Book 2: Chapter 19: A Stout Porter
The Thirsty Goat was closed. It wasnât an emergency, and we werenât out of food. No, it was just far past closing time and all the patrons had left for the day.
The tables were cleaned, most of the help had retired, and a warm fire flickered in the hearth of the pub. The clink of dishes in the kitchen mixed with the crackle of the fire to create a symphony of satisfaction. In the warm orange glow a single dwarf sat at a paper strewn table, contemplating the future of the world. Little did he know how instrumental he would be in the events that would soon transpire.
I mean, I did know, but it felt a little like hubris. Not that a little hubris wasnât good for the soul! Sometimes all you need to keep your energy high is a little voice in the back of your head saying âYes, thatâs right Pete, YOU are the main character in your own life!â
I thumbed through another page of notes and hummed a little Johnny Cash. My favorite Cash was Ring of FIre but I currently had Hey Porter on my mind. I considered the words to the song; I wonder if they have trains on Erd? That struck me as a simple technology to introduce, especially given what Iâd seen so far of gnomish engineering. Depending on how things went with Copperpot I could do a slow drip of tech on the side. Or not, I was busy enough.
âHowâs it going, Pete?â
I looked up - and up, to see the enormous form of Kirk Manly peering down at me. He was carrying a tankard and was sweaty and disheveled from a long night of waitering. His white button up shirt was opened slightly at the neck and a small tuft of hair peeked out like some kind of sad human chest-beard. Annie and I had worried that our clientele would be uncomfortable with a giant serving food, but Kirk was already well-loved by most of our patrons. Iâd thought it would be his dashing good looks (for a Human) or his great singing voice, but it turned out to be something waaaaay dumber. They loved him because he got great distance on the toss.
Every night in pubs around the city, fights broke out amongst the drunkest and most belligerent dwarves. Inevitably this resulted in some dwarf getting tossed out a window and onto his head. There was a fairly large population of tosswatchers who liked to go to pubs to watch their fellows get the yeet to the street. Kirkâs height and strength meant he got some good distance. The brewpub had a singular window to the outside expressly for that purpose. Iâd been wondering why Bran had been so insistent on the silly thing when we'd designed the pub, but it all made sense now.
I patted the table. âItâs goinâ. Want to join me?â
Kirk nodded and took a seat on the picnic bench across from me. He watched in silence for a while as I completed a few notes, taking the occasional sip of his drink. He looked a bit uncomfortable on the too-small seat, and I made a mental note to have Balin make him a personal chair. Maybe a lounge for kicking his feet up after a long night running around the pub.
âAre you enjoying the work?â I asked, pushing my notes to the side.
Kirk gave a wide satisfied smile. âIt's great. Itâs everything I love about portering, but it comes with great food and good friends.â
âIâve been meanin' to ask, what food and drink do they have up in the Human lands?â I asked, pointing up to the ceiling.
Kirk looked up as well and frowned. âItâs a bit similar, and a lot different in other respects.â
I sat up and stretched a bit. âDo tell?â
âFor one thing, there's a lot more sweets and meats down here.â Kirk patted his stomach. âMy stomach loves it, but my waistlineâs starting to complain!â
I scratched my head. âHumans donât eat meat?â
Kirk frowned. âMost of the hunting and farming is controlled by the nobility. Itâs just too expensive for your average person to eat more than the occasional chicken or pork. Fish is more common.â
âSo meatâs a⦠controlled substance!?â
Kirk nodded.
âBy Aaronâs Arse, how can they justify that??â I spluttered.
âThereâs a lot of them - first sons, fourth sons, fifth daughters, seventh sons. Humans have more children in a shorter timeline than dwarves, especially the nobility. Theyâre everywhere and they own everything.â His gaze grew a bit cloudy at that, and I once again considered what had driven a man of his ability and stature down here. I didnât fully buy his action adventurer story, but every man, er and dwarf had his secrets.
âWhat about tha sweets? I refuse to believe that dwarves have a bigger sweet-tooth than teenage girls - er, I mean humans.â I thought back on some of Sammyâs sweets demands, and this time it didnât hurt, it was simply bittersweet. Like chocolate after a breakup.
âI think that it's the gnomesâ fault, actually. A lot of the big family businesses push sweets hard down here, and sugar is readily available from Greentree. Thereâs a whole culture around drinking coffee and eating vanilla cream rolls that we just donât have, though Gnomish tea is common enough.â
âSugarâs still expensive.â I pointed out.
Kirk nodded. âBut nothing like the human lands. Most of our desserts use honey, or imported sweeteners, and that gets expensive. There are beekeepers here and there, but Hive Dungeon is the main distributor of honey in the human kingdoms, and itâs dangerous. Nothing like Greentree.â
âHuh. That⦠kind of sucks. How about alcohol? You mentioned whiskey? Iâm guessing thereâs no beer?â
Kirk smiled widely. âOh, we have whiskey for sure! And gin.â
âDo you have brandy?â
âNever heard of it.â
âHuh. Wine?â
âYou can buy it from the elves, but itâs expensive.â He waggled his eyebrows. âThey hoard the stuff more than a dwarf hoards gold. No offence.â
âNone taken, gold is gold. Anythin' else? Rum, or mead?â From what heâd said about sugar, both of those seemed unlikely. Rum was a byproduct of sugarcane, and mead needed copious amounts of honey.
Kirk pursed his lips. âNo to those too. Just a few kinds of vodka, though I donât drink them, and rice wine. You sure know a lot of different types of alcohol, Pete! Or are you just yanking my leg? I admit, I got a lot of it to yank!â
âYou have sake - I mean, rice wine?!â I sat bolt upright. âThat means you have rice! Can I buy some? Do they have it here!?â my voice came out tinged with a touch of desperation.
Kirk shook his head. âNo, I havenât seen it in Minnova. I know they carry it at the human market in Kinshasa, but itâs expensive.â
Nuts, I was sensing a theme, but I was rich, so who cared! Rice was my favourite gluten-free malt, so Iâd been hoping to use it. At least now I knew there were additional ingredients I could get in Kinshasa! All the more reason to get back to winning this competition.
âWhat about you, Pete? Whatâs all this?â
âCanât you tell?â
âLooks like ingredients. Aqua says you taught Bran a lot of his recipes, are you doing more of that?â
I grinned, as there was a louder than usual *clank* from the kitchen. It was probably Bran dropping some eaves. Heâd better watch out, eavesdropping was a hazardous sport. âYouâre close. Iâm trying to make a new kind of beer.â
âREALLY!â Kirkâs face opened up in boyish wonder. I blinked. He suddenly looked so young, or I was just feeling really old.
I cracked a huge smile too. âAye, Copperpot challenged me to make something that gnomes would love, and I think I know exactly what to use.â
âExcellent!"
âYep, Iâm going to cook up a stout porter!â
Kirk suddenly backed up all the way down his bench, a feat given his size. âExcuse me?â
âWhat?â
âYouâre going to cook what!?â He bit his lip and considered, then guffawed. âAh, it was a pun!â
I thought back on what Iâd said then laughed along with him. âHah, no, actually, not this time.â
âSo what is this porter? Is it similarly Blessed by the Gods?â Kirk eventually asked.
âOh, yes!!" Or at least Guinness was. Now, I had said a stout porter, but that was the original name for two different drinks. A stout, and a porter. Both of them were âdark' beers, and I was hoping they were different enough to appeal to the gnomes.
âCan you tell me more?â Kirk shuffled back to sit more comfortably, his elbows on the table.
âOh, absolutely! How much do you know about beer?â
There was another loud *clang* from the kitchen.
âNot much, honestly.â Kirk shrugged. âI just know that thereâs only been two types for over ten-thousand years.â
âWell, thatâs true and untrue. Obviously thereâs been more made, just none that got popular.â
Kirk chuckled. âThat makes sense. It did feel odd to me. Really, ten thousand years and nobody ever tried something new? It feels a bit unrealistic.â
I coughed. âSure.â
âWhy that name, though? Was it invented by a Titled [Porter]?â
I adjusted my tone to 'storyteller' and began my carefully crafted lie. âLet me tell you the tale! The legends say that once upon a time me kinsfolk - they live very far away from here, you wouldnât know them - mixed the two different kinds of beer in a tankard with a few other ingredients to create a special brew called two-threads. They served it to the hard-working, uh, [Porters] of the city docks. The problem was, if you were missin' any one of the beers, you couldnât make two-threads. A [Brewer] by tha name of Ralph Harwood decided to solve the problem, and created a new beer that tasted just like two-threads. He named it after the men heâd invented it for - the stout porters. It never really took off, but I know how to make it!â I passed my ingredients list over to Kirk and he began to read it over.
This was of course, not entirely true. First of all, it was actually three different types of beer, and it was called three-threads. Also, beer scholars in the modern era have mostly debunked the âRalph Harwoodâ story, which actually originated from a guidebook written in 1802. A man by the name of John Feltham wrote the story, which he called The Porter Brewery, and published in The Picture of London. Ralph Harwood was a brewer in 1720, and three-threads did exist, but he probably didnât invent stout porters. They were just another product of hypercompetitive 1700s London.
Either way, we can thank London for giving us what would one day be Guinness, but tell that to an Irishman and theyâd stuff a potato so far up your arse youâd be tasting French fries for weeks.
As for the difference between the twoâ¦. The only thing all brewers could agree on is that stouts were usually darker and thicker, with stronger overtones and a burnt aftertaste. Porters were just a bit smoother and could be more easily given subtle flavours and sweet adjuncts. Technique wise, porters usually used dark malts, while stouts used pale malts with some roasted malts mixed in. But only usually; there was no consensus.â
Kirk shook his head. âIâm afraid I canât make heads or tails of these ingredients, Pete. Iâm not a brewer..â
âThatâs fine. All ya really need to know is that I can make it with our regular ingredients, I just need an oven and some chemistry equipment. Calcium carbonate, mostly, though Iâm keeping an eye out for different erdroots.â
Bran stuck his head out the transom and shouted, âIâll not be givin' you my oven for beer experimenting! Get yer own! Not after - â
âWe donât talk about pruno! I just need the kiln and some chemistry equipment.â I self-corrected. âThat and some coffee. See, stouts are one of the beers best suited for coffee as an adjunct. Iâm going to blow the gnomes of Minnova away with a coffee stout!â
âI canât wait to try it!â Kirk beamed. âI love both of those things!â
Bran walked out of the kitchen, still grumbling about ovens and explosions and experiments and the noodle incident. He deposited a small plate in front of each of us and crossed his arms.
âWhatâs this?â I asked, poking at it. It looked like⦠a cream puff?
âItâs somethinâ new I made.â Bran huffed, âTry it.â
Well, I wasnât going to turn down anything new from Bran. I sniffed it first. It had a vaguely⦠woodey? smell to it, mixed with the delicious scents of chantilly whipped cream and vanilla. The puff-pastry itself was a standard creampuff style, though it was more akin to a longjohn in length. It looked like a cream-hoagie.
I took a bite, and almost moaned with pleasure. The sweet tang of the cream had an earthy flavour that grounded the vanilla, while the puff-pastry was just spongy enough to not detract from the cream.
âItâs delicious!â I proclaimed, not bothering to wipe the cream from my beard before taking another bite.
âI agree!â Kirk said. âMmmmm! Howâd you get that weird flavour?â
âItâs that stick Balin brought in. I tried some of the stuff you didnât want, Pete, after I checked them fer poison of course. I boiled the inner and outer bark to make a decoction and tried âem both. This is the inner bark, how is it?â
âItâs great! It was⦠an elm, right? I never knew it tasted this good! Honestly, I think this is the most unique dessert youâve made yet!â
Branâs smile grew to encompass his entire face. âIâm glad to hear it, since Iâll be entering it in the Octamillenial baking contest tomorrow!â
Kirk nodded. âI think you can win it with this!â
I stared between him and Bran, mouth open and cream spilling out.
Bran snorted at my expression. âPsh, you didnât know, did you. Youâre so caught up in this beer business that you forget the rest of us have lives outside of tha Goat. It looks like the first champion in the Thirsty Goat family isnât going to be you, Pete.â
He grinned and jerked a thumb up at his face. âItâs goin' to be me, Bran Hurler.â