Women and Beer – Wine or Liberation

March is National Women’s History Month here in the United States. It is an annual celebration of women and their roles in history, sponsored by the National Women’s History Project. As with so much else, the realm of beer seems dominated by men. It is primarily men who are marketed to, primarily men who are the brewers and homebrewers, and primarily men who write about beer. But not entirely. The blogosphere is no different. So, to celebrate Women’s History Month, Hop Talk is taking time out to get to know some of these women.

This is a guest article by Carolyn Smagalski, The Beer Fox.

Deep within the recesses of a woman’s mind lives a place of secrecy, one where fantasy mixes with a perception of her place in the world. She sees her various roles in life, and assigns levels of importance to each. As the weather starts to warm and the thawing earth begins to squish beneath her step, her nose detects aromas of wet, dry leaves and hyacinths – each pleasant in its own way, signaling a new beginning, a new year. Her anticipation of Spring’s natural beauty requires her to launch into a mission of meticulous landscaping, drinking in the aromas of earth, dirt, ivy, daffodil, tulip and lily. She savors the sweetness, but delights in farmland, animal-scents and bitter wafts that fill the air, as well.

This ritual is repeated in every corner of her life – the romantic and sexual relationship she enjoys with her partner; the way she nurtures her children; the order and attention she gives to her career; the ease with which she settles into social situations; the care she extends to matters of culinary excellence. The list is endless.

One thing remains clear. A woman has a broad capacity for enjoying and savoring the gifts of the earth. It is this very broad capacity that led her predecessors, as high priestesses in ancient Sumer, to the brewing of beer, and as royal empresses of ancient Rome, to the painting of their lips with the ambrosia of pungent wine. Woman revels in flavor, aroma, and the kinesthetic sensations surrounding food and drink. This makes her particularly adept at assessing and enjoying the delights of bière and wine.

I use the word bière, rather than beer, because a woman may display an unexplained sensitivity, even in her use of written language. She prefers the word truffle to mushroom, cuisine to food, and brochette to skewer, particularly when she is in the midst of a fine dining experience among her friends. She wants them to see her as savvy. Beer is a fine word for casual use, but she needs the complement of elegant grammar when lobster is laid elegantly upon a delicate sauce. She enjoys the hedonism associated with banal indulgence, and wants to feel wicked in a playful, yet innocent way. She abhors being thought of as “cheap,” and may reject the very act of drinking beer because of the image portrayed by so many beer marketers throughout our anthropological culture.

A woman is drawn to the image of wine as a “godly” drink. In Roman mythology, Bacchus was the god of wine and agriculture, while Dionysus ruled over that domain in Greece. In southern Italy, the Greek culture introduced the Bacchanalia circa 200 B.C., a celebration that was initially open to women only, and was held in the greatest secrecy. With the advent of the Christian rites, particularly the Catholic Church, wine was introduced into the most sacred part of the Mass, and continued in comfort as an “approved” beverage. Of course, the warmer climates of Italy and Greece produced grapes, so wine was abundant. The influence of the Roman Empire had spread throughout Europe, as did their customs – this was good for the Roman tradesman, and the custom continued.

Although monasteries grew their own grain and hops, and brewed beer that sustained monks throughout Lenten Fasts, women were excluded from this form of ceremony regarding beer. Rather, beer was the common beverage consumed by the masses (unpurified water was deadly). It therefore, did not form a parallel with the divine – the imaginative manifestations of Juno or Hera, for instance. Northern cultures in Scandinavia used beer in their sacred rituals, but the southern cultures regarded those unconquered tribes on the Northern Peninsulas as “barbarians.” Yet, when you survey Human Development Standards of the World for 2007-2008, those strong, Scandinavian countries have captured all the top spots – Iceland (#1), Norway (#2), Sweden (#6), Netherlands (#9), and Finland (#11). The USA ranks twelfth, Italy is 20th and Greece is 24th.

With more than 100 different styles of beer, mead and cider available throughout the world today, a woman would be hard-pressed to find nothing to her liking. Although many middle-aged women have seized the concept of directing their own lives and making their own decisions, the power of peer pressure still persists for a large segment of this demographic group. They cling to myths formed long ago:

Myth #1: One style is like all styles

Ladies, wake up! Some are light and champagne-like while others are sweet, dark, and malty. Still others are briskly hopped and have flavors of grapefruit, pine cones, or flowers. Sour Ale, Lambic, and Gueuze are intensely satisfying to a wine lover, while alcohol levels are often (but not always) lower than those found in beer.

Myth #2: Beer makes me sick and bloated

This complaint may be due to a sensitivity to congeners in dark, alcoholic beverages (beer, wine, or mixed drinks), and paler styles would be more easily tolerated and digested by their bodily systems. You may also have sensitivity to the glutens found in beer made with barley, wheat or rye. Gluten-free beer, brewed from sorghum, honey, quinoa, or chestnuts will give you a taste of the exotic, and blends well with meat, poultry and vegetables.

Myth #3: Only “cheap women” drink beer

A woman who is educated about beer and the many styles available globally never looks “cheap,” especially when she makes her choice with an air of confidence and NO apologies. Rather, she is a goddess to men who truly appreciate beer for its “taste.”

Myth #4: Beer clogs my nose

Some beers, particularly those with high hop levels, may cause stuffiness in those who suffer from hay fever. Choose beers that have little to no hops added, indicated by low IBU numbers – Berliner Weisse, Unblended Lambic, Gueuze – or expand into the realm of Mead, Cider and Perry.

This Beer Fox means no insult to middle-aged women. I merely singled out a segment of that group because this is where I see the most resistance to experimentation in beverage of choice. Younger women, particularly those in upscale, cosmopolitan areas, seem to be enamored with the buffet of styles at their fingertips. They are not content to ask their boyfriends or husbands what to order, and are forming peer groups – e.g., The In Pursuit of Ale Club in Philadelphia – for the exploration, education and enjoyment of beer in a non-judgmental, healthy environment. They have discovered the pleasure of true liberation. Osmotar would have been proud!

Carolyn is the Beer and Brewing editor at Bella Online (RSS feed)

Read Hop Talk’s interview of The Beer Fox

Women of the beerosphere: Carolyn Smagalski

March is National Women’s History Month here in the United States. It is an annual celebration of women and their roles in history, sponsored by the National Women’s History Project. As with so much else, the realm of beer seems dominated by men. It is primarily men who are marketed to, primarily men who are the brewers and homebrewers, and primarily men who write about beer. But not entirely. The blogosphere is no different. So, to celebrate Women’s History Month, Hop Talk is taking time out to get to know some of these women.

Carolyn Smagalski

What is your name?
Carolyn Smagalski, The Beer Fox

What is your location?
Cyberspace:
http://beer.bellaonline.com
http://www.phillybeergeek.com
http://www.glutenfreebeerfestival.com
http://www.cqwebwide.com
Earth:
Harleysville, PA – 25 miles northwest of Monk’s Café, the best Belgian Beer Bar in the country.

What is your blog?
http://beer.bellaonline.com
I write the Beer & Brewing site at www.BellaOnline.com . BellaOnline is the second largest website for women on the Internet, with over 400 categories of interest to women. My site – Beer & Brewing – had 3,000 page views per month when I started writing in December of 2004. It now draws nearly
57,000 page views per month, where I have written over 500 articles and newsletters about Beer & Brewing on that website alone.

http://www.phillybeergeek.com
In conjunction with Jason Harris of Keystone Homebrew Supply in Southeastern Pennsylvania, we have created Philly Beer Geek, in celebration of Philly Beer Week – March 7-March 16, 2008. We will hold the 1st Annual Philly Beer Geek Finals Competition on March 13, 2008 – with over $1,000 in prizes for the winner.

http://www.glutenfreebeerfestival.com
I am the advisor to the Gluten Free Beer Festival in the United Kingdom, and have contributed several articles about Gluten Free Beer for those with Celiac Disease, an intolerance to the protein fractions in barley, wheat, oats, rye, spelt, kamut and triticale.

http://www.cqwebwide.com
I also write a website on communication, (both internal and external), for success. It explores business basics, adversity, goal setting, creative imagination, taking action, and the like, and offers solutions for better communication on the Internet.

Do you have a favorite style of beer? What is it?
I am a certified beer judge with the BJCP, and enjoy judging Specialty Beer because the range of flavors and styles is so diverse. These beers expose me to the newest emerging styles – those on the cutting edge in the expanding universe of beer, and I derive great pleasure from the imaginative creativity of the brewers.

Other styles that bring particular pleasure to my palate are sour ales, IPA’s, saison, English Pale Ale, Roggenbier, Russian Imperial Stout, and Wood Aged Beer.

How did you come to write a blog about beer?
In my “proper” job, I coordinate printing and distribution for a number of nationally distributed magazines. At one point, I decided I wanted to expand my life, but didn’t know what capabilities I had. Since I had been cooking for years, I decided to write a cook book. I quickly realized that I needed a unique selling point, so I decided to add beer to the recipes (I noticed a lot of people seemed to like beer. I was a wine drinker, and did not drink beer at the time.) Pennsylvania is a case state, but I wanted to use all different micros in the recipes. I wrote to over 100 breweries across the US and Canada, asking them to send me 2 bottles of beer so I could test my recipes. They did, and I began a rollercoaster ride of cooking every weekend, inviting people from 21 to 81 to my home to taste the recipes and give their opinions. I realized that wasn’t enough. I needed credibility and experience.

As I surfed the Internet, I happened to come across BellaOnline, and they happened to need a Beer & Brewing Author/Editor. Call it Karma. I wrote four “trial articles,” and they accepted me. Passion was born. Since then, beer has taken me to London three times, Alaska twice, Denver four times, Washington DC, Boston, New York, New Hampshire, Illinois, and Iowa, and it has no limits. I have co-hosted a radio show at the GABF with Tom Dalldorf of Celebrator Beer News, presented beer and food demos at the GABF, Great Alaska Beer & Barley Wine Festival and Women of Alaska Festival, been a judge for the National Beerdrinker of the Year Competition in Denver, been a professional judge at the Great American Beer Festival, appeared on Sirius Satellite Radio, had my photos published in several publications, been interviewed for articles in magazines and newspapers, and attended the James Beard Awards in NYC and the Pilsner Urquell Bartender of the Year Competition as Michael Jackson’s partner. I was deeply torn when Michael passed away on August 30th, 2007, but I realize that I need to continue his legacy – to continue in the world of beer that he created through his dogged persistence throughout 30 years of journalistic writing about beer and whiskey.

What prejudices have you had to overcome?
Prejudices? Hogwash! There are certainly challenges, though. I sometimes encounter women who think they hate beer because the only beer they ever had was Bud Light or Miller – then they tried to jump right into a Robust Porter and were put-off by the unexpected surge of complexity to the taste buds. My solution is to explain that they need to approach it as a gentle immersion into its delights – as if you were exploring seduction with a new lover.

Other challenges: Compressing my time enough to get it all done – finding enough time to write as often as I would like. All the work I have done at BellaOnline has been for passion – not pay, so the “Proper Job” that sustains me and pays my bills also requires that I give it a fair amount of attention.

Any other passions?
I am also a single mother to two young men in their early 20′s, who live under my roof, and are developing their own paths in life. My youngest was in a serious accident 5 years ago, and we are still overcoming some of those
challenges daily. I am a IFR rated pilot with a complex aircraft rating, and love aviation, although I have not flown in several years.

Any parting thoughts?
The passion in the beer industry is unlike any I have ever seen – the sense of community, the love for creating a living product, the joy of sharing. This is a great career – this writing about beer. I love what I do…I really love it.

Carolyn is the Beer and Brewing editor at Bella Online (RSS feed)