Small beer: Difference between revisions

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Small beer was a low-alcohol [[beer]] that was made in earlier centuries in order to, as the tomb inscription implied, serve the place that [[water]] would today. In earlier times, water was often not safe to drink, and the fermenting and brewing process would make water potable.
Small beer was a low-alcohol [[beer]] that was made in earlier centuries in order to, as the tomb inscription implied, serve the place that [[water]] would today. In earlier times, water was often not safe to drink, and the fermenting and brewing process would make water potable.


[[Category:Wikipediainfo]]
[[Category:Alcoholic beverages from the real world]]
[[Category:Alcoholic beverages from the real world]]

Latest revision as of 08:40, 19 July 2015

Small beer

Small beer was, judging by what Henry Hawksworth's tombstone said, the thing that caused his death. As Ben read to Polly, the tombstone said:

Henry Hawksworth, he did die
Of drinking too much small beer
When he was dry

The recitation jogged the First Doctor into a better understanding of the code the churchwarden had given as a sort of key to finding Avery's gold. It led the Doctor to look for Daniel Smallbeer's tomb. (TV: The Smugglers)

Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]

Small beer was a low-alcohol beer that was made in earlier centuries in order to, as the tomb inscription implied, serve the place that water would today. In earlier times, water was often not safe to drink, and the fermenting and brewing process would make water potable.