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12-06-2013, 08:39
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Now the end is near, and the curtain is about to fall on Danish brewing during WW I. I hope you've enjoyed the series as much as I have. You can never learn too much about WW I.

I've been promising you something about Danish beer styles and here you are. First the sad tale of a discontinued style:


"The brewing of the stronger "Lager beer" was stopped in Feb., 1918, and export trade brought to a complete standstill, and despite the renewed freedom of the seas, freights still prevent more than a partial resumption."
Journal of the Institute of Brewing, Volume 27, Issue 1, January 1921, page 27. What was that lost Lager beer like? According to the table we saw earlier, it had a gravity of 1052º in 1914, while Pilsner was 1044º. Here's a little more description of the style:


"Bottled beers during recent years have been mainly of two types "Pilsener," a pale beer, and "Lager," a darker and rather stronger beer. The Lager is no longer brewed on account of the restrictions on gravity, and alcohol, and with the exception of old stocks which at the time of writing are approaching exhaustion, the only bottled beer in consumption in Denmark is of a gravity of 1038 or less. At the Carlsberg and Tuborg breweries the 1038 beers are of the Pilsener type, sparkling and palatable light beers, but not equal in point of flavour or character to their pre-war prototypes of 11° Balling or 1044º. At the smaller breweries at other places darker beers of the same maximum gravity are brewed. The old top fermentation beers peculiar to the country are being gradually displaced by these finer bottom fermentation beers, and of late the national beverage Schnapps is also being ousted by bottled Pilsener on account of its greatly enhanced price."
Journal of the Institute of Brewing, Volume 27, Issue 1, January 1921, page 27.How dark was "rather darker"? Probably not properly dark, as there was also Munich beer at 1056º. That would have been properly dark. As in most countries where Lager took off early, the first bottom-fermenting brews were in the dark Munich style. When I first visited Copenhagen in the 1980's, both Tuborg and Carlsberg had beers sort of in the Munich style. I suspect this Lager beer was still pale, but a rather more golden shade than the Pilsner.

The author clearly views the 1038º Plisner as inferior to the stronger version. Though the drop in gravity is tiny compared to that in Britain. Mild had its gravity halved between 1914 and 1919. And never got back to its pre-war level. Whitbread's for example, that had been 1055º in 1914, was only 1042º in the 1920's. Whereas in Denmark Pilsner went back to its pre-war strength:




Danish Pilsener in the 1930's


Year
Brewer
Beer
package
Acidity
OG
FG
colour
ABV
App. Atten-uation


1936
Carlsberg
Pilsner
bottled
0.06
1044.8
1011.1

4.38
75.22%


1939
Carlsberg
Pilsenser
bottled
0.04
1044.5
1009.9
9
4.50
77.75%


1934
Tuborg
Pilsenser
bottled
0.06
1044.7
1013.4

4.05
70.02%


1939
Tuborg
Pilsenser
bottled
0.04
1044.6
1011.5
8
4.30
74.22%


Source:


Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/001



Interesting that the smaller breweries made a dark beer at the maximum gravity of 1038º. Was that a sort of Munich Lager? According to the table we saw earlier, proper Munich beer disappeared in 1917.

Unsurprisingly, top-fermenting beers were under pressure from the fancy new, industrially-brewed Lagers. I guess he means low-gravity things like Hvidtøl and Skibsøl. The tradition never totally died out and Refsvindinge still brews a top-fermenting Hvidtøl.It's a shame the author didn't write a little more about these.

I've just noticed something that doesn't tally. The author says that a maximum gravity of 1038º was introduced in 1918, but the table of beer gravities shows Stout at 1055º in 1918 and 1056º in 1919. Bit of a mystery, that one.

The proportion of bottled to draught beer was a big difference between the British and Danish brewing industries.

"Despite all these difficulties, increased prices, and lower gravities, the trade has recently gone ahead until the breweries are entirely unable to cope with the demands. Table II shows the strides made at the Carlsberg Brewery alone, and the increases are paralleled by those at the Tuborg Brewery.

Table II.



Beer Sales (Carlsberg Brewery) in Barrels.



Bottled.
Cask.
Total.


1914-15
250,300
19,200
269,500


1915-16
270,100
19,200
289,800


1916-17
281,300
40,000*
321,300


1917-18
182,000
13,900
195,900


1918-19
254,800
17,600
272,400


1919-20
406,400
21,400
427,800


* Including 25,000 hectl. Pilsener at 18 Balling exported to Germany.

It will be noticed that whereas before the war the proportion of bottled beer to cask was as 14 to 1, it is now 20 to 1, a most remarkable development."
Journal of the Institute of Brewing, Volume 27, Issue 1, January 1921, pages 27 - 28.25,000 hl of Pilsner at 18 Balling sent to Germany? A beer of that strength isn't a Pilsner, it's a Doppelbock with an ABV north of 7%. It seems really odd to have exported a beer that strong to Germany in the middle of the war. By that time the stuff brewed in Germany was pretty watery. In 1916, gravities were typically in the range 8-8.5º Balling**.

During the war bottled beer, already wildly popular, strengthened its hold on the market. By the end of the war it accounted for 95% of sales. I'd be failing my duty if I didn't come up with similar figures for a British brewery. And guess what? I have just the numbers:




Whitbread Draught and Bottled sales 1901 – 1919



total draught
Bottling
Burton



Year
barrels
%
barrels
%
barrels
%
Total


1914
418,402
49.38%
427,455
50.45%
1,415
0.17%
847,272


1915
374,682
51.79%
347,489
48.03%
1,253
0.17%
723,424


1916
359,215
48.44%
381,397
51.43%
980
0.13%
741,592


1917
281,549
50.15%
278,976
49.69%
924
0.16%
561,449


1918
246,665
63.10%
143,902
36.81%
367
0.09%
390,934


1919
369,845
69.08%
165,000
30.82%
527
0.10%
535,372


1920
400,605
57.14%
298,873
42.63%
1,660
0.24%
701,138


Source:


Whitbread archive document number LMA/4453/D/02/16


Note:


Year ending July



I'm not sure what the Burton column refers to but, as it concerns tiny amounts of beer, I don't think we need to worry about that.

I'm truly staggered that just over half of Whitbread's sales were in bottled format in 1914. I'd have guessed a much lower percentage. But the fall in the share of bottled during the war is exactly what I'd expect. Bottled beer takes more resources and energy to produce compared to draught beer. Which makes the increase at Carlsberg even more striking.

I did intend to finish my look at Danish wartime brewing here. But there's still some stuff I haven't covered. Looks like there will be one more instalment.



** Bayerisches Brauer-Journal 1919, page 249.

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