Questing a Tomb (BEER VERSION!!!)

Nagle

poser, not guitarist
Aug 19, 2002
548
0
16
42
Philadelphia, PA
bathotaxe.com
I tried the "Midas Touch" brew from Dogfish Head tonight:

His golden touch may have conferred fabulous wealth on King Midas, but he nearly starved to death when even his food and drink were converted into the precious metal.* The well-known legend is based on an actual ruler of the ancient kingdom of Phrygia in central Turkey around 700 B.C.* Under a huge mound at the capital of Gordion, a University of Pennsylvania Museum expedition in 1957 excavated an intact burial chamber which likely belonged to King Midas himself.* The body of a 60-year-old male was laid out in state on a thick pile of purple and blue-dyed textiles inside a unique log coffin.**

Most remarkably, the tomb held the largest Iron Age drinking set ever found--157 vessels, including a ram-headed and lion-headed situla--for preparing, serving, drinking and libating a special beverage at the funerary feast of the king.* The secrets of the beverage were revealed by the new methods of Molecular Archaeology.* Dr. Patrick McGovern of the Museum discovered that the residues inside the vessels belonged to a “Phrygian cocktail,” which combined grape wine, barley beer and honey mead.* Starting with the ancient chemical evidence, Dogfish Head Brewery* “re-created” a marvelous golden elixir, trulytouched by King Midas.

www.dogfish.com


It was damn good too. Kind of like a wine-y but also very grain-y tasting Belgian triple fermented ale.