Rachel Laudan

Agua Fresca 7. Barley Water

This, my friends, is a nice glass of barley water: milky in color, so mild in flavor as to be almost tasteless, a little body on the tongue, and one of the most ancient foods you are ever likely to run in to.

It’s the point where archaic drinks find common ground with the aguas frescas.

Long, long ago before Europeans ate raised wheat bread or the Chinese ate rice, barley was the world’s prestige grain. Barley bread was what Gilgamesh ate in ancient Mesopotamia, what Plato and Aristotle ate in Greece, and it was the bread of the Bible. Boiled barley would have been familiar to Confucius and to the unknown authors of the Vedas. The further back you go in history, the more important barley was.

Round about the beginning of our era, though, it began its long fall from grace. Now it is perhaps best known as an ingredient in beer, though much beer is now made from other grains.

If you poke about in many societies, though, barley still has a shadowy existence as a drink.

A special treat in England when I was a child was lemon barley water, not home made but diluted from a bottle sold by Robinson’s, the company that makes jams and jellies.

They also made “patent barley” so that mothers–following a tradition that went back at least to the Roman leader of the Senate, Cato in his book on Agriculture–could quickly put together barley water for a fussing baby, a sick child, an ailing grandmother, or for the whole family as something to cool them on a hot day.

Patent barley is still available but like so many such foods, it’s largest market appears to be in former colonies such as the Caribbean.

But this is to get ahead of the drink.

To make barley water from scratch, you take some pearl barley, that is barley with the tight little hull polished off. Here’s some, labeled cebada perla, that is, pearl barley in Spanish.

To make about 2 cups of barley water, add a third of a cup of barley to 2 cups of water and boil until the barley is soft, probably about half an hour at sea level.

Pour off the liquid and there is your barley water. (The barley that is left is perfect for barley and mushroom soup or beef barley soup).

In fact, barley water is usually brightened up with some kind of citrus. Make a lemonade or a limonada as you normally would, substituting   barley water for plain water. It is a delightful drink even if not quite the cure-all that it was long believed to be.

And it is the progenitor of a whole family of barley and barley-like drinks that will be coming soon to this screen.

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26 thoughts on “Agua Fresca 7. Barley Water

  1. Alex

    First of all thank you immensely for your website. You unite my two most fervent passions of Mexican cuisine and history.

    The only agua de cebada I have came across here in San Diego is more horchata-like than clearer tea based. I think they use some sort of creamer to round out the flavors. Is this true in Mexico?

  2. Mariana Kavroulaki

    Hi Rachel,
    Ancient Greek doctors had noticed the medicinal and cooling properties of barley. Ptisane, that’s the Greek name of barley water of gruel (depending on the ratio of barley to water), was used as an effective weapon against fever. Hippoctates himself was very advocate of barley water. Ptisane was also an easily prepared food for soldiers and a substitute for kid’s milk. However modern research blames it for the frequent references to kidney stones in children in the Hippocratic texts. Seasonings for ptisane included pig’s trotters or olive oil, salt, vinegar, leeks and dill or wine and honey etc.
    Thank you so much for your wonderful posts.

  3. Rachel Laudan

    Rajagopal, Why barley changed from a favored food to one that was barely tolerated is an interesting question and like many of the big changes in food history is only just beginning to be recognized, let alone investigated. It’s a mixture, I think, of changes in ways of grinding, the invention of new varieties of wheat with different properties, the invention of new kinds of wheat food such as Chinese bing, Indian flat breads (I’d guess though we have no dates on these), and raised wheat bread, plus the shift of the Han Chinese population toward the south and the northern Indian population toward the east, both better suited for rice.

    Alex, any one who is fascinated by Mexico and by history has to be a friend of mine. In one sense barley water, agua de cebada, is horchata. In another sense, the two have grown miles apart. All part of the big family tree that we’ll be gradually tracing out.

  4. Rajagopal Sukumar

    Thanks Rachel. It is a complex topic indeed. I think it will have something to do with yields as well – amount of wheat that can be produced from a hectare as well as the versaitility of the grain itself – wheat and rice score big in this area.

  5. Adam Balic

    There is common theory that small beer/ale saved lives when given to children in the UK due to the lessened likelihood of getting a water borne pathogen. If this is true, I wonder if barley water would actually be more risky in these conditions?

    Mind you not all Barley Waters were free of alcohol. Here is an 18th century English version.

    To make Barley Water.

    Boil a quarter of a pound of pearl barley in two quarts of water, skim it well, boil it half away, and then strain it. Sweeten it, but not too much, and put to it two spoonfuls of white wine. It must be drank a little warm.

  6. Rachel Laudan

    Oh my goodness Mariana, I can’t imagine relying on barley water as an antidote to anthrax. You can’t stand a chance. And Rajagopal, wheat may be a good producer compared to non-grains but when the change from barley took place it was not a particularly good producer compared to other grains. In fact it was lousy producing only about 3 or 4 grains for each grain sown. Adam, that’s an interesting recipe for barley water. It would certainly make it more interesting! Dried raisins, figs and liquorice were other flavorings. As to health, it could be that small beer actually had more nutrients too and may even have been easier to digest. My stepdaughter as a tiny girl gurgled away on beer all across the Atlantic on one rough crossing. She could not keep anything else down and that was the doctor’s advice.

  7. Adam Balic

    In Edinburgh at the old imfirmary they handed out low (2%) alcohol “Sweetheart” stout to new mothers. At the new hospital this has stopped, but the nurses and staff encouraged its use. The milk stouts contain lactose and are high in calories and tastes better then NHS food.

  8. Bob Mrotek

    The best barley water of all is called barley wine (hic). It originated in England but is now found in other countries. It is a very strong ale with a fruity taste and an alcoholic content of six to nine percent. In Mexico some people still make something similar from malted corn rather than barley and they call it tesgüino (tez-GWEE-noh). Cheers!

  9. Kay Curtis

    Alex’ post got me thinking about horchata, too. Most people I know think of horchata as a rice drink with cinnamon but when I travel in Spain I get something tasting quite different and inquiry made it sound as though it was made from something like peanuts. A little googling brings the drink up as being based on chufa in Spain or rice, or ground almonds, or herbs&milk or other things and I’m having trouble figuring out, with so many bases, what is the commonality that makes any of these “horchata” and not something else.

  10. Rachel Laudan

    Adam, As a new mother I’m sure I would have loved a little Sweetheart stout. About what you need after labor, surely.

    Bob, your comment about barley wine sent me off to one of my most cherished books, the National Federation of Women’s Institutes Home Made Wines, Syrups and Cordials (1954). Their comment is that barley wine, like most of the other British cereal and fruit wines, actually depend on sugar for the fermentation and the barley is there for flavoring. There’s an interesting story here, I think, about British attempts, once sugar became relatively cheap in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, to foster home-made non-grape wine making.

    Kay, horchata is hugely complex and fosters strong emotions. Not as strong as the origins of pasta, but strong all the same. The common thread is barley and milkiness and I’m about to embark on it. And you are absolutely right about chufa nuts in Spain.

  11. Arturo Gomez Rubio

    Great thread!

    I grew up in Northwest Mexico, in the coastal city of Mazatlan and Agua de Cebada is a favorite in the summer as the most refreshing beverage for hot days. It is sold by street vendors, very cold with a color almost resembling hot chocolate. It is sweetened and spiced with cinammon, maybe a bit of lemon to liven the flavor.

  12. Harold Kulungian

    Ptisane is a Greek word and it is discussed in much careful detail just how to prepare it as a medicine for healing acute diseases that involve fever, in the Hippocratic treatise entitled REGIMEN IN ACUTE DISEASES. An exciting medical breakthrough would be for the medical profession to rediscover PTISANE (translated variously as “barley gruel” or “slops” in the LOEB ed. of HIPPOCRATES, VOL. II, 1923, by WHS Jones). The recovering patient gradually gets a thicker porridge that includes the whole barley.

    I would encourage Rachel to look into classical Hippocratic medicine, which was mainstream medicine for well over 2,000 years. Lines 11-12 of the HIPPOCRATIC OATH, which every new MD takes upon graduation from medical school, states: “I will apply dietetic measures to the best of my ability and judgment; I will keep them from harm and unjustice.”
    The Greek word DIAITE means not only diet in the narrow sense, but the whole way of life; and is thus sometimes translated as “mode of life” or “regimen” in the Hippocratic medical writings. The point is: Hippocratic medicine is dietary and lifestyle holistic medicine, over 2,000 years before the holistic concept was first coined by Jan Christian Smutts, HOLISM AND EVOLUTION (1926).
    And yet today’s mainstream “biomedicine”, based on drugs and surgery, rejects holistic medicine–based on diet and lifestyle corrections–as unproven quackery.

  13. MB

    Hi rachel,

    Last night I went over to deliver a bag of powdered cebada to my friend.
    I grew up drinking agua de cebada in a village of Sinaloa. A few years ago, my wife started making me the drink and now have it everyday. I noticed that since I started drinking it so frequently, my level of cholesterols went down by 40 points within a few months.(Not that i was trying, it just became a side benefit.)

  14. Sandra Christensen

    Came to this sight to find out how to make barley water in hopes of incorporating it into my candy toy recipe. They used to be called barley pops, but for the most part, no one uses barley anymore. I own lots of molds and hope to use some pearl barley to make the water part of the recipe and see how it effects the taste of the sweet. Thanks for the suggestions.

  15. Catalina6

    @Rachel Laudan re: Arturo Gomez Rubio post on dark Horchata–
    A bit of synchronicity here. Saw something today that described Cebada made by a woman in Ensenada. (She’s from Guerrero originally). Her Cebada was made from ground toasted barley. I haven’t yet tried this, but think this might account for a dark Horchata, with darkness increasing the toastier the barley.
    Before store bought refresher beverages American farm wives used to take buckets of barley water to the men in the field as a cooling refreshment during hot weather. Has always sounded like an early form of Gatorade or Pedialyte to me– both a hydrater & electrolyte replacement.

    re: Horchata made in Spain from Chufa — saw something on a company in Spain that makes it (I think in Valencia). They said the “tiger nut” was brought to Spain by the Arabs in the 900s, I believe. It made me wonder if the first health food milk replacement I learned of as a kid – “Tiger Milk” – might have been inspired by this Spanish form of Horchata. Here’s a recipe I found: http://tinyurl.com/Horchata-De-Chufas. Enjoyed the discussion.

  16. Thomas

    I’m in a Salvadoran restaurant in Austin and asked what aguas Treadway they had – I didn’t know any of the words she said, but decided to try ‘cebada’. I found this article trying to figure out what it is. But the delicious concoction I’m drinking is fuchsia is color, and tastes of herbs/spices (maybe cinnamon?). My poor Spanish isn’t up to inquiring further about what’s in here. Any ideas?

    1. Rachel Laudan Post author

      Agua de jamaica, Thomas. One of the commonest and one of the most delicious of the agua frescas. I’d love to taste the Salvadoran version.

  17. Antonio Flores

    Hello ppl. About a year ago i was given this dark agua frescas while I was in Chula Vista, Ca. I did not want to taste it because in general I dont really drink any aguas frescas other than the norm to me, pina, fresa, or sandia. But my friend insisted so with caution i drank this dark agua fresca. To my suprise, it was great! My friend told me it was cebada and that it was not only good of taste but it was healthy to drink. This cebada comes in powdered form mixed with cinammon and vanilla. I have included the companys website so you can see the cebada for yourself. I also use it for my shakes and avena which gives it an added great tasted.

    1. Rachel Laudan Post author

      Thank you Antonio. Sorry for the very long delay thanks to a complex move from Mexico. Just nipped over to your website and I definitely want to explore it more.

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