Travels with Barley: A Journey Through Beer Culture in AmericaSimon and Schuster, 2007年11月1日 - 332 頁 Do beer yeast rustlers really exist? Who patented the Beer Goddess? How can you tell a Beer Geek from a Beer Nazi? Where exactly is Beervana? Does Big Beer hate Little Beer? Ken Wells, a novelist, Pulitzer Prize finalist, and longtime Wall Street Journal writer, answers these questions and more by bringing a keen eye and prodigious reportage to the people and passions that have propelled beer into America's favorite alcoholic beverage and the beer industry into a $75 billion commercial juggernaut, not to mention a potent force in American culture. Travels with Barley is a lively, literate tour through the precincts of the beer makers, sellers, drinkers, and thinkers who collectively drive the mighty River of Beer onward. The heart of the book is a journey along the Mississippi River, from Minnesota to Louisiana, in a quixotic search for the Perfect Beer Joint -- a journey that turns out to be the perfect pretext for viewing America through the prism of a beer glass. Along the river, you'll visit the beer bar once owned by the brewer Al Capone, glide by The World's Largest Six Pack, and check into Elvis Presley's Heartbreak Hotel to plumb the surprisingly controversial question of whether Elvis actually drank beer. But the trip also includes numerous detours up quirky tributaries, among them: a visit to an Extreme Beer maker in Delaware with ambitions to make 50-proof brew, a look at the murky world of beer yeast rustlers in California, and a journey to the portals of ultimate beer power at the Anheuser-Busch plant in St. Louis, where making the grade as a Clydesdale draft horse is harder than you might imagine. Entertaining, enlightening, and written with Wells's trademark verve, Travels with Barley is a perfect gift -- not just for America's 84 million beer enthusiasts, but for all discerning readers of flavorful nonfiction. |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 43 筆
第 2 頁
... tell people you're writing a book, their first question is usu- ally, "What's it about?" But as I moved around the country in the reporting of this project, running into lots and lots of Beer People of all persuasions, I often got a ...
... tell people you're writing a book, their first question is usu- ally, "What's it about?" But as I moved around the country in the reporting of this project, running into lots and lots of Beer People of all persuasions, I often got a ...
第 3 頁
... tell the Beer Folk about drinking beer at my daddy's knee and that, though I've had my flirta- tions with single-malt whisky and wine, it's still hard to think of any- thing (printable here) better than a cold beer on a warm day at the ...
... tell the Beer Folk about drinking beer at my daddy's knee and that, though I've had my flirta- tions with single-malt whisky and wine, it's still hard to think of any- thing (printable here) better than a cold beer on a warm day at the ...
第 15 頁
... tell the would- be perpetrators: "Now, you boys don't have to be like that. What would your mommas say?" Looking around the Bama one incorrigibly slow November night, Brown decided the bar didn't have to be like that (i.e., empty) ...
... tell the would- be perpetrators: "Now, you boys don't have to be like that. What would your mommas say?" Looking around the Bama one incorrigibly slow November night, Brown decided the bar didn't have to be like that (i.e., empty) ...
第 16 頁
... tell you that beyond his business savvy and gift of gab, his other notable trait is a wry, sometimes anarchic sense of humor. One example: rumors that the Bama is for sale sweep the beaches from time to time, a legacy perhaps of the ...
... tell you that beyond his business savvy and gift of gab, his other notable trait is a wry, sometimes anarchic sense of humor. One example: rumors that the Bama is for sale sweep the beaches from time to time, a legacy perhaps of the ...
第 19 頁
... tell a pure one from a phony. Like Joe Gilchrist, I'd spent a fair amount of my youth exploring them. Td learned a lot as a cub reporter on my weekly hometown paper back in Houma, Louisiana, by deconstructing school board sto- ries and ...
... tell a pure one from a phony. Like Joe Gilchrist, I'd spent a fair amount of my youth exploring them. Td learned a lot as a cub reporter on my weekly hometown paper back in Houma, Louisiana, by deconstructing school board sto- ries and ...
內容
9 | |
27 | |
CHAPTER 3 | 42 |
ON THE ROAD AGAIN | 52 |
Slouching Toward Hannibal | 114 |
THE QUEST TAKES A SOUTHERN LURCH | 177 |
CHAPTER 13 | 190 |
ON THE ROAD AGAIN | 204 |
CHAPTER 15 | 217 |
A WRINKLE IN THE QUEST | 228 |
THE FINAL DIVERSION | 238 |
QUESTS | 252 |
EPILOGUE | 267 |
Notes on Sources | 275 |
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actually Adolphus Busch alcohol American beer Anheuser-Busch aroma asked Bama barley barrels beer drinkers Beer Geeks Beer Goddess beer style beer yeast beer's Big Beer blues bottle bowling brewery brewing brewpub Bud Light Budweiser Busch Calagione called casinos Chapter Clarksdale commercial Coors craft beer crowd Darryl Dixie Cup drink drunk Dubuque Eckhardt Elvis Extreme Beer fact fermentation flavor Flora-Bama Fritz Maytag German Gilchrist Grand Wazoo homebrewers Hooters Hooters Girls hops industry kind Kloth knew Koch later laughed looked malt Maribeth mash microbrewery Miller Lite million Mississippi Mormon Mullet Mullet Toss National NBWA neo-prohibitionists night Orleans Pabst Perfect Beer Joint Pilsner Portland pretty quest Rehr River of Beer SABMiller seemed talk Tarzi tell things tion told town Twain Wall Street wine Woody's yeast yeast strains