PDA

View Full Version : Shut up about Barclay Perkins - Young’s Saxon lager



Blog Tracker
25-02-2024, 07:10
Visit the Shut up about Barclay Perkins site (http://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2024/02/youngs-saxon-lager.html)


https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQPt9DoPLTicuQR96l4JRZsIqYswbrCPOAcbJqcgtTsO xbI4yO-RLoDGqf6sQmI1wzsi4sb5zmXkaq4gJZAWddqPunDV0Gfu90f0z gqu3j69OiPJ0YI6kV6qihFChzwAqQcoNpRjKFV36lyFF6Lcyyu N58knr805tznTd4MerBmq0FAS1E_yJEAqtdGNM/s320/Youngs_Saxon_Lager.jpg (https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQPt9DoPLTicuQR96l4JRZsIqYswbrCPOAcbJqcgtTsO xbI4yO-RLoDGqf6sQmI1wzsi4sb5zmXkaq4gJZAWddqPunDV0Gfu90f0z gqu3j69OiPJ0YI6kV6qihFChzwAqQcoNpRjKFV36lyFF6Lcyyu N58knr805tznTd4MerBmq0FAS1E_yJEAqtdGNM/s1244/Youngs_Saxon_Lager.jpg)
I could have already guessed that Young's Saxon was a pseudo-Lager. That type of regional brewery just didn't have the equipment for things like decoction and cold fermentation. But chairman John Young hit back at those who complained it wasn't a real Lager.

Given his commitment to cask beer, it's rather odd to hear him extolling the qualities of their Lager.Because, I'm pretty sure, behind the scenes he wasn't that keen on it. Regarding it as an evil necessity rather than the future of the brewery. Which time has shown it wasn't.
Young’s start major drive for their Saxon lager
In readiness for (he expected summer lager boom. Young & Co.’s Brewery Ltd. of Wandsworth, are starting a major sales push for their Saxon Lager, which was introduced last year.Previously sold in bottles only, the brew was recently launched in cans and, as equipment is installed, it will also be sold on draught in Young's 136 pubs and through free trade outlets.Mr. Geoffrey Hicks, sales manager of of Foster-Probyn Ltd., Young’s subsidiary, has gathered together a special sales force to concentrate solely on the lager's sales to the free trade. The sales drive will be backed by point-of-sale and poster advertising and poster advertising.Speaking at the launch, Mr. Hicks said: “Our results last year were most impressive, exceeding our most optimistic forecasts for Saxon, and now we are going all-out to take advantage of the swing to lager drinking with what we feel is a very fine product with a distinctive flavour, stemming from the specially-imported hops and Young’s brewing expertise.“And for the trade, as with all Young's beers, we have the advantage of being able to offer extremely competitive prices backed by a first-class delivery service.”Mr. John Young, the company's chairman, had a word to say on the nature of lager itself. He believed that it was not necessarily the bottom fermentation process that made the beer a lager. It was, he claimed. The length of time the drink was stored in cold conditioning tanks after brewing that made a lager what it was. After all, the word lager was derived from the German word for storage. Although Saxon is not brewed by the bottom fermentation process it has a long storage time and this prompted Mr. Young to defend the beer against those who had criticised his right to call Saxon a lager: “Saxon is stored for ten weeks before being ready for sale - a much longer period than most of our rivals store their lager beers.”
Brewers' Guardian, Volume 99, June 1970, page 34.John Young does have a point. There are German beers described as "obergäriges Lagerbier": top-fermenting Lager. It's a term used for beers such as Kölsch and Alt which are top-fermented then lagered at a near-freezing temperature. Which sounds very similar to what was happening with Saxon. I'm sure Mr. Young is correct when he said most rival UK Lagers weren't lagered for ten weeks. Many probably barely had time to rest in the lagering cellar.




More... (http://barclayperkins.blogspot.com/2024/02/youngs-saxon-lager.html)