Dave Line
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dave Line (1942? – 1979) is a British beer author. An electrical engineer by profession, he is regarded as a pioneer in homebrewing during the 1970's because at the time homebrewing as a hobby was in its infancy. At the time of his death he was 37, living in Southampton, was married and had a son.
[edit] Homebrewing
In 1963 it had become free to homebrew in the UK, previously requiring an annual 5 Shilling licence, and had just become legal in the U.S..
People wanted to brew beer that matched the quality of shop-bought beer. In his first book "The Big Book of Brewing", Dave Line allowed people to begin to reach the quality they were looking for, by using ingredients and processes that were used in breweries, with simple homebrewing equipment.
At the time people were not getting satisfactory results, because they were using substandard ingredients, low quality syrups or beer kits, baker's yeast, and were not technically informed in the processes of brewing. He advocated the use of proper brewer's yeast, whole-grain barley malts, whole hops, and even went into simple analysis and comparison of the chemistry of water used for brewing different beers, and rudimentary water treatment. He also encouraged sterilisation and proper cleaning of equipment.
He was a regular contributor to Amateur Winemaker, and in a decade, probably had more recipes published than anyone else.