"Three hundred five mugs of beer on the rack, three hundred five mugs of beer! Take one down, swirl it around, three hundred four mugs of beer on the rack!"
If dishes were wishes, Iâd own this whole damn brewery.
Pick up the mug, rinse the mug in scalding hot water, look for the soap. n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
Fail to find the soap. Because apparently, DWARVES DONâT USE SOAP!
Put the mug on the drying rack and move to the next mug.
The party had ended sometime around noon the next day. Pong was a big hit, and I was slightly bothered that it didnât count towards my otherworldly beer knowledge quest. At around five in the morning, the last beer from the brewery got hit with my new Milestone every time it came off cooldown.
[Bottomless Barrel]
You can touch a container that contains no more than forty-eight liters of non-magical liquid and grant it a touch of infinity. For the next one minute, any drink you pour out of it does not reduce the liquid level. If the liquid is not poured into an appropriate container or imbibed within the next twenty-four minutes, it disappears.
You can use this ability once per hour.
It was super neat and an absolute joy to use. Iâve had fun with my Milestones and Blessings, and theyâve even saved my life, but this Milestone was the first one I had earned the normal way. And it felt the most me out of everything Iâve received on Erd.
I could touch a bottle of Romanée Conti red wine, pour it out to a dozen people, and never use a drop of wine in the bottle. I imagined my expensive alcohol collection back on Earth, with its forty-year-old whiskeys, rare wines, and specialty craft beers. A skill like this would have allowed me to share those delicacies and still have a full bottle!
It was a shame that opening a bottle was a countdown to destruction for the drink within. Uncorking introduced oxygen to the drink, which allowed for an oxidization reaction to occur. It was the exact same process that created rust, with a similar outcome. The flavour would slowly be destroyed, and in some cases, all that was left after oxidation was pure vinegar. I could use a trick involving a nitrogen filled barrel, but there was no guarantee nitrogen even existed here. Then again, it would be a bit too much of a cheat to open a bottle, use [Bottomless Barrel] and then re-bottle it with no possible downside.
I paused in the middle of placing a mug on the rack. Wait.. could I actually do that re-bottle trick? I popped open my character sheet. As I did, a few âfailed questâ notifications popped up. One was expected, but the next was a surprise.
Championship Road Part 2/2 Failed!
Looks like you hit a speed bump on the road to success.
Requirement: Enter the top 3
Reward: None
Quest: An Ore-Able Time Part 3/10 Failed!
You donât plan on mining ever again. Some dwarf.
Collect: 140.7/400 Tonnes of Ore
Reward: None
Failing Ore-Able time was a surprise. I was used to taking a hundred quests and letting them sit on the backburner; the thought one would simply fail on its own had never occurred to me.
It did make sense. Now that I was officially in the brewery, I wasn't ever going to complete that quest. It was a massive, subconscious, 'abort quest' in my soul. Ore-Able Time had probably been one of Tiaraâs quests? Sorry, yer worship!
Onto my milestones! Let's see if they had what I was looking for.
Status: Provided by the Firmament
Name: Peter Phillips Samson Roughtuff Age: 49
Conditions: Tired
Race: Dwarf
Blessings: [Flesh to Stone], [Flash of Insight], [Strength of All: Held], [Regeneration]
Title: [Alchemist]
Milestones: [Outworlder], [Power Pick], [Ingredient Scan], [Stabilize Mixture], [Basic Slash], [Bottomless Barrel]
Strength 15.2
Vitality 17.3
Agility 11
Dexterity 11
Wisdom 14
Intelligence 12
Perception 15.1
Charisma 12
Yep, there it was. I popped open [Stabilize Mixture] and gave it a read through.
[Stabilize Mixture]
You are able to make an unstable mixture reach perfect equilibrium. It will no longer react violently unless you force it to do so.
You can use this ability once per minute.
Would that allow me to keep a drink from being oxidized? The Milestone seemed to have two parts. The second part was clearly focused on explosives, but the first part specified âallowing an unstable mixture to reach perfect equilibrium.â Oxidization was essentially an instability within the alcohol. If I re-corked a drink, could I use [Stabilize Mixture] to prevent it from going bad? I HAD to check. I may have just discovered the first synergy in my skills! Who doesnât love cool synergies?
Sure, it wasnât big or fancy, or freaking magic, but unlimited expensive alcohol with no downsides!! I almost dropped a mug before I re-focused my attention. Some experimentation could wait; Annie was letting me on the brewery floor as soon as the dishes were done. At least I was better off than poor Balin, who was going to be fixing tables outside till next week.
"Three hundred mugs of beer on the rack, three hundred mugs of beer! Take one down, swirl it around, two hundred ninety nine mugs of beer on the rack!"
â
âAnd, here it is!â Annie swung open the door and let me onto the brew room floor. I had been inside for a brief, incredible moment yesterday, but now I had the time to fully appreciate it. I took a deep sniff and the scent of boiled wort and musty malt assailed my nostrils. I closed my eyes and thought back to my first brewing room.
â
Carolineâs cheerful laugh echoed in the large, mostly empty warehouse. âHa! I can see under my skirt on the floor. Why is it so shiny?â
âCareful! Youâll slip, and I donât want to spend the next eight hours in Emerg!â I glowered in mock disapproval.
*bleh* Caroline stuck her tongue out at me. âIâll be fine, worrywart.â
âI'm not worried about you.â I walked over to pat her burgeoning belly. âIs our little girl kicking yet?â
âMmmm,â Caroline closed her eyes and leaned her head into my shoulder, ânot yet. The doctor says itâll be soon though.â
We stood there for a moment until Caroline pulled away. âYouâre avoiding the question, why does the floor of our brewery look like an ice rink?â
âWell⦠It cost a bit extra, but I got the concrete sealed. With all the spills in a brewery, we want to keep the concrete floor from staining or cracking, so I had them put epoxy over top.â
âWas it expensive?â
âA little, but we need it to be up to code anyway.â
âKeep to the code?â
âArrr, thatâs right, me hearty!â
The two of us shared a hug as we gazed upon the gleaming rows of fermentation tanks in Beavermoose brewery.
â
That damn floor had been way too expensive, but had also been so wonderfully easy to clean. It was the first thing that came to mind as I looked out over the brew room floor here. The dirty, dirty, brew room floor. There was mud caked in places from spilled beer mixed with dirt, and while it certainly wasnât a pigsty, it was nothing like the pristinely clean brewery I remembered. I knew that dwarves werenât that big into hygiene, but this was a bit ridiculous.
The floor was an enormous slab of grimy, off-yellow granite, while the dusty walls were made of a combination of wood and stone. A warm yellow light shone down from several solstones set in the rafters. A large brick fireplace with a chimney up to the ceiling sat beneath a copper-bottom boiling tank at the center of the room. The pungy aroma of coal smoke added to the various earthy scents wafting through the space.
Still, even with the slight patina of dirt and grease on everything, it was the most beautiful thing Iâd seen in this life. Most of the usual brewing equipment was there, alongside rows upon rows of barrels and kegs. A few things were missing, but I could fix that soon enough. Thankfully, all the equipment was clearly well maintained and in top shape.
There were three other dwarves hard at work and they all looked over as we entered. There was the braided viking John, and his pretty-boy son Johnsson, alongside the massive Richter. They were busy levering a large wooden trough from the boiling kettle to one of the many open-topped fermentation tanks. Looks like Iâd guessed right about the open air tanks. Score one for Pete.
Annie cleared her throat for attention, âAhem, we have decided that Pete is going to join us on the brew room floor.â
There was a moment of shocked silence, and then Johnsson gave a hoot and a holler.
âThatâs great! Welcome to the family Pete!â He came over and gave me a pound on the shoulder. He was covered in sweat and grime from a day of hard labour, and he positively exuded 'thank the Gods, someone my age' energy.
âThanks Johnsson, itâs great to finally be a part of this brewhaha!â I gave him a friendly pound back. He looked confused for a moment, though John gave a small snort from where he was locking the trough into place.
Richter came over and shook my hand.
âI sah ya workinâ âard wit tha priss, ya?â
âPriss? Do you mean Penelope? Sheâs not that bad!â
âYer bruddaâs in love witâ tha biggest troublemaker in Minnova. I tink tha Roughtuff clan âas a ting fer punishment.â
âExcuse me!?â Annie protested as the rest of us laughed. Her cheeks grew more and more crimson as the laughter grew until she finally pulled back a fist and swung at Richter. He deftly dodged with the grace of long practice, and her punch connected squarely on the laughing face of Johnsson. He went down with a squawk, and the rest of us laughed harder.
Annie turned to me, her eyes promising murder. âDo you want me to show you around, or should I leave you with these louts? Maybe we could go wash more dishes?â
I stopped laughing and stood to attention. âYes maâam! No maâam!â
âThatâs what I thought. The rest of you, we have two large orders to fulfill within the month, and someone just emptied out all our stock! We need those three batches done by tonight! Pete bought us a few months, donât waste it!â
Johnsson and Richter scrambled back to work, though John took his time. He gave me a wink as he passed. He struck me as the silent and thoughtful type compared to Jeremiah Goldstone's jolly giant.
âAlright Pete, let me show you around. I will remind you that all of this is confidential." Annie's voice carried a tinge of warning. "The methods of beer creation are a secret passed down from generation to generation, and jealously guarded by the traditional brewing families and the Honourable Guild of Brewers.â
âOh, those guys? They seem a bit⦠uhâ¦â
âSet in their ways?â Annie sighed, âDonât I know it. You said you know a bit of brewing?â
âThat would be correct.â And an understatement.
âCan you tell me what everything in here does?â She waved her hand around the room.
âAbsolutely, but is this your tour or mine?â I waggled my eyebrows.
âHumour me. Balin said some stuff that has me curious, but he clams up whenever I push.â
Uh oh. That wasnât good. Communication issues like that could be a problem in a relationship, and I was the direct cause. Well, Annie had let me into the heart of her family, so maybe we could let her into the Roughtuff clanâs.
âLet me talk a bit with Balin.â
âDoes it have something to do with your âamnesiaâ?â I could practically feel the air quotes in her voice and winced a bit. Yeah, that excuse had been wearing thin recently.
âSort of. I promise itâll make sense.â
âFine. Do you want to do the honours?â
âSure.â
We dodged out of the way as Richter walked by carrying a giant bag full of Erdroot. He dumped it into a metal hopper and went to get another sack.
I pointed to the hopper. âThat there is the grist mill, and itâs where you mill the Erdroot into malt.â The hopper dropped into a large grinder, and Johnsson got to work turning a crank nearly as tall as he was.
âThatâs right. We get most of our Erdroot from local farms, but itâs gotten a lot more expensive. The price dropped back down recently, but that may not last for long.â
âDo you take turns on the crank?â
âNo, Johnsson does most of it since heâs the youngest. I think heâs looking forward to giving someone else a chance.â She grinned maliciously.
âUm.â
âWhat about this?â Annie directed me to a pair of large apparatuses. One was the copper-bottom boiling tank and fireplace combo while the other was a large wooden barrel. They were nearly thrice my height and equally as wide. They were empty at the moment, though I could see leftover bits of gunk inside. A ramp led up to sturdy scaffolding constructed around the two barrels, and a complex series of pipes ran back and forth between them. John was busy shoveling coal into the fireplace.
âEasy enough. You put all the milled malt into that wooden barrel, which is the mash tun. Next, you boil water in the copper brew kettle beside it. Then you pipe the hot water into the mash tun to make your wort.â
âYes, thatâs all correct.â Annieâs eyes narrowed. âAnd all classified. I need you to have that conversation with Balin about your amnesia sooner rather than later.â
âI will, I promise.â I pointed to an enormous wooden spoon up on the scaffold. âWho stirs the mash?â
âRichter mostly. Heâs tall enough and strong enough for it. My dad used to do it before, and then Richterâs father.â
âWhat happened to Richterâs father?â
âYouâll need to ask him.â Annie said coolly. Oops, some kind of history there. I pointed back at the copper tank.
âNext, you pump the wort back into the brew kettle, where you boil it for a few hours. During this phase you add some flavours and bittering agents.â
âCorrect again. Do you happen to know what we use?â She asked sweetly, but I could sense the slightly bitter undertones. It was clear that the secret ingredients were a touch more sensitive than everything else.
âNo idea.â I shrugged. I left the 'they suck though', unsaid.
She sighed in relief. âWell, thatâs something at least. Dad buys the ingredients and puts them into sacks.â She pointed to a series of brown burlap bags lying against the scaffolding. âYouâll just dump it into the boil, so donât worry about it.â
âAww, not even a clue?â
âNo, we need to keep some things secret.â
âFiiiine.â I whined, petulantly. âAfter you boil the wort, it gets filtered through the hopback and chilled before it goes into one of the fermentation tanks. Or it should, but I donât see any equipment for that. The last step is to add some yeast and wait.â
âWhatâs a hopback?â Annie asked. âYouâre mostly right, but we donât chill the wort, it just gets pumped through those troughs into the fermentation tanks to cool.â
âUgh, thatâs the no-chill method. And no hopback? That explains so much.â
âWhat are you talking about?â Annie asked as her eyes gleamed with curiosity. Thatâs right, Annie was a rebel who believed there could be a better way to make beer. Well, two could play the âmysterious secretsâ game.
âI'll tell you, but you need to do something for me first.â
âWhat?â Annie folded her arms in the universal âIâm about to deny your silly requestâ pose.
âGet me a pair of mops and buckets and Iâll tell you while we work.â
Her arms fell to her side in confusion. âWhy mops and buckets?â
I looked around me and said, âBecause if thereâs anything Iâve learned recently, itâs that all good things in this world start with cleaning up shit.â