malt-msg - 3/26/06 Period use of malted grains. Malt is grain softened by steeping in water and then allowed to germinate. Modern sources. NOTE: See also the files: rice-msg, grains-msg, beer-msg, beverages-msg, brewing-msg, bread-msg, Ancent-Grains-art, leavening-msg, Ale-a-Beer-lnks. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ Date: Fri, 10 Dec 1999 11:43:46 -0500 From: Christine A Seelye-King Subject: SC - Malt Powder It is my understanding that Malt is from toasted barley, hence, barley malt. Or perhaps the term barley malt just specifies that it is barley and not wheat malt. Where is Waverly Root? (leaving the room briefly and consulting the reference section) Ok, nothing in 'FOOD', but here is the OED listing. Malt [Com. Teut.:OE 'mealt':-OTeut.*'maltos-'neut.;f. the root of Melt,Smelt vbs] 1.Barley or other grain prepared for brewing or distilling by steeping, germinating, and kiln-drying, or by gelatinization, etc. 2.transf. Used for: Malt liquor (slang or colloq.) 1718 I. 'Extract of m.', a preparation of m. used as food for invalids. Provb. 'The m. is above the meal', said the person under the influence of drink. attrib. and Comb., as m.-spirits; m-cellar, m-meal, etc.; m.extract, a saccharine and mucilaginous substance obtained from wort; also='extract of m.; - -floor, (a) a floor on which the malt is spread to germinate; (b) a perforated floor in the malt-kiln, through which heat ascends from a furnace below to dry the barley laid upon it; - -kiln, a kiln in which the m. is dried after steeping and couching; m.liquor, liquor made from m. by fermentation, as ale, beer, stout, etc.; - -sugar = Maltose; -tax, a tax on m., now replaced by the beer-duty; m.vinegar, vinegar made from the fermentation of m. Malt , v., 1440. 1. trans. To convert (grain) into malt. Also absol. b. intr. To admit of being malted 1766. 2. transf. (pass. and intr.) Of seeds: To come to the condition of malt owing to germination being checked by drought 1733. 3. trans. To make (liquor) with malt 1605. 4. intr. To drink malt liquor (vulgar) 1813. 3. A man of worship, whose beere was better hopped than maulted CAMDEN. So, it seems that it can be any grain, but most likely barley and wheat. Hmmm. Christianna Date: Fri, 10 Dec 1999 11:44:30 -0600 From: "Decker, Terry D." Subject: RE: SC - Malted Milk > > "Nestle Carnation Malted Milk, original flavor" (there's also > > chocolate) > > This is absolutely the stuff the old soda jerks used. Carnation was > > a major supplier of soda fountains back in the *olde* days. > > Anahita > > > But, as the label says, this is "malted milk", ergo, milk with malt > powder added to it. Right? > Christianna Right. It is malt powder cut with powdered milk and wheat flour (according to one label) to produce measurable amounts without making the malt flavor overpowering. It is the stuff used in malts, sodas and other dishes where you want a hint of malt. Malt powder and malt syrup tend to be used in making commercial quantities or where you want a strong malt flavor. Malted milk and malt powder serve similar purposes, but have different potencies. Diatasic malt is a specialized malt exceptionally high in the enzyme diatase to improve fermentation. The primary use I know of is in commercial bakeries. Bear Date: Sat, 11 Dec 1999 09:42:25 -0500From: Philip & Susan Troy Subject: Re: SC - maltStefan li Rous wrote:> Was malt known in period? Perhaps under a different name> such as sprouted, browned wheat? :-) I think I've seen mention of malt> in nursery rhymes but those aren't necessarily period. The only place> I can remember malt is in malted milk. Adamantius' comment makes me> wonder if it might have been used in late-period brewing but I have> no idea if it was.There _are_ some medieval culinary recipes that call for wort(essentially the malt-infused solution fermented to make ale), as acooking medium, the way you might simmer in wine, but I'm not aware ofany use of malt extract by brewers until the early 20th century or so.Malt, BTW, can be almost any grain, and is generally the predominant[cheap] grain in a given area, but in our Anglo-centric SCA thisgenerally refers to barley unless specified otherwise. Also, for therecord, not all malt in period is toasted. It is dried in a sort ofkiln, but in Markham's instructions for malting there's no toasting atall beyond a brief heating (with lots of attention, turning, etc.) tostop the plant embryos from continuing to grow and to dry the malt.Excessive toasting, of course, will limit the diastolic enzyme activity(well, all right, as long as I'm being jargonistic I'll say zymurgy.Neener Neener.) Anyway, Markham's early seventeenth-century English maltis what is today known as "white malt", to distinguish it from palemalt, which is actually a light brown and tends to produce an amber ale.Even white malt, still occasionally used in England today, can produce apale-ish amber ale.> What is the differance between "Spray-dried malt extract and powdered> malt? Is the extract more concentrated? They sure sound similar.Depends on what you mean by powdered malt. Malt (as in malted barley orother grain) can certainly be ground to a fine powder, but it'sgenerally regarded as a Bad Thing for brewing with because it tends toproduce cloudy brews. Spray-dried malt extract is made the same waypowdered milk is, by spraying malt syrup or wort into a freeze-dryingvacuum chamber. Powdered malt extract, made this way, would be the samething, but powdered _malt_ could refer to what is essentially used bybakers to make malted waffles and bread and such: malt flour. Maltextract is, in theory, pretty much pure maltose, while ground maltcontains proteins, starches, insoluble fiber, etc., in addition to some maltose.Now, malt extract has been known since the nineteenth century (with thefirst of the real experiments into "enriched" foods) as a fairlyhealthful food/supplement, and it found its way into a number of foodsas a vaguely medicinal additive. There's a reason why the first placesto serve these milk drinks, including malted milk and the early tonicdiluted with two-cents-plain and known today as Coca-Cola, weredrugstores. I think the modern formula for making Carnation malted milkmix, with its dried milk and wheat flour, has more to do with making itrich and thick than with the fact that malt contains a grain element.Adamantius Date: Sat, 11 Dec 1999 00:25:48 -0600From: "Decker, Terry D." Subject: RE: SC - malt > Was malt known in period? Perhaps under a different name> such as sprouted, browned wheat? :-) I think I've seen mention of malt> in nursery rhymes but those aren't necessarily period. The only place> I can remember malt is in malted milk. Adamantius' comment makes me> wonder if it might have been used in late-period brewing but I have> no idea if it was.> --> Lord Stefan li Rous Barony of Bryn Gwlad Kingdom of Ansteorra> Mark S. Harris Austin, Texas stefan at texas.netMalt was definitely known in period. Malted barley was a major product inthe Hanseatic League trade. I believe you will also find malted grain beingused in Assyrian and Egyptian brewing.Malting increases the enzymes, particularly diatase, in the grain whichconvert starch to sugar and enhances fermentation processes such as brewingand baking.If you look at the ingredient labels, you'll find malt in a lot of oddplaces, primarily as a flavoring agent.Bear Date: Sat, 11 Dec 1999 01:38:43 -0600From: Magdalena Subject: Re: SC - malt> Was malt known in period? Perhaps under a different name> such as sprouted, browned wheat? :-)Malt was known as ... malt. or perhaps mault, or malte, or some german word Idon't remember. ;> Where you have beer/ale brewing, you have malt. In fact, Idon't know if you can make beer without malt. I don't think so. You can makebarley stuff, but it isn't beer/ale. (Beer has hops, ale does not, for a moreor less period definition.) In period, people who knew how to malt were paidmore than those who did not. I haven't personally seen any of the info on theearly Egyptian brewers, but hearsay says that there were maltinginstructions/pictures.- -Magdalena Date: Mon, 13 Dec 1999 18:15:05 EST From: LrdRas at aol.com Subject: Re: SC - malt magdlena at earthlink.net writes: << Malt was known as ... malt. or perhaps mault, or malte, or some german word I don't remember. ;> >> [from: Miriam-Webster] malt [1] (noun) [Middle English, from Old English mealt; akin to Old High German malz malt, Old English meltan to melt] First appeared before 12th Century 1 : grain (as barley) softened by steeping in water, allowed to germinate, and used esp. in brewing and distilling Ras Date: Mon, 13 Dec 1999 19:33:00 -0500 From: Nick Sasso Subject: Re: SC - malt > Was malt known in period? Perhaps under a different name > such as sprouted, browned wheat? :-) I think I've seen mention of malt > in nursery rhymes but those aren't necessarily period. The only place I can > remember malt is in malted milk. Adamantius' comment makes me wonder if it > might have been used in late-period brewing but I have > no idea if it was. Malted wheat and oats were used in monastic breweries since 14th century, according to inventories. Also, the German purity laws seem to suggest something was being malted (mostly wheat) other than barley that had to be outlawed. niccolo difrancseco Date: Mon, 13 Dec 1999 19:48:53 -0500 From: "Richard Kappler" Subject: RE: SC - malt Malt has been used back to Sumerian times and prolly before. It is impossible to make beer or ale without it. Now I'm not gonna get into the terminology/semantics battle currently underway, but the original question can be answered two ways. Was malt used in period? Yes, absolutely, regardless of what you construe period to be, it was, and long before. Was the term malt used in period? Dunno. I defer to Miriam. Regards, Puck Date: Wed, 10 Nov 2004 23:39:13 -0500 From: "grizly" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Beverages To: "Bill Fisher" , "Cooks within the SCA" > On Wed, 10 Nov 2004 12:11:16 -0800 (PST), Chris Stanifer > wrote: >> >> Does anyone have a reference for the use of Malt Syrup as a beverage??? >> It seems to me that it may have occurred to someone, somewhere along the way, >> to water down malt syrup to use as a sweet beverage, which, having made it >> myself from time to time, is very tasty. >> >> Perhaps medieval brewers didn't reduce their malt to syrup? Perhaps >> they didn't make their malt syrup seperate from the brewing process?? Not >> sure.... anyone? >> William de Grandfort Historical references suggest that malt syrup was not in use until the late 1700's by the British Royal Navy to brew beer on voyages . . . extending the life of their alcohol. No pasteurization yet, so you got malt vinegar from beer/ale way too quickly. I can get the book title having the reference, if someone needs it. Something like "History of Brewing in England from 600 to 1800" . . . . with three paragraphs or so (hyperbole) on pre-1700 items. maestro niccolo difrancesco Date: Sun, 5 Jun 2005 20:27:51 -0500 From: "Terry Decker" Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] malt To: "Cooks within the SCA" No, I'm talking about a recipe that calls for malt (probably barley malt, but not necessarily) in addition to the leavening. By itself, malt does not leaven, but it does provide a serious boost for the leavening. Modernly bakers tend to use diamalt (malt extract with diatase) to improve the bread. If you use a teaspoon or two of malt, malt extract, or diamalt to a pound or two of dough, it will boost the yeast. If you add a quarter cup or so, it will act as a sweetner. Bear > Bear, I think Lyse meant using the barley malt as a sweetener. You are > talking about ale barm as a leavening agent, right? Not as a sweetener. > > Stefan > >> The pre-1600 recipes and descriptions I've seen don't mention barley malt, >> but it would probably have been in the ale barm for those breads that were >> not leavened with sourdough. The first mention I can remember for malt >> in bread is Markham in the early 17th Century. >> >> Bear >> >>> Would barley malt have been used instead or sugar? >>> Lys Edited by Mark S. Harris malt-msg Page 6 of 6