理解早期现代啤酒:一个跨学科的案例研究

IF 0.1 Q3 HISTORY
S. Flavin, Marc Meltonville, C. Taverner, J. Reid, Stephen Lawrence, Carlos Belloch-Molina, John Morrissey
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引用次数: 1

摘要

啤酒是北欧和大西洋地区早期现代饮食的主食。虽然它深刻的社会、经济和文化意义是公认的,但人们对这种饮料本身的性质和质量,特别是它的营养特性知之甚少。到目前为止,估算卡路里和酒精含量的方法都是单一学科的,要么是基于谷物含量的理论计算,要么是现代等价物的粗略近似值。本文以16世纪的爱尔兰为例,描述了一种跨学科的方法来解决早期现代啤酒的问题。该项目利用大量未发表的档案材料,利用最合适的原料、设备和工艺,重现了一种早期的现代啤酒。对成品饮料的科学分析为啤酒作为膳食主食提供了新的视角。该项目是将实践或实验方法融入主流历史研究的典范,也是激进跨学科的实践。它代表了迄今为止在任何背景下重建历史啤酒的最全面的努力,汇集了历史学家,实验考古学家,农学家,微生物学家,酿酒科学家,工匠,农民和酿酒师,以解决有关过去的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Understanding Early Modern Beer: An Interdisciplinary Case-Study
Abstract Beer was a staple of early modern diets across northern Europe and the Atlantic World. While its profound social, economic, and cultural significance is well established, little is known about the nature and quality of the drink itself, particularly its nutritional characteristics. Until now, attempts to estimate calorie and alcohol content have been monodisciplinary in approach, involving either theoretical calculations based on grain content, or a rough approximation with modern equivalents. Using sixteenth-century Ireland as a case-study, this article describes an interdisciplinary approach to the problem of early modern beer. Exploiting a rich seam of unpublished archival material, the project recreates an early modern beer, using the most appropriate ingredients, equipment, and processes possible. Scientific analysis of the finished drink offers new perspectives on beer as a dietary staple. The project is a model for integrating practical or experimental approaches into mainstream historical study, and the practice of radical interdisciplinarity. It represents the most comprehensive effort to recreate an historic beer in any context to date, bringing together historians, experimental archaeologists, agronomists, microbiologists, brewing scientists, craftworkers, farmers, and maltsters to tackle problematic questions about the past.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: “Ajalooline Ajakiri. The Estonian Historical Journal” is peer-reviewed academic journal of the Institute of History and Archaeology, University of Tartu. It accepts articles in Estonian, English or German. It is open to submissions from all parts of the world and on all fields of history, but articles, reviews and communications on the history of the Baltic region are preferred.
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