spike418
Active Member
Stumbled across this book the other day and in particular a chapter entitled
Psychotropic and Highly Inebriating Beers :mrgreen:
Sacred and herbal healing beers written by Stephen Harrod Buhner
Apparently
Here are a few selective quotes on various brews :
Psychotropic and Highly Inebriating Beers :mrgreen:
Sacred and herbal healing beers written by Stephen Harrod Buhner
Apparently
The book does not seem to have been discussed in detail on here and I just wondered if anyone else had crossed over to the no hop method and if so were the results as devastating as expected/hoped forYour post looks too spamy for a new user, please remove off-site URLs.
Here are a few selective quotes on various brews :
Myrica has been used throughout Europe for millennia in the brewing of ale. It was one of the most common herbs, after juniper, in traditional brewing in Norway, the ale was called pars. The stories of its intoxicating properties are legendary.
"Wild Rosemary contains a volatile oil (ledum oil) that has strong inebriating effects and that in high doses produces cramps, rage, and frenzy . . . . A number of experiments with wild rosemary beer have demonstrated that the inebriating effects of alcohol are increased, and people get drunker quicker."
According to Linneaus, it was used by the people of Lima in
Dalecarnia, instead of hops, whrn they brewed for weddings, " . . . so ·
that the guests become crazy." Linneaus called the plant galentara,
"causing madness", and this plant "which the people of Lima sometimes
use in their ale stirs up the blood and makes one lose one's balance."
. . . Yarrow is in no way innocent when mixed with ale. It has
a strong odour and flavour, and well deserves the name Linnaeus gave
it, to indicate the frrezy that was said to result from it. Like Ledum
palustre, skvattram adds poisonous after-effects to the influence of
the alcohol. Thus yarrow must contain substances which increase the
effect of the alcohol, and bring about special sensations and feelings
when added to ale. According to Linnaeus, it is significant that it was
used to arrive at a state of complete and immediate intoxication
Wormwood is extremely bitter and needs to be used with a judicious hand, as Dr. Worth cautioned in 1 692. The plant hasn't changed much since then. I originally used 3/4 ounce in the following recipe and found it too bitter for my taste, though people with a tendency toward gustatory sadomasochism, tongue flagellation, or those who enjoy the taste of earwax might find it pleasant.
In low doses, beer brewed with henbane has an inebriating effect, in moderate doses, it is an aphrodisiac. (Hen bane is the only beverage
that makes you more thirsty the more you drink! This is due to the
dehydrating effects of the tropane alkaloids.) In high doses, it leads to
delirious, "demented" states, confusion, disturbances of memory, and
mad behaviors having no apparent cause.