An edition of Strong waters (2010)

Strong waters

a simple guide to making beer, wine, cider and other spirited beverages at home

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Last edited by MARC Bot
February 28, 2020 | History
An edition of Strong waters (2010)

Strong waters

a simple guide to making beer, wine, cider and other spirited beverages at home

  • 5.0 (1 rating) ·
  • 1 Want to read
  • 1 Have read

Discover the Many Rewards of Homemade Spirits—Unique, Flavorful, Economical and Surprisingly Easy to Make

Today’s renewed interest in making wine and beer at home amounts to nothing less than a renaissance. No matter why you want to join the new generation of homebrewers—to complement your cooking, to save money, or simply for a truly rewarding hobby—Strong Waters will tell you how.

In this do-it-yourself guide, Scott Mansfield makes a grand tradition accessible for today’s enthusiasts. Beginners will welcome his tips for getting started inexpensively with everyday materials, and experienced hobbyists will be inspired by recipes for longtime favorites and forgotten delights, including:

  • Limoncello, the perfect aperitif to conclude an Italian dinner
  • Perry, apple cider’s sweeter cousin, made from pears
  • Rhodomel, an ancient Grecian mead flavored with roses and honey
  • Spruce Beer, a North American classic since colonial times

Strong Waters covers everything from the basics of bottling to the science of sweetening. It’s surprisingly easy, and as eight pages of color photos illustrate, the results are tantalizing.

Publish Date
Publisher
Experiment
Language
English
Pages
243

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Strong Waters
Cover of: Strong waters

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Book Details


Table of Contents

1 Why Make Your Own?
Basic Steps
Easier than Making Soup
Getting Started
2 Equipment
Must-Haves
Nice-to-Haves
3 Ingredients
Water
Sugars
Yeast
Additives
4 The Full Process
Planning the Batch Size
Sanitizing Equipment
Cleaning Used Bottles
Sanitizing Ingredients
Hydrating the Yeast
Controlling the Temperature
Controlling the Light
Fermenting
Racking
Stabilizing
Clearing
Blending
Bottling
Aging
5 Recipes
Fruit Wines
Vegetable Wines
Miscellaneous Wines
Meads
Hard Ciders and Perry
Beers
Miscellaneous Beers
Distillations, Jackings, and Infusions
6 Troubleshooting
Glossary
Pearson’s Square
Sizes and Conversions
Other Sources of Information
Acknowledgments
Index
About the Author

Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-227) and index.

Published in
New York

Classifications

Library of Congress
TP548.2 .M37 2010

The Physical Object

Pagination
x, 243 p., [8] p. of plates :
Number of pages
243

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL25255570M
Internet Archive
strongwaterssimp0000mans
ISBN 10
1615190104
ISBN 13
9781615190102
LCCN
2009938395
OCLC/WorldCat
426814300

Excerpts

Why Make Your Own?

Not long ago, our forebears regularly drank a rich variety of wines, ales, and aperitifs that make today’s range of choices look impoverished by comparison. While most of us today peruse a wine list to choose between grape wines—a Cabernet or a Pinot Noir, for example—previous generations might have chosen between grape wine, cider, honey-based mead, metheglin (a mead with herbs added), perry (pear cider), peachy (you can guess what that was made of), or a variety of herb-based ales.
...
Given the symbolic place alcohol holds in our shared culture—consumed at celebrations and often accompanying important rituals or rites of passage—making our own alcoholic beverages is a particularly rich form of self-expression. The human relationship with fermentation is long. Some of the earliest discovered writings are Sumerian brewing instructions, and some of the earliest known paintings show people making and drinking beer. As people began to create and inhabit cities, fermented beverages saved millions of lives by helping to kill the bacteria in the shared water. The purpose of the earliest agricultural studies was to enhance wine and beer production and quality. The process of making alcoholic beverages led to many of the first laws, to the early specialization of labor, to guilds, and later to labor unions. Both drinking and prohibitions against it have deep roots in many of our religions.
...
And while today almost all of us buy our alcoholic beverages ready-made and prepackaged, making them was as common as cooking dinner throughout nearly all of our history. Countries, regions, and families each had their own cherished recipes for alcoholic beverages. Most of these recipes are lost, but some of the best—at least the ones that were written down—appear updated and standardized on these pages.
added by ScottMansfield.

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON
February 28, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot remove fake subjects
July 17, 2019 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
September 10, 2018 Edited by ScottMansfield Edited without comment.
September 10, 2018 Edited by ScottMansfield Added new cover
March 28, 2012 Created by LC Bot import new book