Earliest Agricultural Tools

digitS'

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I did set up a still, once.

Using a pressure cooker, it was quite simple & easy (altho, probably not safe). I used some very mediocre, homemade grape wine. The result was terrible !

Something that I might have tried was distilling it twice. Of course, storing it in an oak cask should have improved the flavor but what I had out of a household pressure cooker was absolutely not enuf to bother with. Maybe mixed with some wintergreen oil it would have been pleasant to have rubbed on my back :D. Without the wintergreen ;), I had hoped that it would taste like brandy, but noooo.
 

flowerbug

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I did set up a still, once.

Using a pressure cooker, it was quite simple & easy (altho, probably not safe). I used some very mediocre, homemade grape wine. The result was terrible !

Something that I might have tried was distilling it twice. Of course, storing it in an oak cask should have improved the flavor but what I had out of a household pressure cooker was absolutely not enuf to bother with. Maybe mixed with some wintergreen oil it would have been pleasant to have rubbed on my back :D. Without the wintergreen ;), I had hoped that it would taste like brandy, but noooo.

i hope you did some reading up first or knew how to do that without poisoning yourself?! it is certainly one of those things that if you just went into it and drank everything that came out you'd be in for some trouble eventually...
 

Marie2020

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it has been a long time since i last enjoyed a good dark beer. after my old friend passed away i no longer had my once in a while beer and bratwurst (and saurkraut!) buddy to visit a few times a year.
It's a hard one. So many gone in what seems to be an instant :hugs
 

Marie2020

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❤️ @SPedigrees

A couple of years ago, I read about the very early use of wild barley as food for humans. It now seems that there is genetic evidence that it was domesticated in 3 different locations, Middle East, Asia and Africa.

Really, I have no knowledge of when beer making shows up in prehistory. The notion that it may have been very early goes along with the idea that wine making played an important role in the development of civilization. You see, if you are a farmer and growing several acres of grapes, you had better have a market where you can exchange your product for the essentials. Your time and resources are tied up in a nonessential.

The winery might have more people involved in this industry. Perhaps, there was a ready market for exchanging wine for food, clothing, etc. Soon, tailors, butchers and bakers arrive with their farmer connections :).

It would be quite a revelation to have evidence that farming began as an earlier step as a way to enjoy a ready supply of beer. Etymology, Barn (n.) ... from Old English bereærn "barn," literally "barley house," from bere "barley"...
I met a man that said, making wine was really easy. You just pressed kilos of grapes. Straining out the juice and wine is produced

I'm having enough trouble making sauerkraut. I have to start all over again 😪 😪
 

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