Wednesday, January 12, 2022

Hảo Háng Do Thái Nhật Nhĩ Man rượu bia bợm nhậu do thái

 Hảo Háng Do Thái Nhật Nhĩ Man rượu bia bợm nhậu do thái

In the Middle Ages, Germany embraced beer. By law, Jews were barred from brewing the popular national drink. That didn’t change until the 1800s, but Jews became central to the beer industry in another way: by growing a flower called hops, which is a crucial ingredient in beer.

Germany’s 1516 “beer purity law” mandated that beer be made only with hops, barley, yeast and water. Hops were suddenly in great demand, creating a key business opportunity. At the time, many Jews were being expelled from German cities. Resettling in the countryside, Jews began to grow and trade hops, soon dominating the industry. By the time the Nazis rose to power in the 1930s, Jews controlled about 70% of German’s important hops industry.

A 1764 census of Polish Jews found that approximately 80% of Jews living in villages worked in the alcohol trade, distilling and selling wine, vodka, liqueurs and beer. Poland’s vodka and beer industries grew in the 1500s, as landowners devoted more land to grow the grains needed for these drinks and set up taverns to sell them in. Many of the innkeepers who ran these taverns were Jews who were seen as more sober and responsible than the general population.

So ubiquitous were these Jewish managers that the image of a kindly Jewish innkeeper became ingrained in Polish life. One example is the character of Jankiel the tavern-keeper, a wise and patriotic Jew created by Poland’s national poet Adam Mickiewicz in his work “Pan Tadeusz” .

Germany’s iconic decorated beer steins, surprisingly, are a Jewish invention. Germans traditionally drank their beer from plain, unadorned steins. Starting in the 1800s, Jewish entrepreneurs began making ornate, decorative steins. The trend caught on, and today beautiful beer steins are a quintessentially German art form. Hảo hán Do Thái nhân hảo hán Nhật Nhĩ Man nhân người do thái uống rượu bia người nhật nhĩ man bợm nhậu #nguoidothai #jew #jews #jewish #beer #beerstagram #beerlover #alcohol #alcoholic #sephardi #sephardic #sephardim #sephardicfood #mizrahi #mizrahit #mizrahim #mizrachi #hebrewisraelites #hebrewisraelite #hebrew #beard #bearded #beardedman #beardy #beardyman #israelite #israelites #beardie #ashkenazi 



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