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From
Mental Floss:
According to Jane Austen expert Laura Boyle,
the Austen family was filled with “enthusiastic home brewers” who made
their own mead, wine, and beer. Though technically part of the gentry, Austen grew up
on a farm where her family produced everything except luxury goods. As
an adult, she was intimately involved with housekeeping and food prep, a
world that was seen as entirely feminine.
That world involved plenty of beer. Elizabeth Ham, a contemporary of Austen’s, wrote that
“No one in these days ever dreamt of drinking water.” At the time,
water supplies were fraught with health dangers, and brewing beer was
seen as a way to create a safe drink
that wouldn’t spread disease. Long before the epidemiology of diseases
like cholera was understood, people realized that something about the
boiling and fermenting process of beer made those who drank it less sick
than those who sampled the often-tainted drinking water. Light or
"small" beer with a low alcohol content thus became a staple for
children and adults, who drank it with all meals and who often made it
at home.
One of Austen's specialties was spruce beer, a kind of cousin of root
beer that contained hops and molasses. In letters to her sister
Cassandra, she told of
making spruce beer: “It is you … who have the little Children,” she
wrote, “and I that have the great cask, for we are brewing spruce beer
again.” Sadly, Austen’s beer recipes are lost to time, though her family mead recipe still exists. (Read more.)
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