A brief history of alcohol - Rod Phillips

6,380,109 views ・ 2020-01-02

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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This chimpanzee stumbles across a windfall of overripe plums.
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Many of them have split open,
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drawing him to their intoxicating fruity odor.
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He gorges himself
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and begins to experience some… strange effects.
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This unwitting ape has stumbled on a process
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that humans will eventually harness
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to create beer, wine, and other alcoholic drinks.
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The sugars in overripe fruit attract microscopic organisms
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known as yeasts.
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As the yeasts feed on the fruit sugars they produce a compound called ethanol—
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the type of alcohol in alcoholic beverages.
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This process is called fermentation.
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Nobody knows exactly when
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humans began to create fermented beverages.
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The earliest known evidence comes from 7,000 BCE in China,
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where residue in clay pots
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has revealed that people were making an alcoholic beverage
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from fermented rice, millet, grapes, and honey.
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Within a few thousand years,
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cultures all over the world were fermenting their own drinks.
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Ancient Mesopotamians and Egyptians made beer throughout the year
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from stored cereal grains.
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This beer was available to all social classes,
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and workers even received it in their daily rations.
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They also made wine,
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but because the climate wasn’t ideal for growing grapes,
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it was a rare and expensive delicacy.
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By contrast, in Greece and Rome, where grapes grew more easily,
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wine was as readily available as beer was in Egypt and Mesopotamia.
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Because yeasts will ferment basically any plant sugars,
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ancient peoples made alcohol
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from whatever crops and plants grew where they lived.
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In South America, people made chicha from grains,
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sometimes adding hallucinogenic herbs.
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In what’s now Mexico, pulque, made from cactus sap,
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was the drink of choice,
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while East Africans made banana and palm beer.
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And in the area that’s now Japan, people made sake from rice.
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Almost every region of the globe had its own fermented drinks.
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As alcohol consumption became part of everyday life,
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some authorities latched onto effects they perceived as positive—
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Greek physicians considered wine to be good for health,
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and poets testified to its creative qualities.
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Others were more concerned about alcohol’s potential for abuse.
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Greek philosophers promoted temperance.
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Early Jewish and Christian writers in Europe integrated wine into rituals
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but considered excessive intoxication a sin.
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And in the middle east, Africa, and Spain,
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an Islamic rule against praying while drunk
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gradually solidified into a general ban on alcohol.
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Ancient fermented beverages had relatively low alcohol content.
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At about 13% alcohol,
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the by-products wild yeasts generate during fermentation
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become toxic and kill them.
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When the yeasts die,
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fermentation stops and the alcohol content levels off.
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So for thousands of years, alcohol content was limited.
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That changed with the invention of a process
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called distillation.
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9th century Arabic writings describe boiling fermented liquids
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to vaporize the alcohol in them.
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Alcohol boils at a lower temperature than water,
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so it vaporizes first.
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Capture this vapor, cool it down, and what’s left is liquid alcohol
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much more concentrated than any fermented beverage.
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At first, these stronger spirits were used for medicinal purposes.
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Then, spirits became an important trade commodity
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because, unlike beer and wine, they didn’t spoil.
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Rum made from sugar
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harvested in European colonies in the Caribbean
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became a staple for sailors
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and was traded to North America.
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Europeans brought brandy and gin to Africa
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and traded it for enslaved people, land,
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and goods like palm oil and rubber.
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Spirits became a form of money in these regions.
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During the Age of Exploration,
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spirits played a crucial role in long distance sea voyages.
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Sailing from Europe to east Asia and the Americas could take months,
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and keeping water fresh for the crews was a challenge.
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Adding a bucket of brandy to a water barrel kept water fresh longer
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because alcohol is a preservative that kills harmful microbes.
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So by the 1600s,
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alcohol had gone from simply giving animals a buzz
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to fueling global trade and exploration— along with all their consequences.
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As time went on,
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its role in human society would only get more complicated.
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