• If you have bought, sold or gained information from our Classifieds, please donate to The Homebrew Forum and give back.

    You can become a Supporting Member or just click here to donate.

Historical brewing techniques

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

davidat19

Active Member
Joined
Nov 5, 2013
Messages
39
Reaction score
13
I got given this for christmas...it is a treatise on farm house brewing....any body fancy it? Twelve kid plus postage?


1704474420886.png


Description


Ancient brewing traditions and techniques have been passed generation to generation on farms throughout remote areas of northern Europe. With these traditions facing near extinction, author Lars Marius Garshol set out to explore and document the lost art of brewing using traditional local methods. Equal parts history, cultural anthropology, social science, and travelogue, this book describes brewing and fermentation techniques that are vastly different from modern craft brewing and preserves them for posterity and exploration.
Learn about uncovering an unusual strain of yeast, called kveik, which can ferment a batch to completion in just 36 hours. Discover how to make keptinis by baking the mash in the oven. Explore using juniper boughs for various stages of the brewing process. Test your own hand by brewing recipes gleaned from years of travel and research in the farmlands of northern Europe. Meet the brewers and delve into the ingredients that have kept these traditional methods alive. Discover the regional and stylistic differences between farmhouse brewers today and throughout history.

About Lars Marius Garshol

Lars Marius Garshol is a Norwegian software engineer that travels the world to learn more about beer. Garshol spent five years researching various aspects of brewing at remote farmhouses throughout Scandinavia and the Baltic countries. He is the author of LarsBlog, a blog devoted to sharing his discoveries and travels as he researches the lost art of brewing in northern Europe, Historical Brewing Techniques: The Lost Art of Farmhouse Brewing,and a book on Lithuanian beer. He lives with his wife and children in Rælingen, Norway.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I got given this for christmas...it is a treatise on farm house brewing....any body fancy it? Twelve kid plus postage?
It's a very interesting gook and well worth having. Garshol is an authority on brewing n the edges of viabilty.
(Unless it's a duplicate, of course).
 
Picture and description added to the OP to save members searching.

12 kids may be a struggle for some members ;)
 

Latest posts

Back
Top