Tuesday, 19 August 2008
Autumn resolution
This morning the weather was glorious, sunny but fresh. More like late September than August. As if the bright, crisp hand of autumn were already reaching out to touch us.
I've always thought of the autumn as Drinking Season. Not quite sure why. It isn't as if I abstain the other three seasons. Perhaps it's a subconscious connection with my first term at university. That started in October and that's when I began drinking beer seriously.
There's a twinge of regret at the end of summer. Regret at the loss of opportunites that, like this year's sun, will never return. Time isn't unlimited. There's my own mortality, for one thing. Am I making good use of my time? How much longer can I put off writing that book? Shouldn't I start now?
I keep telling myself it's because I haven't completed the research. But that's just an excuse. I'll never finish the research, I know that. There will always be more to learn, mysteries to unlock, puzzles to decipher.
Beer, Ale and Malt Liquor
British Beer Styles 1700 to 1973
There. That's a start. The title's a good place to begin. Now the chapter headings.
Introduction
1700-1750 Stitch, Brown Beer and Pale Ale
1750-1780 Porter, Stout and Entire
1780-1815 From brown to pale malt
1815-1850 Porter supreme
1850-1880 Ale comes of age
1880-1914 Adjuncts arrive
1914-1920 A teetotal PM - disaster!
1920-1939 A sort of stability
1939-1949 War and austerity
1950-1973 Stagnation and decline
Appendices:
- Tables of og and fg's for British beers 1700-1973
- Brief history of BP, Whitbread and Truman
- Tax rates
I'll discuss the brewing methods, materials and the characteristics of the beers brewed in the period in question. Each chapter will conclude with a series of typical recipes for the main styles.
Now I just have to come up with the words themselves.
What's my autumn resolution? Stop engaging in arguments with idiots on the interweb and write my book instead. Chapter one is already starting to take shape.
I've always thought of the autumn as Drinking Season. Not quite sure why. It isn't as if I abstain the other three seasons. Perhaps it's a subconscious connection with my first term at university. That started in October and that's when I began drinking beer seriously.
There's a twinge of regret at the end of summer. Regret at the loss of opportunites that, like this year's sun, will never return. Time isn't unlimited. There's my own mortality, for one thing. Am I making good use of my time? How much longer can I put off writing that book? Shouldn't I start now?
I keep telling myself it's because I haven't completed the research. But that's just an excuse. I'll never finish the research, I know that. There will always be more to learn, mysteries to unlock, puzzles to decipher.
Beer, Ale and Malt Liquor
British Beer Styles 1700 to 1973
There. That's a start. The title's a good place to begin. Now the chapter headings.
Introduction
1700-1750 Stitch, Brown Beer and Pale Ale
1750-1780 Porter, Stout and Entire
1780-1815 From brown to pale malt
1815-1850 Porter supreme
1850-1880 Ale comes of age
1880-1914 Adjuncts arrive
1914-1920 A teetotal PM - disaster!
1920-1939 A sort of stability
1939-1949 War and austerity
1950-1973 Stagnation and decline
Appendices:
- Tables of og and fg's for British beers 1700-1973
- Brief history of BP, Whitbread and Truman
- Tax rates
I'll discuss the brewing methods, materials and the characteristics of the beers brewed in the period in question. Each chapter will conclude with a series of typical recipes for the main styles.
Now I just have to come up with the words themselves.
What's my autumn resolution? Stop engaging in arguments with idiots on the interweb and write my book instead. Chapter one is already starting to take shape.
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3 comments:
Hooray!! And about time too.
Good luck! Glue your ass to the chair if you have to.
By the way, I always thought of autumn as a beer season, too. I think it's something about how, as the atmosphere cools, it seems (to me, at least) to smell more, to become more aromatic. For whatever reason, that makes me want to drink Fuller's ESB and Hacker-Pschorr Oktoberfest.
That's a great resolution. It has the side benefit of putting off the mortality issue (blood pressure and such) by some years as well. Good luck with the book!
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