Organic Beer

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This topic has 17 voices, contains 25 replies, and was last updated by  kenneth659 724 days ago.

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tater03
December 23, 2007 at 3:38 pm

tater03
December 23, 2007 at 3:38 pm

My husband was in the store awhile back and came home and told me that they now had organic beer. I was just wondering if anyone has ever tried it? I ran a search on it and it seems that a lot of the alcohol manufacterers are going to be coming out with their own version of organic beer.


Alice
December 23, 2007 at 10:35 pm

Really? I haven’t heard anything about that before. And I wonder if it’s certifiable or just a portion of the beer is organic?

I don’t drink beer so I don’t think I would be able to tell the difference.


eviesearth
December 30, 2007 at 7:20 am

I have seen organic wine, and tried it too. :) I have not seen or even heard of organic beer. Would you happen to know the brand? I would be interested to try it, even though I am not a beer drinker.


tater03
December 30, 2007 at 6:35 pm

I know Anheuser Bush has some out now. It is called Stone Mill and the have another one called Wild Hop Lager but I have not tried either one. I looked for it in the store and I didn’t see it.


roguegal
December 31, 2007 at 4:43 am

Wait a minute! Isn’t beer organic to begin with? It’s made from Hops and something else. You mean there are chemicals in beer? You learn something new every day!


reverend-blair
January 3, 2008 at 1:57 am

Mostly what they call organic beer is just beer without preservatives in it. In some cases they use the goop at the bottom of the tanks for fertilizer or animal feed.

There is a law in Germany…or maybe just a German province…that prohibits making beer with anything but barley, hops and water.

The most problematic part of the beer industry is the huge, centralized breweries. Beer is heavy and shipping it from a centralized location is very energy intensive.

If you want to be an environmentally beer drinker, the best solution is to buy beer made locally. Most areas have micro-breweries. As an added bonus, they usually make a better product too.


eviesearth
January 3, 2008 at 10:58 pm

If it is being sold as organic, then I would assume that the barley, hops and other ingredients are organic. I do not think non organic beer has any chemicals added, or does it?


reverend-blair
January 3, 2008 at 11:53 pm

I doubt there are enough organic growers to supply the beer market. Growing crops like barley to certifiable organic standards is very difficult because of overspray from neighbours, etc. There is also presently a world-wide hops shortage, and beggars can’t be choosers, so insisting on organic hops in quantities large enough for a mega-brewery is kind of a long shot.


eviesearth
January 19, 2008 at 6:15 am

Possibly the best route for someone that wants organic beer would be to make your own. I have seen the make your beer kits online a while back.


reverend-blair
January 19, 2008 at 3:18 pm

Yeah, it’s pretty easy too. I’ve made a fair bit of beer, so I have some tips for working from the kits:

-Double malt. Instead of using sugar, use two cans of molasses. Only use one pouch of yeast though.
-Keep it dark. Light damages beer, so let it ferment in dark room.
-Through in some extras. Nuts, caramel, and licorice all go well with dark beers. Just toss a cup or so into the wort when boiling up the original gallon.
-Get fresh yeast. The yeast in the kits is often past date. Buy a pouch of fresh stuff.
-mix your carbonating sugar in with the entire batch instead of shocking each bottle or keg. Just pull a few cups of wort, bring it to a boil and mix in one cup of sugar for every five gallons of beer. If you want more carbonation, add a little more sugar. Add the sugar mixture to the wort and stir well. Now bottle the beer.
-Use mini-kegs, or big kegs if you have the space. Do you want to wash 72 bottles or four little kegs?


tater03
January 19, 2008 at 5:09 pm

I personally don’t really drink it enough to make my own. I just had not realized that the bigger beer companies were now testing the waters when it comes to organic beer.


organiceverafter
January 25, 2008 at 4:14 am

one great thing to do is go and get all the ingredients(organic of course) and make your own. Its not only fun to do you can learn a lot about the process and support the organic market.


greenbean
April 26, 2008 at 4:06 am

link

I’ve tried it, it’s good. And 100% organic I think.


greenbean
April 26, 2008 at 4:07 am

From their web site… “We believe that using barley and hops that are grown without toxic and persistent pesticides and chemical fertilizers makes our beer tastier and more enjoyable, both for you and for the planet. We’ve been perfecting our delicious organic recipes for over five years now. Our Pale Ale, Nut Brown Ale and Amber Ale —long time favorites—are the first ones that we’ve decided to release. We hope you enjoy them! Stay tuned for more releases to come.”

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