“BEER,” AS BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ALLEGEDLY QUIPPED, “is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.” It may indeed be that—you won’t encounter any debate on that point here—but it is a great many more things to our nation as well. To name just a few: Beer is the carbonated motor in a quarter-trillion-dollar American industry. Today it is second only to water and soft drinks when it comes to popularity among beverages, even beating out such staples as coffee and milk. It is a brew made for bonding, a point of local pride, and most important for our purposes, a beloved and reoccurring character in the story of a country. Disembark with the Pilgrims at Plymouth Rock, march with George Washington, or ride with Paul Revere, and what will you find? Why, you’ll find beer. It is a relative constant in a multifarious culture, and a liquefied shibboleth for a people—or perhaps more accurate, conglomeration of peoples—who have been throughout the course of their history notoriously difficult to box in or pin down. Malt, yeast, and hops have formed a glue of sorts, perhaps not the only one, yet a surprisingly important binding ingredient. And in their many diverse expressions, they have enabled a variegated set of hyphenated identities to adhere, admirably if not perfectly.
Indeed, we Americans have never been shy about touting the richness of our own diversity—in theory, anyway. Native Americans and explorers alike recognized the great abundance of our wildlife and the shimmering beauty of our varying landscapes. Immigrants and early settlers brought to our shores a wealth of creeds and a bounty of tongues, all of which shaped the multifaceted character of our nation, as they continue to do. It’s written smack-dab on our currency, for Pete’s sake. E Pluribus, Unum: From Many, One. Even in they didn’t always put it in practice, our founding fathers recognized the value of this inclusion, which preserved our Union when it teetered on the brink of collapse. No, a house divided against itself cannot stand. But an ideal of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, propped up by a colorful caste of dreamers and doers from every far-flung corner of the globe—you needn’t a powdered wig or a stovepipe hat to recognize that that makes for one hell of story. And possibly, a civilization quite unlike any other, in history or on earth.
Difference, as an abstract notion, is stitched into the fabric of the American experience—though there have always been a few rips and tears. The Mohegan Indians never did care much for the more entrepreneurial Pequots. English Puritans could barely stomach the free-wheeling Dutch. And the voluptuary habits of French-speaking Creoles made stuffier minds in Washington wonder if the Louisiana Purchase had even been worth it. Geechees and Gullahs spoke a coastal southern dialect unintelligible to their inland kin, Tejanos in the Southwest confused the heck out of the Anglos with their fandangos, and when it comes to the Amish sects of the Pennsylvania Dutch, they’ve been perplexing the rest of motor-loving America for the better part of a century.
And yet despite all our differences and affiliations, a common thirst for beer has prevailed, enjoyed consistently across the many years and layers of the American experience. That golden alchemy of barley and hops was as precious to the pilgrims and patriots of yore as it is to the Joe Six-Packs of today, with a dependable, practically culture-defining ubiquity. True, there is baseball and pop music, but both are relatively recent arrivals compared to the beloved brewdog, and neither tastes so good after mowing the lawn on a hot summer day.
Are we being cheeky or melodramatic, to attach so much drama and import to such an everyday drink? Perhaps. But it’s worth looking at the numbers. Just how much do we love beer? About six billion gallons worth—that’s the amount of beer Americans consume on a yearly basis, with each drinking-age adult chugging back an average of nearly thirty gallons of pilsner, lager, porter, and ale. That number is impressive, and it stays relatively consistent across the board, whether you’re in Alabama or Alaska, California or the District of Columbia. And that’s in the present day, mind you. Take a glance at the drinking habits of the early colonial period or the Industrial Revolution—which we shall be doing in short order—and one simple and undeniable fact emerges: America is a nation of beer drinkers. We always have been, to varying degrees, and we most likely always will be.
As for explanations of beer’s ubiquity across the length and breadth of American civilization, there are several obvious avenues one might pursue. For starters, the role it has played in civilization itself. Wine may get the credit these days as the most “civilized” drink, but the brewing of beer and the cultivation of grains—the latter of which allowed our ancient forbearers to give up hunting and gathering and start watching college football in those newfangled things called cities—share a relationship that’s practically symbiotic. It’s impossible to say precisely when ancient humans first realized that a bowl full of bread left out in the rain might ferment into something intoxicatingly delicious, but pictorial and written evidence suggests that barley beer was widespread throughout the Near East by 4000 B.C., and very well may have existed in the Fertile Crescent as far back as 10,000 B.C. Sumerians lauded beer in the Epic of Gilgamesh, Mesopotamians were known to drink it through straws, Egyptian pharaohs consumed it on a daily basis, and Sophocles himself believed beer should be enjoyed frequently, albeit in moderation, and with plenty of bread and meat on the side. The Chinese discovered the recipe for malted rice-based beer almost ten thousand years ago, millet and sorghum-based brews have been well known to Africans since time immemorial, and multiple Native American civilizations—whose forebearers discovered America via the Bering Strait many thousands of years before Columbus stumbled upon the West Indies—have been incorporating corn beer into their feasts and rituals for thousands of years. Almost since the beginning, it seems, beer has rivaled water as the universal beverage.
Then there is also the basic fact of nutrition. Despite what junior high health class would lead you to believe, beer is actually brimming with precisely the sort of things a body needs to be healthy. In addition to its pure energy potential—between 100 and 300 calories per pint, depending on the style and consistency—most beers also contain considerable amounts of readily digested peptide-based proteins, soluble glucan-based fiber, minerals such as potassium, calcium, and magnesium, and a ton of essential water-soluble vitamins. Even the alcoholic portion of beer, although obviously deleterious when consumed in large quantities, has been suggested to improve heart health and increase lifespan when enjoyed in moderation. Our historical predecessors may not have been well educated on the chemical specifics of the beer they consumed, but they were well aware of the crucial role it played in their diets, especially during leaner historical periods when food was scarce and clean water difficult to come by. Beer, they found, filled in for both quite nicely.
So is that it then? Simply a matter of wholesomeness and heritage? Possibly so. But then again, milk is also brimming with vitamins and minerals, yet old friends seldom go out to grab a glass of 2 percent and catch up. Wine and whiskey have an equally illustrious history, but no U.S. president ever hosted a Pinot Noir Summit at the White House to help smooth out our differences; no baseball vendor ever enlivened a season opener with cries of “get your ice-cold bourbon, here.” What makes beer feel so distinctly and consistently American?
It is a question that I must admit, I seldom considered before beginning this book. Granted, I had been drinking beer for the entirety of my adult life—even longer if you count a few childhood sips and adolescent shenanigans. In Ohio, I had grown up around the canned domestic macrobrews that form the backbone of the beer industry in America, and some of my earliest memories are of begging my father—usually with little success—for a tinny taste of his forbidden Bud. As a young writer gone east, I buttressed that midwestern foundation further with a selection of local craft brews and preferred imports (I’ve always had a weakness for Chimay, and when the weather’s warmer, I seldom turn down a good hoppy IPA). To doubt the seminal role beer plays in our culture would have been tantamount to questioning the Rockies or Lake Erie or the Mighty Mississip—it had always been there, had it not? It was one of those things that an American just takes for granted.
That was until, on a whim, I decided to dabble in a little brewing of my own. Ironically, my initial interest in the home production of alcoholic beverages was not related directly to beer, but rather whiskey. Having just completed a history of bourbon in America, I thought it might prove educational to engage in a little moonshining of my own—only to discover that a host of legal impediments stood in the way when it came to spirits. For reasons of taxation and safety, home distillation was subject to regulations that had been on the books since Prohibition. Beer, on the other hand, was essentially fair game, as it had been since 1979, when its own Prohibition-era restrictions on home brewing were finally lifted. As long as it is for personal consumption and not sale, any adult can brew his or her own beer. Seeing as how whiskey is at its essence little more than distilled beer, and considering the fact that I was more than happy to drink either one, I rolled up my sleeves and gave brewing a try.
First, there were a few problems to solve: I had no recipe, no equipment, and none of the supplies. I knew little beyond the basics—that beer was the result of a specific yeast strain making alcohol and carbon dioxide out of the natural sugars of a malted grain. This, and the truth that, if done properly, it tasted pretty damn good. Fortunately, I had a brother-in-law in our nation’s capital—here’s to you, Steve—who dabbled in home brewing and had a passion for good beer. In fact, he once went so far as to use the Freedom of Information Act to request the secret recipe for White House Honey Ale. And while it did not yield the top secret information he desired, it does speak to the lengths he’ll go to to find the finest suds around.
So, on one fine spring day, I caught the train from New York to Washington, D.C., browsing en route Charlie Papazian’s seminal work The Complete Joy of Homebrewing to nail down the basics. Just as I’d hoped, the afternoon proved extremely educational. I learned about steeping the barley, boiling the wort, pitching the yeast, and sanitizing the carboy, all while sampling a heady assortment of American beers. It takes beer to make beer, as the old brewer’s adage goes, and Steve had supplied us with a full range of craft brews to enjoy when the brewing began. There was Stoudts Pils from Pennsylvania, Left Hand Milk Stout from Colorado, Great Lakes Dortmunder Gold from Ohio, Abita Turbodog from Louisiana, Devils Backbone Vienna Lager from Virginia, Firestone Walker Wookey Jack from California, Dogfish Head Palo Santo Marron from Delaware—the eclectic list went on and on, with each seemingly more delicious than the last.
The conversation eventually turned philosophical, as those enriched by good beer so often do, and the aforementioned questions of beer’s unique role in American history and culture came to be asked. And gradually, confronted by that diverse array of American brews before us, an undeniable fact emerged: this “national” drink of ours wasn’t national at all. That truth may have been obscured by the rise of ubiquitous national brands in the twentieth century, but beginning with the earliest American settlers, and continuing on up to the craft brews of the present day, beer has been and still is a local phenomenon. It may be enjoyed across the nation, but for most of our history, it’s been made next door. Our affection for beer is common and universal, but its history in our country is exceptionally regional. And thanks to its regional origins, as I would come to discover in the days that followed, the experiences of early brewers would help shape the unique history and identity of our country in a myriad of surprising ways.
How so? Well, for beginners, in New England, the Puritans’ beer not only brought the Mayflower to shore and the minutemen to arms, it also helped establish Harvard and Yale, and, one could argue, paved the way for college football. In Manhattan, a tradition of entrepreneurial, trade-oriented brewing that first arrived with the Dutch would eventually give rise to Babe Ruth and the New York Yankees. In the Midwest, beer garden contests between rival German American factions would give birth to amusement parks and roller coasters, and in the South, the same improvised beer recipes Jamestown settlers experimented with when their barley wilted would set the stage for American whiskey. It was a novel idea, and an intriguing one at that—the notion that local beers actually helped to shape the distinctive regional cultures that would cohere and combine to build a nation. Beer, like America, has prevailed not because of uniformity, but rather diversity—and it has always allowed for interpretation at the local and regional level to accommodate it. Essentially, everyone loves beer . . . but opinions have always varied as to what beer should be.
Needless to say, for someone with an interest in American history and a love of good drink, it seemed an issue that warranted further exploration. “How long until this home brew is ready to drink?” I asked my brother-in-law Steve, basking in the sun and sipping on my second Great Lakes Dortmunder Gold of the day. “About a month” was his nonchalant reply.
And at that moment, flush with that distinctly American brand of naive optimism, not to mention a half-dozen exceptionally good beers consumed over the course of a beautiful spring day in our nation’s capital, that short interval felt like just enough time.
Little did I know.