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23-12-2018, 07:45
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Lager has been present in the UK market for longer than you might imagine. The first bottom-fermenting beer was brewed as early as 1835, though it didn’t hang around for long.

When Gabriel Sedlmayr returned to Munich in 1835 after his research trip to the UK, he sent John Muir, an Edinburgh brewer he had befriended, bottom-fermenting yeast. Muir, using instructions from Sedlmayr, brewed Lager in his brewery at 28 North Back of Canongate. . Problems propagating the yeast meant the experiment didn’t last long.

The first commercial imports of Lager arrived in the UK in 1868 . Bottom-fermenting beer, mostly in the form of Vienna Lager or Mïnchener quickly gained a toehold in the British market.

Though available, sales of Lager were tiny compared to indigenous styles, mostly because of the high price. Imported Lager cost around three times as much as a British beer of a comparable strength.

Lager imports increased throughout the late 19th century. I don’t have figures specifically for Lager, but I do know that it was almost all the beer imported to the UK.



British beer imports 1860 - 1914


year
barrels


1860
3,592


1870
5,058


1880
10,742


1890
35,081


1895
44,399


1900
50,875


1905
51,944


1900
50,927


1914
74,205


Source:


Brewers' Almanack 1928, p. 115


Brewers' Almanack 1955, p. 51.




The high price Lager demanded drew the attention of local brewers, who reckoned there was money to be made brewing it in the UK. Several brewers tried brewing Lager in the 1870s, but with little commercial success. It was only in the 1880s that anyone was to have lasting success with UK-brewed Lager.

The brewers to achieve lasting success were those that invested in specialist Lager-brewing plant. For example, Tennant who built a state of the art brewery in 1889 and Wrexham Lager Brewery whose first beer was brewed in 1883 .

There were, however, several spectacular failures in the 1880s and 1890s, which seems to have put off most others from entering the Lager market. When imports were cut off during WW I, interest was revived in brewing Lager in the UK, but, other than a few experimental beers, nothing much came of it until peace returned.

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