It's a funny period. British beer strengths were just starting to recover from their postwar nadir. But most beers were still pretty week. Whitbread Best Ale (Mild) was only 1032º, IPA 1035º and PA 1040º. Not particularly impressive. Apart from the odd strong beer that was made in tiny quantities, there was almost nothing stronger and 1050º. Which is why this is an unusual beer.
Whitbread had been in the export business for a long while. Like most other large London brewers they took advantage of the port and Britain's imperial muscle to ship beer all around the world. For the export trade, already weakened at the end of the 19th century by the growth of Lager, the glory days ended with WW I. Most foreign markets had been closed or dried up. Sales in the empire had been badly hit as colonies built their own brewing industries.
Where was left? Belgium.
Let's take a look in detail at British exports:
British Beer Exports 1946 – 1953 | ||||||||
1946 | 1947 | 1948 | 1949 | 1950 | 1951 | 1952 | 1953 | |
Channel Isands | 5,342 | 7,021 | 9,958 | 9,693 | 6,505 | 2,721 | 8,959 | 9,815 |
Gibraltar | 5,698 | 7,077 | 6,958 | 7,609 | 8,530 | 8,693 | 8,183 | 8,325 |
Malta | 414 | 521 | 673 | 897 | 336 | 624 | 445 | 484 |
Cyprus | 2,593 | 2,312 | 2,112 | 2,538 | 4,002 | 2,712 | 2,099 | |
British West Africa | 1,574 | 5,797 | 18,044 | 34,626 | 33,811 | 35,593 | 50,636 | 58,049 |
British East Africa | 1,361 | 2,624 | 7,316 | 13,391 | 4,014 | 4,341 | 1,900 | 1,511 |
Aden | 50 | 1,284 | 2,327 | 4,200 | 2,684 | 2,006 | 2,897 | 5,927 |
Bahrein, Koweit, etc | 594 | 5,141 | 7,813 | 4,099 | 4,039 | 5,073 | 4,756 | |
India and Pakistan | 69,278 | 8,130 | 17,075 | 18,076 | 15,333 | 11,890 | 9,451 | 5,617 |
British Malaya | 26,270 | 6,377 | 10,463 | 12,258 | 11,666 | 14,412 | 6,028 | 5,447 |
Ceylon | 2,648 | 7,686 | 3,565 | 6,669 | 6,363 | 5,605 | 5,656 | 8,624 |
Hong Kong | 10,062 | 5,873 | 5,679 | 12,863 | 9,508 | 12,027 | 7,254 | 4,811 |
Australia | 54 | 8,481 | 18,761 | 16,879 | 35,790 | 8,303 | 57 | |
Canada | 313 | 1,598 | 1,281 | 2,090 | 3,352 | 3,680 | 3,892 | |
Bermuda | 22 | 788 | 977 | 1,603 | 2,843 | 1,901 | 1,466 | 948 |
British West India Islands | 251 | 1,045 | 15,087 | 14,009 | 15,459 | 15,213 | 16,112 | 17,123 |
Bbritish Guiana | 38 | 175 | 1,991 | 2,752 | 3,871 | 3,247 | 6,056 | 6,594 |
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan | 1,843 | 3,069 | 5,747 | 5,291 | 6,805 | 6,277 | 3,035 | |
Irish Republic | 221 | 3,280 | 11,327 | 6,201 | 4,225 | 5,223 | 4,966 | 4,674 |
Other British Countries | 74 | 972 | 6,470 | 6,719 | 7,153 | 8,927 | 10,260 | 6,570 |
total | 123,303 | 64,047 | 138,511 | 187,280 | 163,198 | 186,411 | 166,314 | 158,358 |
Norway | 595 | 1 | 17 | 79 | ||||
Iceland | 11 | 7 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 10 | 20 | |
Faroe Islands | 12 | 6 | ||||||
Germany | 543 | 1,196 | 3,275 | 3,140 | 3,144 | 5,349 | 3,995 | 3,618 |
Belgium | 1,405 | 3,414 | 34,288 | 33,786 | 33,362 | 45,733 | 50,237 | 55,240 |
France | 756 | 193 | 294 | 611 | 645 | 817 | 882 | 852 |
Italy | 2,564 | 121 | 71 | 17 | 44 | 28 | 21 | 92 |
Greece | 2,954 | 1,917 | 137 | 196 | 24 | |||
Algeria | 18 | 5 | 6 | |||||
Libya | 14 | 190 | 3,381 | 6,576 | 4,571 | 4,150 | 3,040 | 1,634 |
Transjordan | 95 | 675 | 821 | 155 | 362 | 227 | 66 | |
Palestine | 1,299 | 8,684 | 3,045 | |||||
Egypt | 12,536 | 12,709 | 7,587 | 6,999 | 4,782 | 11,001 | 29,288 | 51,981 |
Iraq | 1,760 | 7,792 | 5,621 | 4,936 | 2,503 | 3,763 | 2,516 | 3,619 |
Iran | 1,898 | 1,700 | 1,996 | 1,971 | 553 | 259 | 89 | |
Burma | 40,439 | 5,695 | 31 | 147 | 636 | 1,018 | 1,800 | 1,173 |
USA | 270 | 2,986 | 1,921 | 1,563 | 967 | 1,373 | 1,328 | |
Other Foreign Countries | 283 | 620 | 3,306 | 3,999 | 5,916 | 15,378 | 7,552 | 6,873 |
total | 64,115 | 45,633 | 66,587 | 66,847 | 58,012 | 89,022 | 101,076 | 126,581 |
Grand total | 187,418 | 109,680 | 205,098 | 254,127 | 221,210 | 275,433 | 267,390 | 284,939 |
Source: | ||||||||
“1955 Brewers' Almanack”, pages 58-59. |
As you can see, in 1950 Belgium was the second biggest recipient of British exports, second only by a few barrels to British West Africa. Belgium received more than 50% of exports to non-British countries and 15% of all exports.
Whitbread Pale Ale is still sold in Belgium. No idea where it's brewed.
That's me done. Over to Kristen . . . . . . .
Kristen’s Version
A very straightforward beer here that doesn’t require a whole lot of explanation. This one does very well on cask as it can get a bit ‘tinny’ on draught. Ingredients
Grist–Three different English pale malts. Really your choice here. All are indicated as ‘second’ grade so its really your preference here. I used Maris Otter, Golden Promise and some Halcyon split evenly. For the sugar I used straight No1 invert. Very simple to make and use in this beer. The tiny bit of caramel does add a hint of caramelly goodness but very little of anything else. A very simple recipe so make your decisions based on your preference. I think the %sugar to malt is what I’d focus on more than what type of malt. See how this much sugar plays in this beer. You can split your batch and add your sugar directly to your fermenter if you’d like. Just be sure to calculate your hopping BU if you do this as the lower gravity will extract more bitterness.
Hops–They call for Worcester Goldings which I used b/c I had them and don’t get to use them very often.
Wonderful little hops that I wish I got more often. Stick with something Goldings or go experimenting at your leisure just make sure they are lower alpha hops.
Yeast – The dry or the wet Whitbread works very nicely here. I’m not a big fan but it plays very nice with the sugar in the beer.
In the 1970's, I recall Whitbread's bottled pale ale as we got it in Canada tasting much like the taste notes, except not as strong (can't recall exact strength, maybe 5%). That chewy malt quality - I remember it like yesterday - really!
ReplyDeleteGary
A lets brew Wednesday on Wednesday,i feel dirty
ReplyDeleteLooks like a lover recipe though, one to keep in mind for future brews
I like how Norway and Iceland each received one barrel of beer in certain years. One barrel! I wonder what those single barrels were, or for whom?
ReplyDeleteI particularly liked this one as it was something that a lot of people have had. At least a similar version of it. I've had the current version and it really isn't horribly far off from this beer. Really gives people an idea of what a high percent of sugar does to a beer like this.
ReplyDeleteAlso, if you want, you can split the batch in half, add sugar to one fermenter and none to the other. You'll have a sort of bitter and this beer.