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01-05-2014, 07:19
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We've now got to Brown Ale in our leisurely wander through Hoare's beers of the interwar years.
Had the brewery closed a couple of decades earlier, they would probably never have brewed a Brown Ale. There's the odd example from before WW I, but it was only in the 1920's that it became a mainstream style and every brewery produced one.
In the early days in particular, Brown Ales were a diverse bunch. It's only after WW II that they mostly became tweaked versions of Dark Mild. Beers like Whitbread Double Brown had no connection at all with Mild. It was brewed single-gyle with a grist unlike any of their other beers. At over 5% ABV, it was also stronger than any interwar Mild. Apart from in the Northeast of England, stronger Brown Ales had pretty much disappeared by 1960.
That's one of the reasons I was so keen to get Pretty Things to brew Double Brown. It looked an interesting beer, unlike any contemporary beer, and I wanted to try it. I wasn't far wrong. It was a lovely beer, especially in cask format.
The first two examples in the table below look like this stronger type of Brown Ale. They certainly have too high an OG to be a slightly modified Mild.
The gravity, unsurprisingly, plummets after 1931 (Snowden's emergency Budget, remember) and by 1933 it looks very much like the classic post-war Brown Ale: a gravity in the low 1030's and an ABV of around 3%.
I'm slightly confused by the draught Brown Ale. For starters, the style was usually exclusively in bottled format. Second, what makes it different from Dark Mild? It has about the same gravity as Hoare's X Ale. Was is really a different beer? As all their brewing records are gone, we will probably never know.
Hoare Brown Ale 1927 - 1933
Year
Beer
Price
size
package
Acidity
FG
OG
ABV
App. Atten-uation
1927
Brown Ale
7d
half
bottled
1050.6
1929
Brown Ale
8d
pint
bottled
1012.8
1046
4.31
72.17%
1930
Nut Brown Ale
7d
pint
bottled
1011.2
1036
3.21
68.89%
1931
Nut Brown Ale
pint
bottled
1033
1931
Nut Brown Ale
9d
pint
bottled
1010.4
1030
2.53
65.33%
1931
Toby Brown Ale
9d
pint
bottled
1009.8
1034.9
3.25
71.92%
1931
Brown Ale
8d
pint
draught
0.07
1007.9
1037.6
3.86
78.99%
1932
Brown Ale
9d
pint
bottled
0.05
1010.8
1034
3.00
68.24%
1933
Golden Brown Ale
8d
pint
bottled
0.05
1007.2
1030
2.96
76.00%
1933
Nut Brown Ale
8d
pint
bottled
0.05
1009.4
1032
2.93
70.63%
Sources:
Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/001
Truman Gravity Book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number B/THB/C/252
Next time we'll look at X Ale, that staple of the public bar. And a beer these Brown Ales were probably often mixed with.
More... (http://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2014/05/hoare-brown-ale-1927-1933.html)
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-0fwjV0vlM_g/U1ZOazFVFiI/AAAAAAAATcQ/LVeVEEZ3tyA/s1600/Hoare_Fine_Toby_Ale.jpg (http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-0fwjV0vlM_g/U1ZOazFVFiI/AAAAAAAATcQ/LVeVEEZ3tyA/s1600/Hoare_Fine_Toby_Ale.jpg)
We've now got to Brown Ale in our leisurely wander through Hoare's beers of the interwar years.
Had the brewery closed a couple of decades earlier, they would probably never have brewed a Brown Ale. There's the odd example from before WW I, but it was only in the 1920's that it became a mainstream style and every brewery produced one.
In the early days in particular, Brown Ales were a diverse bunch. It's only after WW II that they mostly became tweaked versions of Dark Mild. Beers like Whitbread Double Brown had no connection at all with Mild. It was brewed single-gyle with a grist unlike any of their other beers. At over 5% ABV, it was also stronger than any interwar Mild. Apart from in the Northeast of England, stronger Brown Ales had pretty much disappeared by 1960.
That's one of the reasons I was so keen to get Pretty Things to brew Double Brown. It looked an interesting beer, unlike any contemporary beer, and I wanted to try it. I wasn't far wrong. It was a lovely beer, especially in cask format.
The first two examples in the table below look like this stronger type of Brown Ale. They certainly have too high an OG to be a slightly modified Mild.
The gravity, unsurprisingly, plummets after 1931 (Snowden's emergency Budget, remember) and by 1933 it looks very much like the classic post-war Brown Ale: a gravity in the low 1030's and an ABV of around 3%.
I'm slightly confused by the draught Brown Ale. For starters, the style was usually exclusively in bottled format. Second, what makes it different from Dark Mild? It has about the same gravity as Hoare's X Ale. Was is really a different beer? As all their brewing records are gone, we will probably never know.
Hoare Brown Ale 1927 - 1933
Year
Beer
Price
size
package
Acidity
FG
OG
ABV
App. Atten-uation
1927
Brown Ale
7d
half
bottled
1050.6
1929
Brown Ale
8d
pint
bottled
1012.8
1046
4.31
72.17%
1930
Nut Brown Ale
7d
pint
bottled
1011.2
1036
3.21
68.89%
1931
Nut Brown Ale
pint
bottled
1033
1931
Nut Brown Ale
9d
pint
bottled
1010.4
1030
2.53
65.33%
1931
Toby Brown Ale
9d
pint
bottled
1009.8
1034.9
3.25
71.92%
1931
Brown Ale
8d
pint
draught
0.07
1007.9
1037.6
3.86
78.99%
1932
Brown Ale
9d
pint
bottled
0.05
1010.8
1034
3.00
68.24%
1933
Golden Brown Ale
8d
pint
bottled
0.05
1007.2
1030
2.96
76.00%
1933
Nut Brown Ale
8d
pint
bottled
0.05
1009.4
1032
2.93
70.63%
Sources:
Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/001
Truman Gravity Book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number B/THB/C/252
Next time we'll look at X Ale, that staple of the public bar. And a beer these Brown Ales were probably often mixed with.
More... (http://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2014/05/hoare-brown-ale-1927-1933.html)