Just three companies control approximately 80 percent of the beer industry in the US. Brewing beer at home is one way to counter this corporate monopoly. However, Mississippi, Kentucky, Alabama and Oklahoma still outlaw the craft. Recently, a victory for homebrewers was scored in Utah, when on February 19th the State Senate legalized homebrewing, bringing the state out of the shadows of prohibition.
Three Republican Senators voted against the bill, including Senate Majority Assistant Whip Gregory Bell. "I'm not comfortable with home brewing," Bell said to the Deseret News. "It seems fraught with mischief to me. Maybe I don't understand it."
Why doesn’t Bell understand this delicious an empowering craft? Perhaps because corporations have taken over an industry than used to be rooted in the kitchens of the world. It was in Mesopotamia, modern day Iraq, where first emerged the trade of beer and barley, according to Fermenting Revolution: How To Drink Beer and Save the World by Christopher O'Brien. The need to cultivate crops for this important product may have been the initial reason for the settlement of the world's first large-scale community. In Babylonia, where beer was safer to drink than the canal water, barley and beer were used as a form of currency. The foundations of modern society appear to be built on, well, beer.
At the time of the American Revolution, rebels encouraged boycotts against English beer, chanting the phrase, "Homebrewed Is Best." George Washington brewed his own beer in a house designated for the craft in his backyard. At Monticello, Thomas Jefferson gave his friends beer brewing lessons. In 1872, there were 3,421 breweries in the US. According to the New Yorker, during the Civil War, a member of the United States Sanitary Commission said beer was a “valuable substitute for vegetables.” Now there are more than 1,400 breweries, and over one million homebrewers in the US.
Yet during Prohibition, home brewers naturally took a hit. After Prohibition was lifted, wine was allowed to be produced legally at home, but beer was not. In 1978, NY Congressman Barbar Conable sponsored a bill that would legalize homebrewing. When introducing the bill to Congress, Conable said that Americans should not have to “rely on the beer barons” for their brew. It wasn’t until 1979, when President Jimmy Carter signed the Cranston Act, that home brewing was legalized in many states. At the time of the law’s passage, only forty four breweries were in operation the US.
However, the Cranston Act still allowed individual states to prohibit the production. Before the Utah Senate legalized homebrewing a few days ago, those who brewed at home had to get a license and post a $10,000 bond. Utah Senator Steve Urquhart said of the new law’s passage, "We're dealing with adults and this simply isn't a big deal. That's the argument that persuades me." Utah Governor Jon Huntsman now needs to sign the bill into law for it to be applied. Pending this passage, homebrewers will be able to brew legally starting on May 12.
This homebrewers’ victory in Utah is in part thanks to two years of grassroots activism and lobbying on the part of the American Homebrewers Association and Gary Glass, the Association’s director. Glass spoke to the Beer Examiner about the process. “Much thanks to all of the Utah craft brewers who have helped us in the effort to legalize homebrewing over the past couple of years… The huge response we've had from Utah homebrewers and beer enthusiasts contacting their legislators had a major impact. I was present and testified at the legislative committee hearings and was encouraged to hear from many legislators that they were surprised at the number of contacts from voters urging them to support the measure.”
Homebrewing is a wonderful pastime that can also help build community. In Burlington, Vermont my friends and I recently pooled our money together to buy brewing equipment, and started a collective which shares the equipment, recipes and the beer with other locals around town. In this way, homebrewing has built community and allows us to cut out the corporate middle man.
Similarly, the homebrewers’ victory in Utah is one step close to enabling the beer drinkers of the world to take back their brew from the corporations of the world.
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Benjamin Dangl is the author of The Price of Fire: Resource Wars and Social Movements in Bolivia (AK Press). He is the editor of TowardFreedom.com, a progressive perspective on world events, and UpsideDownWorld.org, a website on activism and politics in Latin America.
Re: Grassroots Beer Brewers Score a Victory in Utah
By Loewen, Matt at Mar 07, 2009 18:43 PM
Awesomeness. I bake my own sourdough bread. Next school semester Im going to try my hand at home brewing!
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Re:
By Small, Brian at Mar 13, 2009 06:56 AM
I tried baking bread but didn't have enough patience for all the fermenting. Just mixing and frying dough for Pupusas is more my speed. That special rice (MochiGome) used to make those sticky pounded rice cakes that a few old people choke on every new years - that makes for a great Pupusa (my interpretation). I use wheat too but the MochiGome flower makes it easier to come up with something edible. Like Wendell Berry says 'Eating is an Agricultural act' and I think Michael Pollan or somebody adds that it's also a political act. Eating Local is a Good Thing, Food Miles, independence.. Probably be good to use local material for intoxicants too. Take control. Influence by _Diet for a Small Planet_ I started replacing some sugar with soy flour (Kinako) and regular flour with Whole Wheat flower (and rice flour).. If you going to do it, do it right I guess - to adapt that old Saturday Night LIve Trojans commercial.
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Botany of Desire and a Japanese Folk Tale
By Small, Brian at Mar 07, 2009 17:44 PM
Great article. Made me look at history in a new way and think of Michael Pollan's _Botany of Desire_ chapter on Marijuana (and drugs with culture in general).
There was a popular Japanese Manga animation TV show that did all the Japanese folktales, Mukashi Banashi. I've only had the good fortune to see two but they stick with you. One of them was about a farming village with a lot of rivalry that was getting poorer and poorer, the life harder and harder. One day a guy notices birds staggering out of a hole in the cliffs and discovers Sake (or beer or Shochu, can't remember) He starts producing alcholic beverages, everyone gets together for parties, drinking and dancing they start cooperating and life in the town gets better.
I had always heard about the dangers and horrors of alcoholism, how it's associated with violence and unhealthy evils way more than pot... To see alcohol put in a positive light on a kids program was a bit of a shock. But then you start to realize that if a society/culture has a way of dealing with their particular social lubricant or anesthetic (coca leaves in Bolivia, Morning Glory seeds in India?...) it shouldn't be terrifying.
Washington and Jefferson brewing their own beer is a great tidbit. Makes for a nice conversation at the Japanese Enkai parties for whatever occasion. THanks!!
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