"Between the days of all malt and the last war rather less sugar was used in brewing than now. Scotch beers were invariably kept, and still are, for a month to mature and condition in cask before leaving the brewery, and English bitters were stored for two or three months or more. Indeed, vatting, and October and March brewing, continued in many English breweries right up to 1914. The larger percentages of sugar now necessary for very quick conditioning were therefore not required in the old days. Between more malt and the higher mashing heats of a stock beer a sounder product was obviously come by. But if you presented a matured beer to the public of to-day it would be condemned as "sharp," which is perhaps as well, since, at the present rate of duty, brewers cannot afford to lock up their capital long enough to trade on matured ales.
It is doubtful if we now use more malt substitutes in the form of grain, if, indeed, as much. Their use, unlike sugar, which confers sweetness and fulness, is often largely a question of economy. One very large brewery, with a most popular article, is said, however, to use no copper sugar at all. All their sugar goes as priming. Theirs is a very pleasant, well-balanced and well-brewed beer, usually found in excellent condition, but with slight dryness of palate. So much for the use of unmalted grains, except that, in fairly large quantities, it confers an astonishingly good condition to beers.
One thing that disturbs the older technical brewers is that the modern craze for speed in nearly everything tends to penetrate brewing. With time-saving mechanism we are expected to do in, say, nine hours, that which really requires eleven hours. Forgotten it is that we are still converting a natural product grown in the soil, barley made into malt, then into another natural product, beer. Except in cooling boiled worts, no justification exists today for hurrying brewing process any more than it existed a hundred years ago. In actual fact, process requires, in many if not most cases, an extension of time now.
Why? Mainly because malts are more drastically cured to brew the unfailingly brilliant beers demanded by modernity. It may safely be said that much modern malt inclines towards distinct over-curing, though not over-colouring, for that reason. The writer has brewed with malts cured for only six or seven hours. Maltsters and brewer-maltsters give it ten, and more, these times, at round about similar curing heats. Now, this must bake the grain more, and render a longer period in the mash tun absolutely necessary for thorough and sound conversion. For many years some beers have shown a tendency to cloud, later a very slight fret, after three or four weeks in cask. Under-curing has often been blamed. The writer has blamed it so, but, at last, thinks it may just as likely be over-curing, resulting, by a period in mash too short, in improperly converted malto-dextrins.
Marked changes have come about in the palate character of beer, as distinct from those due to lower gravity. English light bitter ales are, in most instances, not quite so bitter as pre-1914. The partial absence of that very clean and decided bitter is in cases most marked. On the other hand, some brewers have conferred rather more bitter than the gravity can carry and balance. In both bitters and milds there has been for some years an ever-increasing tendency towards sweetness. Sometimes it is even sickly to the old bitter-drinker. But people generally don't seem to mind, and, on the whole, it is likely the fashion and demand of to-day. There is an idea that the craze for very clear beer is a very modern one. But in Scotland forty years ago the public would have it clear, perhaps because glasses were usually, if not always, used, while pewter and earthenware mugs were still popular in England. Reverting to sweetness, women must have it so — possibly on account of the ancient tag, Sweets for the Sweet — and some men. but for a reason more obscure."
"The Brewers' Journal 1940" pages 55-56.
In case I forgot to mention, the author at least began his career in Scotland. Hence the mention of Scotch beers. It's fascinating to hear that they were still matured a month in cask even in 1940. Only one slight problem: what does he mean by "Scotch beers"? Does he mean Scotch Ale - stuff like Younger's No.3 - or just any beer brewed in Scotland? I'm inclined to think the former, but the sentence is ambiguous.