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Thirsty? Try some refreshing 'space beer'

  • Story Highlights
  • Beer to be made with barley from seeds that spent months aboard space station
  • Brew will come in a pilot edition of 100 bottles to be ready in November
  • Russian space team took the barley for storage from April to September 2006
  • Project studied the adaptability of plants to environmental changes
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TOKYO, Japan (AP) -- Japanese beer-lovers can anticipate an out-of-this-world brew: suds made with barley descended from grains that traveled in outer space.

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An Okayama University graduate student holds the latest crop of "space barley."

The "space beer," to be test-brewed by Sapporo Breweries Ltd., will come in a pilot edition of 100 bottles to be ready in November, company spokeswoman Momoko Matsumura said.

The beer will be made with barley, to be harvested this weekend, descended from seeds that spent five months in 2006 aboard the international space station.

"We're really looking forward to tasting it when it's ready," Matsumura said.

The barley project started when Sapporo teamed up with Okayama University biologists working with the Russian space team.

The team took 0.9 ounce of barley into space for storage inside the space station from April to September 2006.

The project is part of biological studies of the adaptability of plants to environmental changes and the impact from stresses such as space travel.

Sapporo planted 0.14 ounce of the barley grains that returned from space at its research farm northeast of Tokyo in March 2007.

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The seedlings were harvested in November. The company expects to harvest 100 pounds of the third-generation grains Saturday for use in the space beer.

Sapporo isn't planning to sell the special brew, at least for now, and hasn't decided how it will distribute the planned 100 bottles, Matsumura said.

Scientists have not found any difference between space barley and the Earth-confined version, she said.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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