'Tantalising, enlightening and the best reason to raise another glass of beer' Olly Smith
'This is one of the most important books ever written about beer' Mark Dredge
Since its creation 13,000 years ago, beer has shaped everything from architecture and advertising to religion and bioengineering. The people who built the pyramids were paid in ale; the first fridge was built for beer not food;
bacteria was discovered while investigating sour beer; and it was the beer halls of Germany that hosted Hitler's rise to power.
In this highly entertaining beer-lover's guide to world history, award-winning drinks writer Jonny Garrett recounts the incredible human moments and inventions in pursuit of the perfect pint.
'This book will make you laugh, it will make you smarter and it will make you want to drink more beer' Ned Palmer
'As fascinating as it is funny... full of revelations about beer's vital role in the world' Robbie Knox
Publisher: Atlantic Books
ISBN: 9781838959968
Number of pages: 368
Dimensions: 198 x 129 mm
Edition: Main
Garrett shares his huge knowledge about beer and its history with joyful enthusiasm and wit. This book will make you laugh, it will make you smarter and it will make you want to drink more beer. - Ned Palmer, bestselling author of A Cheesemonger's History of the British Isles
Annoyingly good. Jonny Garrett succeeds in doing what all good beer writers should: taking a subject that can seem geeky at times and making it compelling to the general reader. - Pete Brown, bestselling author of Man Walks into a Pub
As fascinating as it is funny, The Meaning of Beer is full of revelations about beer's vital role in the world. - Robbie Knox, presenter of JaackMaate Podcast & Soccer AM
Jonny Garrett takes us on a historical, cultural and blissfully hoppy romp through the story of beer. Both sobering and intoxicating, it is far more than a paean to the pie-eyed and is broad enough to travel from Temple Bar to the Thirty Years War. Glass half full. - Rick Broadbent, bestselling author of That Near-Death Thing and Now Then: The Story of Yorkshire and its People
This is one of the most important books ever written about beer - Mark Dredge, TV presenter and author of A Brief History of Lager
Tantalising, enlightening and the best reason to raise another glass of beer. - Olly Smith, award winning wine expert, columnist and author
A cracking read that will surprise you as you learn the impact that this humble (and delicious) drink has had on the modern world. The first industrial use of refrigeration was for beer, the science advances that... More
The production of finished beer took time and parameter of each raw material must not lack and in proper percentage. The last stage of fermentation was also very important.
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