
Brewing Beer from Bread (Sumerian Method) — Bappir Beer Bread
Instructions
Malt the Barley
Malt the Barley
Soak whole barley grains in water for 24 hours, then drain and spread them on a flat surface kept moist. Over 3-5 days, the grains sprout — tiny rootlets and a shoot emerge from each kernel. This germination process activates amylase enzymes within the grain that convert starch to fermentable sugars (maltose). Once the shoot is approximately the same length as the grain (about 5 mm), halt the germination by spreading the sprouted grain in the sun to dry completely. This produces malt — the essential ingredient that provides both the enzymes and the fermentable sugars for brewing.
Material untuk langkah ini:
Barley Grain2 kg buah
Waterfor soaking buahBake the Beer Bread (Bappir)
Bake the Beer Bread (Bappir)
Coarsely grind the dried malt and mix it with wheat flour and a small amount of water to form a stiff dough. The Hymn to Ninkasi describes mixing bappir with honey and dates. Form the dough into thick, flat loaves. Bake the loaves twice — first at moderate heat to cook through, then at lower heat to dry them out. The twice-baking produces a hard, dry bread that stores well and concentrates the enzymatic activity. Bappir was a traded commodity in Mesopotamia; cuneiform ration lists record bappir distributions to workers alongside other staples. The bread does not need to rise — it is essentially a vehicle for delivering malt enzymes and fermentable carbohydrates.

Material untuk langkah ini:
Whole Wheat Flour500 g buah
Honeysmall amount buah
Dates (Dried)100 g buah
Watersmall amount buahTools needed:
Hearth
Mortar & PestleCrumble and Mash
Crumble and Mash
Crumble the bappir loaves into a large clay vat and add warm water (approximately 65-70 degrees C — hot enough to activate the malt enzymes but not so hot as to destroy them). The optimal temperature for the barley amylase enzyme is 62-67 degrees C. Add chopped dates for additional sugars and flavour. Stir the mixture thoroughly and allow it to rest for 1-2 hours, maintaining warmth by insulating the vat with straw or placing it near a fire. During this mashing period, the amylase enzymes convert the remaining starch in the bread into maltose and other fermentable sugars, creating a sweet liquid called wort.
Material untuk langkah ini:
Dates (Dried)100 g buah
Water10-15 litres buahTools needed:
Clay Vessel
Large Cooking PotStrain and Ferment
Strain and Ferment
Strain the liquid through a woven basket or cloth to remove the spent grain and bread solids. The resulting wort is a sweet, cloudy, brown liquid. Transfer it to a clean vessel and allow it to cool to body temperature (approximately 30-35 degrees C). In ancient brewing, fermentation was initiated by wild yeasts present in the environment and on the grain itself — no commercial yeast was added. Cover the vessel loosely (to allow carbon dioxide to escape but keep insects out) and leave it in a warm place for 3-5 days. Bubbling indicates active fermentation as the yeasts convert sugars to alcohol and carbon dioxide.
Tools needed:
ClothServe Sumerian Style
Serve Sumerian Style
Sumerian beer was drunk fresh, within days of fermentation — it was not stored long-term. The finished beer is thick, cloudy, slightly sweet, and mildly alcoholic (probably 3-5 percent ABV, depending on the sugar content of the mash). It was consumed through long reed straws to filter out the floating grain particles and sediment — Sumerian art frequently depicts figures drinking from large communal vessels through straws. The flavour is bready, mildly sour (from lactic acid produced by bacteria co-fermenting with the yeast), and date-sweet. This style of beer was so culturally important that the goddess Ninkasi was dedicated to its production, and the Hymn to Ninkasi functions as both a prayer and a brewing recipe.

Tools needed:
Drinking Bowl
Dried ReedMaterials
5- 2 kg buahPlaceholder
- 500 g buahPlaceholder
- 200 g buahPlaceholder
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