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Maciamo
Aug 23, 2002, 21:39
Ancient Ale Brews Up a Treat

One of Japan's most well known breweries has produced a new beer based entirely on a recipe inscribed on a 4400-year-old Egyptian wall painting. Kirin Brewery, Japan's second largest beer maker, has teamed up with Egyptologists from Waseda University in Tokyo to reproduce an alcoholic beverage based on a recipe deciphered from a recently discovered Egyptian hieroglyphic. Anthropologists say Old Kingdom Beer, as Kirin has dubbed it, is more or less the same ancient ale that would have been consumed in Egypt as far back as the 10th century BC. A barley based brew with a hefty alcohol content of about 10 percent, Old Kingdom has approximately twice the kick of modern day beer. Kirin brewers say the concoction is quite different from today's traditional lager beer because it's not made from hops, the ingredient that gives beer its bitter bite - and the dark color and thick consistency produce little or no head.

Unfortunately, curious pub crawlers won't get to wet their whistles with a pint of Old Kingdom any time soon. Kirin Brewery and Waseda University say the first batch will be reserved for research and then sent to the US to be put under the microscope at the Master Brewers Association of America beer conference this October. A similar limited edition brew was marketed by Newcastle in the mid-nineties under the name Tutankhamen Ale. A single bottle sold for a heady US$80.


Bad luck they didn't commercialise it more widely. I would have liked to try it just to give me a (slightly) better idea of how was life like in Ancient Egypt. With a mummy on it, it would have looked terrific in the combini:gulp:

moyashi
Aug 23, 2002, 22:58
here, here, I could go for Molson Olden ;)

Dang I can't wait to give it shot. I normally don't like dark ales but if the brew is what they drank ... you gotta give it a shot at least :)

thomas
Aug 26, 2002, 07:27
Pharaonic beer must have been much better than what they used to produce in Egypt until a few of years ago. The local beer was called "Stella" (not Artois though) and contained up to 90% of rice instead of barley. Barley had to be imported of course and was too expensive. Meanwhile Amstel has taken over, so you can actually call it "beer". Getting thirsty...
:gulp:

deborah gormley
Aug 26, 2002, 08:07
I would like to try it once maybe, and thats how I voted,
but I'm sure alot of men would try it quicker,lol I like new products to be tryed and tested before I try them myself, after the trails and 30 peoples recommendations, I would try it provided it smelt like a beer and not something thats been wrapped up for centuries,lolol