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<h2> CHAP. VII. <i>Of Brewing in general</i>. </h2>
<p>Brewing, like several other Arts is prostituted to the opinionated
Ignorance of many conceited Pretenders, who if they have but seen or been
concern'd in but one Brewing, and that only one Bushel of Malt, assume the
Name of a Brewer and dare venture on several afterwards, as believing it
no other Task, than more Labour, to Brew a great deal as well as a little;
from hence it partly is, that we meet with such hodge-podge Ales and
Beers, as are not only disagreeable in Taste and Foulness, but indeed
unwholsome to the Body of Man, for as it is often drank thick and voided
thin, the Feces or gross part must in my Opinion remain behind in some
degree. Now what the Effects of that may be, I must own I am not Physician
enough to explain, but shrewdly suspect it may be the Cause of Stones,
Colicks, Obstructions, and several other Chronical Distempers; for if we
consider that the sediments of Malt-liquors are the refuse of a corrupted
Grain, loaded with the igneous acid Particles of the Malt, and then again
with the corrosive sharp Particles of the Yeast, it must consequently be
very pernicious to the <i>British</i> human Body especially, which
certainly suffers much from the animal Salts of the great Quantities of
Flesh that we Eat more than People of any other Nation whatsoever; and
therefore are more then ordinarily obligated not to add the scorbutick
mucilaginous Qualities of such gross unwholsome Particles, that every one
makes a lodgment of in their Bodies, as the Liquors they drink are more or
less thick; for in plain Truth, no Malt-liquor can be good without it's
fine. The late Curious <i>Simon Harcourt</i> Esq; of <i>Penly</i>, whom I
have had the honour to drink some of his famous <i>October</i> with,
thought the true Art of Brewing of such Importance, that it is said to
Cost him near twenty Pounds to have an old Days-man taught it by a <i>Welch</i>
Brewer, and sure it was this very Man exceeded all others in these Parts
afterwards in the Brewing of that which he called his <i>October</i> Beer.
So likewise in <i>London</i> they lay such stress on this Art, that many
have thought it worth their while to give one or two hundred Guineas with
an Apprentice: This Consideration also made an Ambassador give an
extraordinary Encouragement to one of my Acquaintance to go over with him,
that was a great Master of this Science. But notwithstanding all that can
be said that relates to this Subject, there are so many Incidents
attending Malt-liquors, that it has puzled several expert Men to account
for their difference, though brewed by the same Brewer, with the same
Malt, Hops and Water, and in the same Month and Town, and tapp'd at the
same time: The Beer of one being fine, strong and well Tasted, while the
others have not had any worth drinking, now this may be owing to the
different Weather in the same Month, that might cause an Alteration in the
working of the Liquors, or that the Cellar may not be so convenient, or
that the Water was more disturbed by Winds or Rains, &c. But it has
been observed that where a Gentleman has imployed one Brewer constantly,
and uses the same sort of Ingredients, and the Beer kept in dry Vaults or
Cellars that have two or three Doors; the Drink has been generally good.
And where such Malt-liquors are kept in Butts, more time is required to
ripen, meliorate and fine them, than those kept in Hogsheads, because the
greater quantity must have the longer time; so also a greater quantity
will preserve itself better than a lesser one, and on this account the
Butt and Hogshead are the two best sized Casks of all others; but all
under a Hogshead hold rather too small a quantity to keep their Bodies.
The Butt is certainly a most noble Cask for this use, as being generally
set upright, whereby it maintains a large Cover of Yeast, that greatly
contributes to the keeping in the Spirits of the Beer, admits of a most
convenient broaching in the middle and its lower part, and by its broad
level Bottom, gives a better lodgment to the fining and preserving
Ingredients, than any other Cask whatsoever that lyes in, the long
Cross-form. Hence it partly is, that the common Butt-beer is at this time
in greater Reputation than ever in <i>London</i>, and the Home-brew'd
Drinks out of Credit; because the first is better cured in its Brewing, in
its Quantity, in its Cask, and in its Age; when the latter has been loaded
with the pernicious Particles of great Quantities of Yeast, of a short
Age, and kept in small Casks, that confines its Owner, only to Winter
Brewing and Sale, as not being capable of sustaining the Heat of the
Weather, for that the acidity of the Yeast brings on a sudden hardness and
staleness of the Ale, which to preserve in its mild Aley Taste, will not
admit of any great Quantity of Hops; and this is partly the reason that
the handful of Salt which the <i>Plymouth</i> Brewers put into their
Hogshead, hinders their Ale from keeping, as I shall hereafter take notice
of.</p>
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