Start 14-Day Trial Subscription
*No credit card required
Archaeologists from Stanford University have discovered a recipe for beer more than 5,000 years old, which marks the earliest recorded use of barley in China.
The discovery was made along a tributary of the Wei River, where scientists unearthed equipment presumably used for brewing, filtration and storage of beer including amphorae, funnels, stoves and wide-mouthed pots. Inside the containers lay the residue from a liquid which included barley, "Job's Tears" (Chinese pearl barley), broomcorn millet and tubers like potatoes and yams.
Though the ingredients would have likely made a somewhat flavorless brew, this discovery pushes back the time when barley was first thought to be used by more than a thousand years, which would mean that the Chinese were using barley for brewing beer-like beverages before they were eating it, contrary to what was previously thought.