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Re: Middle Earth brewing

Posted: Wed Mar 15, 2023 4:26 am
by Desert Loon
Not alcoholic, but I brewed my first batch of kvass over the past weekend. I like to bake bread, and although I know kvass was traditionally made with rye bread, I haven't learned how to bake rye bread yet, so I thought I'd try the wheat. I saved a few slices of a loaf that was all from hard red flour and dried them out, then toasted them - maybe a bit too dark. I put them to soak with some raisins, a spoonful of yogurt whey, and a pinch of yeast, for a couple of days.
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Then I strained out the solids and had a nice clear brown liquid with a very slight fizz and a taste that took some getting used to. Turpentine came to mind at first. But I'm warming to it, and I'll keep on experimenting.
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I read that kvass is traditionally brewed with sugar added, but I thought: surely in medieval Russia they would not have had that, so I wanted to try it with no sweetener, not even honey. Again, I'm getting to like the taste.
It has only a very slight fizz (a bit less than kefir), and it won't keep long. But it is refreshing, and leaves a good feeling in the belly.

Re: Middle Earth brewing

Posted: Wed Mar 15, 2023 5:46 am
by Taylor Steiner
Very cool

Re: Middle Earth brewing

Posted: Wed Mar 15, 2023 10:03 am
by Elleth
Hunh - that looks like really interesting stuff!

How interesting that they used finished bread for it*. Do you happen to know if the bread was usually stale/old, and if that made a difference?

Re: Middle Earth brewing

Posted: Thu Mar 16, 2023 1:04 am
by Desert Loon
Elleth wrote: Wed Mar 15, 2023 10:03 am How interesting that they used finished bread for it*. Do you happen to know if the bread was usually stale/old, and if that made a difference?
Yes indeed: it was a way to use stale bread - though I expect that the demand for the drink led to a lot of bread deliberately left out to get stale.

Re: Middle Earth brewing

Posted: Fri Feb 16, 2024 6:19 pm
by Elemmakil
Gulli wrote: Wed Feb 09, 2022 9:11 pm Greetings fellow wanderers!
I started brewing ales, meads and ciders... recently I made Dwarven stout. It's a smoked oatmeal stout with peppercorns. I call it HRUM, which is soot in old English.
I am wondering shat other types of ales would you associate with different cultures?
I am thinking brown ale for hobbits, braggot for Beornings. So let's have fun and suggest styles for different folks.
What's your recipe for HRUM?