. No matter what the government wants or what a religious minority wants.

    • @arlosmith2784
      @arlosmith2784 10 дней назад

      Actually with respect to cannabis, the public is protesting federal Prohibition: At least 38 states have legalized at least medical marijuana. 🍃

  • @groovysoca
    @groovysoca 14 дней назад

    Informative, interesting, well presented; great video.

  • @AndreasAndersson-ve4jx
    @AndreasAndersson-ve4jx 15 дней назад

    Would have been interested in how Brewing under licence is done & it's market share Vs actually exported. And for a regular Licence brewed Lager, are all the ingredients locally sourced, or do they ship something, like spices? Yeast? I suppose they have no process for making a syrup like e.g. Coca-Cola? In Sweden my guess is that perhaps 90% of foreign beers is Licence brewed. And that the imported beers usually are types that does not taste like everything else, like Guinness or Corona? (@ each end of the spectrum.) E.g.Löwenbräu is in Sweden brewed by Spendrups. Nothing wrong with it. But it is nothing like the Löwenbräu in glass bottle i bought from a vending machine in (München? Ingolstadt?), which is the best lager i have ever tasted.... (The Germans have beer bottle vending machines in lots of places, incl. in the factory halls. On the Audi factory in Ingolstadt, they also have wall-mounted beer openers and & a beer bottle holder on every machine. They would perhaps buy a beer per shift, or something like that. I guess they can do that, cuz they can handle it.... It was a fabulous, super-clean, super well maintained factory...)

    • @HopsandHistory
      @HopsandHistory 14 дней назад

      Thanks for the comment. I enjoyed reading it. In fact, it made me think of something from about 15 years ago in the United States. I distinctly remember when Anheuser-Busch bought Becks and started brewing the German brand's all-malt recipe in St. Louis or wherever it was. American beer drinkers immediately noticed the difference. Was it the water? Was it the grain? It just didn't taste liked an imported Becks. Anheuser-Busch insisted that it was the same German recipe, but something made it different when brewing in the United States. I think water chemistry and brewing conditions (weather, fermentation vessels, etc.) may account for some of the differences between Löwenbräu in Sweden and in Germany. As for beer vending machines, they have no future in the USA. The trajectory here has only been to make beer more restricted since the 1980s. We've got a puritanical element here. I still get asked for identification when buying beer from a grocery store despite my gray hair.

  • @basja1323
    @basja1323 15 дней назад

    Love american light lagers! Prost

  • @trippen4819
    @trippen4819 16 дней назад

    Beer for the people!

  • @izzulhaziq4898
    @izzulhaziq4898 17 дней назад

    eren kruger

  • @indigohammer5732
    @indigohammer5732 18 дней назад

    I like the story of the Striped Pig😂

  • @indigohammer5732
    @indigohammer5732 18 дней назад

    Absolutely fascinating. Thank you.

  • @indigohammer5732
    @indigohammer5732 18 дней назад

    I just stumbled upon your channel and I would like to say how much I enjoyed your presentation. There's great use of some wonderful source material and I have certainly learned a few new things. I had no idea James Watt invented the Hydrometer! My late Father worked in a Brewery for a short period and used to make "Home Brew". Particularly a dark "Heavy". A dark beer popular in Scotland. You probably know that the Bass "Red Triangle" is the first "Registered Trade Mark" in The UK. Many thanks from your now teetotal viewer in Glasgow, Scotland.

  • @jamesdavidson6274
    @jamesdavidson6274 20 дней назад

    I work at OSU go beavs! I also studied history and homebrew, so naturally I think the history of beer is fascinating. Great stuff!

  • @willmcintosh9974
    @willmcintosh9974 20 дней назад

    Awesome man, absolutely love it. Thank you for uploading and sharing your knowledge 🍻

  • @50wfiak33
    @50wfiak33 22 дня назад

    i’m not at school but i’m still learning lots

  • @taylormichel5978
    @taylormichel5978 23 дня назад

    Are you saying sill or still?

  • @ShaheenGhiassy
    @ShaheenGhiassy 27 дней назад

    Interesting tidbit that an excise tax on beer helped fund the civil war

  • @ShaheenGhiassy
    @ShaheenGhiassy 27 дней назад

    Well done, nice work

  • @docBZA
    @docBZA 28 дней назад

    Hell yeah dawg thanks for putting this out there! Fascinating to learn about the history of American brewing post prohibition

  • @TheFrankHuda
    @TheFrankHuda 28 дней назад

    I'm binging Beer Stories....3rd video in row. Great stuff. I'm not even a huge beer guy, but I am a history guy. O God I really AM 35 years old....

    • @HopsandHistory
      @HopsandHistory 28 дней назад

      Thanks for the comment! I'll tell a secret. I don't like beer as much as I like world history.

  • @Fnargl99
    @Fnargl99 Месяц назад

    Wait is this the baseball professor. if so what other chanels you got

    • @HopsandHistory
      @HopsandHistory Месяц назад

      The channel began it's life as "world history stories" after I created an hourlong video about the Cuban Missile Crisis. Then I started teaching the history of beer and brewing at Oregon State. Here we are. Thanks for watching the "baseball professor"!

  • @Peter-lr3zf
    @Peter-lr3zf Месяц назад

    An excellent video. Would you agree that the development of American Lager Beer is the likely result of American Industrialization?

    • @HopsandHistory
      @HopsandHistory Месяц назад

      The two things are connected,, but Americans had been experimenting with adjunct grains since colonial times. So you've got brewers willing to experiment with barley malt different from what was in Europe. After the Civil War urban markets got in the North, brewing professionalized, and consumers showed their preference for clear and light beer. Take all of that plus chemists calling for the use of rice and corn to stabilize the protein and enzyme content of six row barley.

    • @pb68slab18
      @pb68slab18 Месяц назад

      @@HopsandHistory And the market for the best barley and hops grew accordingly, resulting in higher prices for those grains. And lesser quality led to the birth of 'cheap' beer. I drank Rolling Rock, which used corn and rice according to the bottle cap. It did make for a sweeter drink.

  • @stuartjackson8091
    @stuartjackson8091 2 месяца назад

    They invaded as much as migrated, well they just invaded, like Europeans have in the Americas.

  • @woodynightshade2285
    @woodynightshade2285 2 месяца назад

    Is there any record of when the malting process was first understood by Europeans? I would imagine that it probably happened by accident, with some farmer roasting barley to arrest the grain's beginning to germinate, after having become wet.

    • @HopsandHistory
      @HopsandHistory 2 месяца назад

      What I can say is that ancient people in Sumeria and Egypt understood the malting process. They didn't have scientific language to describe it, but they understood the mechanics of soaking grains so they sprouted and stopping that process with heat. When I think about European malting, the English were the first maltsters to use coke instead of firewood as the heat source for drying the malt. That was a big advance since firewood imparted undesirable smells to the malt. Those advances are well-documented.