[Home]History of Small beer

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Revision 4 . . (edit) November 5, 2001 5:58 am by Hajhouse [typo]
Revision 3 . . November 5, 2001 5:57 am by Hajhouse [*non-alcoholic beer]
Revision 2 . . (edit) November 5, 2001 5:40 am by Sodium
Revision 1 . . November 5, 2001 5:19 am by Hajhouse [*new entry]
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff)

Changed: 1c1
Small beer is a beer that contains very little alcohol, perhaps less than one percent. Sometimes unfiltered and porridge-like, it was a favored drink in Medieval Europe and colonial North America. It was sometimes had with breakfast, as attested in Benjamin Franklin's autobiography. Before public sanitation?, water-transmitted diseases, such as cholera?, were a significant cause of death. Because alcohol is toxic to most water-borne pathogens, drinking small beer instead of water was one way to escape infection.
Small beer is a beer that contains very little alcohol, perhaps less than one percent. Sometimes unfiltered and porridge-like, it was a favored drink in Medieval Europe and colonial North America. It was sometimes had with breakfast, as attested in Benjamin Franklin's autobiography. Before public sanitation?, water-transmitted diseases, such as cholera?, were a significant cause of death. Because alcohol is toxic to most water-borne pathogens, drinking small beer instead of water was one way to escape infection.

Changed: 3c3,5
Metaphorically, small beer means a trifle, a think of little importance.
Small beer is not made in any significant amount today, though a similar product called non-alcoholic beer (which actually has a little alcohol) is quite common.

Metaphorically, small beer means a trifle, a thing of little importance.

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