Posts Tagged ‘beer’

Five things I’m surprised we eat

Sunday, January 13th, 2013

I bought some oysters at Whole Foods the other day, and at home I took on the difficult task (for me) of shucking them. It got me thinking: who was the first person to actually pry (or smash) open an oyster and then proceed to eat its slimy contents?

With that in mind, here are five things I’m surprised we eat, mainly due to preparation:

  • Oysters – It’s a rock, for Pete’s sake. Who sees a rock and figures there’s a meal inside?
  • Blowfish – Hey, let’s take the second-most poisonous vertebrate in the world and charge $50 a serving! Who was the person who figured out which parts were safe? More importantly, why does blowfish remain a menu item when it can paralyze your diaphragm muscles and prevent you from breating?
  • Lutefisk – Sorry to keep picking on seafood, especially one that’s eaten in the Midwest. In this case, you take a perfectly nice fish and soak it until it turns into a jelly-like consistency and becomes super smelly, on the verge of rotting. Wikipedia even points out that the Wisconsin Employees’ Right to Know Law specifically exempts lutefisk in defining “toxic substances.”
  • Baked Alaska – Meringue by itself is surprising to me, since someone figured that you could beat sugar with raw egg whites and make something edible. Also, the part about baking ice cream seems counter-intuitive.
  • Beer – Don’t get me wrong–I love beer. As a homebrewer, I know first hand the immense number of steps and how much attention you have to pay toward keeping things sterile to make a good batch. So, ancient civilizations figured out how to combine random amounts of hops, barley, yeast and water and keep it sanitary enough to avoid funky beer? Amazing.

Beer musings

Sunday, April 24th, 2011

I have a few thoughts on beer that I thought I’d pool together. 

I just read that China has overtaken the United Stated as the top consumer of beer. As documented in a paper by the American Association of Wine Economists, the Chinese consumed 31.76 billion liters of beer in 2005 compared to 25.81 billion by Americans. Obviously, there are more people living in China, so the United States still wins the liters per capita battle (86 to 24). U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A!

What was really interesting about the article was how the authors discovered that beer consumption follows an inverse-U shape relative to income. Apparently, people drink more beer as they make more money up to a point, then beer consumption diminishes. I guess that makes sense–beer made up 90 percent of my alcohol consumption in college, but as I progressed through my career (and saw my salary rise), I find myself drinking more spirits such as bourbon and vodka. Is this true with you, too?

The authors “calculated the turning point, i.e. the point where beer consumption starts declining with growing incomes, to be approximately 22,000 US dollars per capita.”

We can do our part to drink more beer by attending the inaugural Madison Craft Beer Week. You can participate in beer dinners, beer tastings and cocktail classes. I plan on doing several tastings and possibly the Beer History Pub Crawl (I would go to the Oregon Beer Festival but I have a wedding that day).

Speaking of craft beer, I have a honey ale that just needs one more week before it’s ready for consumption. It’s the third beer I’ve brewed.

Finally, tickets for the Great Taste of the Midwest go on sale on Sunday, May 1. If history serves as a guide, you’ll have to get in line by midnight to have a chance.

Beer poured from the bottom

Sunday, January 23rd, 2011

This is cool. One night while drinking margaritas, a man comes up with a device to pour beer from the bottom of the cup. It’s so fast that you can pour 56 beers per minute, which frees up time for the bartender to take care of other tasks.

I hope to see this at bars and arenas around the country soon. In fact, I wonder if I can buy this for my home?

Unfortunately, Bing/NBC videos doesn’t allow you to embed a video into a blog, so here’s the link:

http://www.bing.com/videos/watch/video/bottoms-up-man-invents-beer-pouring-machine/6rzi4zb?q=Beer+Alcohol&rel=msn&from=en-us_msnhp&form=MSNRLL%3E=42007

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