Making of Beer
History of Beer
Culture of Beer
Making of Wine
History of Wine
Culture of Wine
200

This is the grain most commonly malted for brewing beer.

What is Barley?

200

This ancient civilization is thought to have brewed beer as early as the 4th millennium BCE.

What is the Sumeria Civilization?

200

This Irish stout is famously associated with St. Patrick’s Day.

What is Guinness?
200

The natural sugars in these fruits are the primary source for fermentation when making wine.

What are Grapes?

200

Archaeologists trace the earliest winemaking to this region, around 6000 BCE.

What is the Caucasus (Georgia)?

200

This sparkling wine from France is often used for celebrations.

What is Champagne?

400

Sugars are converted into alcohol and carbon dioxide by the yeast through this process.

What is Fermentation?

400
This Bavarian festival, first held in 1810, is now the worlds largest beer celebration.

What is Oktoberfest?

400

This improvised alcoholic drink, often made from fruit, sugar, and bread, is secretly fermented in jail cells.

What is Prison Beer?

400

The skins of red grapes are left in contact with the juice to give this characteristic.

What is Color (or Tannins)?

400

Ancient Romans spread viticulture across this European country, now famous for Bordeaux and Burgundy.

What is France?

400

This style of wine, made with minimal intervention and no additives, has surged in popularity among younger drinkers seeking authenticity.

What is Natural Wine?

600

This characteristic flavor is added to the beer by Hops.

What is bitterness?

600

During this U.S. era (1920-1933), alcohol production and sales were banned.

What is Prohibition?

600

This American beer brand’s slogan was “Tastes great, Less filling.”

What is Miller Brewing (or Miller Light)?
600

This French term refers to the unique environmental factors that affect a wine’s taste.

What is Terroir?

600

These religious communities in Europe preserved viticulture through the Middle Ages, perfecting techniques that shaped modern winemaking.

What are Monasteries?
600

This blind tasting, where California wines beat French vintages, is often cited as the moment that sparked this modern cultural transformation of wine.

What is the 1976 Judgment of Paris?

800

This liquid is produced after mashing grains and before fermentation begins.

What is Wort?

800
The largest number of Trappist monasteries famous for brewing beer are housed in this European country. 

What is Belgium?

800

This smoky specialty from Bamberg is brewed with malt dried over open flames, giving it a distinctive campfire aroma.

What is a Rauchbier?

800

The vessel traditionally used for aging wine, often made of oak.

What is a Barrel?

800

This Italian city-state helped popularize Chianti in the Renaissance.

What is Florence?

800

This French phrase means “white wine” and is used worldwide.

What is Vin Blanc?

1000

This law explains why beer goes flat after you open the can.

What is Henry's Law?

1000

This 1516 German law limited beer ingredients to water, barley, and hops.

What is the Reinheitsgebot (or German Purity Laws)

1000

This Belgian-style beer is traditionally brewed with orange peel and coriander.

What is Witbier?

1000

Before fermentation begins, grapes are typically crushed and pressed to release this liquid, the starting point for wine.

What is Must?

1000

This pharaoh’s tomb contained jars of wine, showing its importance in ancient Egypt.

Who is Tutankhamun?
1000

This Japanese drink, often compared to wine, is brewed from rice.

What is Sake?

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