PDA

View Full Version : Shut up about Barclay Perkins - Other Bass bottled beers after WW II



Blog Tracker
29-11-2018, 08:23
Visit the Shut up about Barclay Perkins site (http://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2018/11/other-bass-bottled-beers-after-ww-ii.html)


https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-8DMZTDJqsTM/W_1ZSTzOpuI/AAAAAAAAfo8/_fDNRNkh3Tsi-MNdnZPSXTaTJczWCfvaQCLcBGAs/s400/Bass_Imperial_Stout_P2.jpg (https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-8DMZTDJqsTM/W_1ZSTzOpuI/AAAAAAAAfo8/_fDNRNkh3Tsi-MNdnZPSXTaTJczWCfvaQCLcBGAs/s1600/Bass_Imperial_Stout_P2.jpg)
Someone asked yesterday about Bass beers other than their IPA. Did I know what they were like? Well, what do you think? My master table of beer analyses has 22,817 entries in it. Of course I've got other Bass beers.

Though they were best known for their iconic Pale Ale, Bass brewed a full set of other beers.They had to, seeing as they were supplying their own tied houses. Which would have needed a full range of draught and bottled styles.

Some of their bottled beers had been around almost as long as their Pale Ale. No. 1 Barley Wine, for example, which goes back to at least the 1860s and probably a decade or two further. It was a Burton Ale in the old style, so may even pre-date the Pale Ale.

Bass No. 1 was one of that rare breed of beers which, even after two world wars, still retained its 19th-century strength. Though you paid a price for that high gravity: 5 shillings or more for a pint. Not that anyone really drank it by the pint. Like all very strong beers of the period, it usually came in nip (third of a pint) bottles.

Imperial Stout, also known as P2, was another long-lived product. Though probably not quite as old as No. 1. It wasn't as lucky on the gravity front, having fallen from 1093º in the 1930s. Though there were few Stouts with gravities pushing 1080º in the 1950s and 1960s.

The Brown Ale will be of a much more recent date. I would guess late 1920s, but I have no data to back that up. My first analysis for it is the one from 1955 in the table. Based on the OG, it's clearly meant to compete with beers like Newcastle Brown Ale, rather than the weaker Manns style.

Finally Gold Triangle. Which looks like an intended competitor of Gold Label, given its nbame and very pale colour. Though it is quite a bit weaker.



Other Bass bottled beers after WW II


Year
Beer
Style
Price per pint
OG
FG
ABV
App. Atten-uation
colour


1955
Burton Amber Ale
Amber Ale
22
1036.4
1008
3.69
78.02%
20


1952
Barley Wine
Barley Wine
64.5
1104.1
1035.6
8.93
65.80%
80


1953
Barley Wine
Barley Wine
60
1104.6
1036.3
8.90
65.30%
80


1958
No. 1 Barley Wine
Barley Wine
63
1106.8
1039.8
8.71
62.73%
100


1955
Brown Ale
Brown Ale
24
1054.7
1015.6
5.07
71.48%
85


1959
Brown Ale
Brown Ale
36
1052.9
1015.6
4.84
70.51%
105


1952
H & O Pale Ale
Pale Ale

1036.7
1007
3.86
80.93%
20


1948
Export Stout
Stout

1065
1018
6.11
72.31%



1953
Imperial Stout
Stout
45
1078.2
1025.1
6.90
67.90%
375


1955
Imperial Stout
Stout

1078.8
1018.4
7.90
76.65%
375


1956
Imperial Stout
Stout
54
1077.5
1027.9
6.43
64.00%
350


1966
Imperial Stout
Stout
63
1077.2
1027.7
6.41
64.12%
312


1963
Gold Triangle
Strong Ale
72
1063.6
1013
6.61
79.56%
19


Sources:


Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/002.




More... (http://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2018/11/other-bass-bottled-beers-after-ww-ii.html)