Anthropology
Related: About this forumNew findings confirm that Bronze Age Babylonians really loved beer
03 SEPTEMBER 2018
Chemical analyses finds Mesopotamian brewing was widespread, and quaffing styles were more varied than thought. Andrew Masterson reports.
A clay tablet from Iraq, around 2500 BCE, showing people drinking beer from a single vessel, using straws.
COURTESY OF THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
The ancient Mesopotamians really didnt mind a beer, new chemical analysis has shown.
Many Bronze Age textual and pictorial sources attest to the consumption of beer in Mesopotamia the oft-described cradle of civilisation between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in the Middle East from as early as 4000 BCE.
References deciphered from third millennium BCE cuneiform texts show that the Mesopotamians were as sophisticated in their tastes as todays hipster craft-brew fans, choosing between several different types, including golden beer, sweet dark beer and red beer.
Unambiguous chemical and archaeological evidence, however, has remained scarce. The identification of building remains as breweries, large vats as beer-making pots, and bowls as drinking vessels have been based mostly say a team of archaeologists led by Elsa Perruchini from the University of Glasgow in Scotland on educated guesswork.
More:
https://cosmosmagazine.com/archaeology/new-findings-confirm-that-bronze-age-babylonians-really-loved-beer
bdtrppr6
(796 posts)left-of-center2012
(34,195 posts)Frothingslosh is a unique beer that's so light that the beer actually floats on top of the foam. It all started out as a running joke on Rege Cordic's Pittsburgh radio show in the 1950s. He made up all kinds of joke ads for this fictitious beer and invented slogans such as "A whale of an ale for the pale stale male" and "Hi dittom dottom, the foam is on the bottom."
But the Olde Frothingsloth concept became so popular, that eventually it caught the attention of the Pittsburgh Brewing Co. who started selling small runs of Olde Frothingsloth for special occasions such as Christmas and holidays. Of course, the beer being sold was really just Iron City Beer repackaged with Olde Frothingslosh labels, but the labels themselves were so outrageous that they instantly became prized among beer can collectors.
The most popular cans were those that featured Miss Olde Frothingslosh, Fatima Yechburgh , the supposed winner of the Frothingslosh Beauty Contest. Fatima was described as a resident of a small town near Pittsburgh. When not studying arc welding, she enjoyed soap carving, arm wrestling, sky diving, and ballet.
I believe that the Pittsburgh Brewing Co. still occasionally produces small runs of Olde Frothingslosh.
packman
(16,296 posts)Grew up in the Pittsburgh area and remember Olde Frothingslosh Pale Stale - I preferred Stoney's myself. Thanks for the memory.
left-of-center2012
(34,195 posts)I graduated high school in New Kensington, 22 miles up the Allegheny River from Pgh.
Went to junior high in Punxsutawney, before moving to "New Ken".
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,727 posts)that strongly suggests that the original impetus for cultivating grain was to brew beer, not bake bread. Thus, beer came before bread. Makes sense to me. Grain, mixed with water and left alone will ferment. Consuming the liquid brings about certain, ahh, effects and behaviors, which most humans like and will seek out.
What possessed early humans to turn grain into flour has always struck me as a huge mystery. Don't get me wrong, I'm glad our distant ancestors figured it out. I like bread, I've even been known to bake it myself.
The other thing is that older beers would have been highly nutritious, as well as having the oft-desired effect of intoxication.