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DisplayTitle The Inspiring and Surprising History and Legacy of American Lager Beer
Page Content OPEN ACCESS FOR A LIMITED TIME
MBAA TQ https://doi.org/10.1094/TQ-57-1-0126-01 | VIEW ARTICLE
Gregory Paul Casey. Perry Park, CO, U.S.A. (Retired)
AbstractThe Inspiring History and Legacy of American Lager Beer is envisioned
to be a nine-volume series of books covering the history of the American lager
brewing industry from the 1840s to the 1940s and the evolution of adjunct lager
beer as America’s “national beverage.” The “surprising” aspect of this history
is that it ever happened at all, given the half-century-long assault on the
industry between the 1870s and 1910s to impose an “American Reinheitsgebot.”
Unified in this objective were a plethora of the nation’s political, cultural,
and agricultural institutions—all seeking to ban to use of rice and corn-based
products in the brewing of American ales and lagers. Equally united in
opposition to this effort were the brewers and brewing scientists of America.
In battles that were passionate, highly public, and intense in nature, these
brewing industry advocates successfully defended the right of American brewers
to brew with the ingredients of their choice. It is a powerful legacy not only
for America’s first revolution in beer (the adjunct lager brewing industry) but
also for the nation’s second revolution in beer (the American craft brewing
industry). In this article, an overview is provided of the scope, structure,
and content of the nine-volume series, with historical vignettes provided to
help illustrate these.
Keywords: adjunct lager beer, American beer history, beer
standards, corn, malt substitutes, Reinheitsgebot, rice
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