The study published on May 23, uncovered a set of "beer-making tool" kits at Mijiaya, an archaeological site located in China's northwest city of Xi'an.
The kits include funnels, pots and specialised jugs. The excavated kits date back to around 3400 to 2900 BC and are thought to be the oldest beer brewing facility discovered so far in China, state-run China.Org reported.
The shapes and styles of the vessels suggest they were used in three distinctive stages in the beer-making process: brewing, filtration and storage.
Wang Jiajing, one of the report's researchers believed the beer produced by the excavated 5000-year-old beer-making kits is not exactly the same as modern beer.
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She said today's beer is mainly brewed from barley or wheat, but the beer made 5000 years ago is a mixture of millet, barley and a few tubers from plant roots.
In term of the taste of the beer, Wang said it is hard to speculate on the specific taste as we can not ascertain the beer's sugar contents.
But she said based on the current discovery, the taste of the beer might be a little sour and sweet.
A researcher at an archaeology institute in Shaanxi province Xing Fulai said the find could advance the history of barley in China at least 1000 years.
Beer is one of the oldest beverages humans have produced, it dates back to at least the fifth millennium BC and is recorded in the written history of ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia.
As any cereal containing certain sugars can undergo spontaneous fermentation due to wild yeast in the air, it is possible that beer-like beverages were independently developed throughout the world soon after a tribe or culture had domesticated cereals.