beer
beer alcoholic beverage made by brewing and fermenting cereals, especially malted barley, usually with the addition of hops as a flavoring agent and stabilizer. One of the oldest of alcoholic beverages (there is archaeological evidence dating to c.3000 BC), beer was well known in ancient Egypt, where it may have been made from bread. At first brewed chiefly in the household and monastery, it became in late medieval times a commercial product and is now made by large-scale manufacture in almost every industrialized country, especially Great Britain, Germany, the Czech Republic, and the United States.
Although British, European, and American beers can differ markedly in flavor and content, brewing processes are similar. A mash, prepared from crushed malt (usually barley), water, and, often, cereal adjuncts such as rice and corn, is heated and rotated in the mash tun to dissolve the solids and permit the malt enzymes to convert the starch into sugar. The solution, called wort, is drained into a copper vessel, where it is boiled with the hops (which provide beer with its bitter flavor), then run off for cooling and settling. After cooling, it is transferred to fermenting vessels where yeast is added, converting the sugar into alcohol. Modern beers, typically lighter than ancient, contain about 3% to 6% alcohol.
Beers fall into two broad categories. Ales are made with yeast that ferments more quickly at warmer temperatures and tends to rise to the surface. Lagers use yeast that ferments more slowly at cooler temperatures and tends to settle, and they are aged at cold temperatures for weeks or months, hence the name [Ger., Lager =storage place]. Most major American beers are lagers; many are Bohemian Pilsners, a golden-hued lager. Bock beer, said to take its name from Einbeck, Prussia, where it was first made, is a heavier, usually darker lager. Pale ale is generally a light to dark amber, strongly hopped beer. Porter is a strong, dark ale brewed with the addition of roasted malt to give flavor and color. Stout, an ale which is darker and maltier than porter, has a more pronounced hop aroma and may attain an alcoholic content of 6% to 7%. Light, or low-calorie, beer is lower in alcohol content. Ice beer is a higher-alcohol beer produced by chilling below 32°F (0°C) and filtering out the ice crystals that form.
In the 1980s, consumer dissatisfaction with the taste and choice offered by major breweries led to the growth of microbreweries—firms that produce fewer than 15,000 barrels annually—especially in the United States. By 2000 there were more than 400 U.S. microbreweries and more than 1,000 brewpubs (a microbrewery that sells mainly through its own restaurant or bar).
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Edmund Spenser: A Reception History and Jonson's Spenser: Evidence and Historical Criticism.
Magazine article from: Yearbook of English Studies; 1/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; Edmund Spenser: A Reception History. By DAVID HILL...pound]37.50; $67.50. Jonson's Spenser: Evidence and Historical Criticism...If English poetry does not begin with Edmund Spenser, a case could be made that English...
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Edmund Spenser: the boyhood of a poet.
Magazine article from: Contemporary Review; 2/1/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...for an evangelical tract. Spenser's family, although impoverished...of patrician descent. John Spenser, his father, was a jobbing...Althrop (probably as one of the Spensers of Hurstwood, near Burnley in Lancashire), which makes Edmund Spenser the collateral ancestor of...
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Spenser's filthy matter.(sexuality in Edmund Spenser's "The Faerie Queene")
Magazine article from: The Explicator; 6/22/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...allusion to Tasso as well: Spenser tempers the sexual power...as alluding to book 1 of Spenser's own poem as well as to...WORKS CITED Spenser, Edmund. The Faerie Queene. Ed...Queene, Book 2. The Works of Edmund Sp
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Edmund Spenser, Mary Sidney, and the Doleful Lay.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900; 1/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...Clorinda' is hers, though Spenser's poem explicitly says it...Lay' seems of a piece with Spenser's introductory poem preceding...the poem's attribution to Spenser. (12) Anne Lake Prescott...Edition of the Shorter Poems of Edmund Spenser observes that the countess...
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Introduction: Spenser's paratexts.(Edmund Spenser)
Magazine article from: Studies in the Literary Imagination; 9/22/2005; ; 700+ words
; With the exception of Edmund Spenser's Letter to Ralegh, the front and...Thomas Wharton spoke famously of Spenser's having written the Dedicatory...discouraged careful attention to the sonnets Spenser actually wrote. Until recently...
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Metapoetry in Edmund Spenser's Amoretti.(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Philological Quarterly; 9/22/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...Garden of Venus represents one of Edmund Spenser's most striking testimonials...and the centrality of art in Spenser's epic has long been recognized...crucial role assigned to art in Spenser's masterful sonnet sequence Amoretti...
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The evolution of modern Irish poetry.("Befitting Emblems of Adversity": A Modern Irish View of Edmund Spenser from W.B. Yeats to the Present)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Irish Literary Supplement; 3/22/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Adversity": A Modern Irish View of Edmund Spenser from W.B. Yeats to the Present...Adversity": A Modern Irish View of Edmund Spenser from W.B. Yeats to the...imaginative and analytic efforts of Edmund Spenser and the work of the poets...
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Ralegh's gold: placing Spenser's dedicatory Sonnets.(Edmund Spenser)(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Studies in the Literary Imagination; 9/22/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...Ralegh 11), we are invited to read Edmund Spenser's Virgil-influenced epic in...Sonnets celebrate and chastise Spenser's fellow planters and patrons...law stance taken most clearly by Spenser's policy tract, A View of the...
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Edmund Spenser's 'Amoretti' and 'Epithalamion': A Critical Edition.
Magazine article from: Yearbook of English Studies; 1/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; Edmund Spenser's 'Amoretti' and 'Epithalamion...Hieatt's groundbreaking analysis of Spenser's marriage hymn, The Epithalamion...1962), scholars have been aware of Spenser's keen interest in numerological patterns...
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Allegory, Space and the Material World in the Writings of Edmund Spenser.(Allegory, Space and the Material World in the Writings of Edmund Spenser: Studies in Renaissance Literature, vol. 17)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 12/22/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...Space and the Material World in the Writings of Edmund Spenser. Studies in Renaissance Literature 17. Cambridge...Space and the Material World in the Writings of Edmund Spenser contributes to the growing field sometimes called...
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Edmund Spenser
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Edmund Spenser Edmund Spenser (ca. 1552-1599) ranks as the fore most English poet of...Queene, he is the poet of an ordered yet passionate Elizabethan world. Edmund Spenser was a man of his times, and his work reflects the religious...
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Spenser, Edmund (1552 or 1553–1599)
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
SPENSER, EDMUND (1552 or 1553 – 1599) SPENSER, EDMUND (1552 or 1553 – 1599), English poet and author. Born in London, perhaps at East Smithfield, Spenser was educated at the newly founded Merchant Taylors' School and...
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Spenser, Edmund
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Spenser, Edmund (1552–99) English poet. Spenser's debut volume was the pastoral The Shepheardes Calender...sequence Amoretti was published with Epithalamion in 1595. Spenser's masterpiece is The Faerie Queene (1589–...
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John Keats
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...in Edmonton. Then it was that Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene awakened him...poetry. The imaginative beauty of Spenser's world of fantasy fulfilled...stanzas entitled "Imitation of Spenser." On Oct. 2, 1815, Keats was...
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Tasso, Torquato (1544–1595)
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
...as an important model for the two major English Renaissance epics, Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene (1590, 1596) and John Milton's Paradise...Reformation. See also Italian Literature and Language ; Milton, John ; Spenser,
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