I can remember when I first looked at the records in the 1921 Truman Burton set. They confused the hell out of me. For a start, Truman seems to have used pretty much a single recipe for their whole of their range. Or at least XXX was parti-gyled with all the other beers: P1 (Pale Ale), R4 (Running Burton Ale), XX (Mild Ale) and 7d (Mild Ale).
But it gets even weirder than that. They also blended the beers after fermentation. This is a fairly simple example. The first three, S, W and XX are as fermented, the second two the beers as racked (with the OG back calculated):
Beer | barrels | gravity |
S | 133 | 1054.77 |
W | 129 | 1040.31 |
XX | 286 | 1033.92 |
Beer | barrels | gravity |
XXX | 262 | 1047.54 |
XX | 286 | 1033.92 |
Source: | ||
Truman brewing record held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number B/THB/C/335 |
In this case, all of S and W were blended together to produce XXX. It seems an awfully complicated way of going about things.
In this example some of the R4 was used to bump up the gravity of the XXX:
Beer | barrels | gravity |
R4 | 215 | 1054.77 |
XXX | 203 | 1043.37 |
Beer | barrels | gravity |
R4 | 188 | 1054.77 |
XXX | 333 | 1047.54 |
Source: | ||
Truman brewing record held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number B/THB/C/335 |
There are also examples where worts of 1055.6 and 1039.5 were fermented separately then blended to create XXX with a theoretical OG of 1047.5.
I've no idea why they did this.
Take it away Kristen . . . .
Malt: Five pale malts, four of them being English and one American 6-row-y variety. Mix and match to your hearts content. Do your best to get that US in there though. If you had to pick single pale malt, I’d probably either choose Mild malt or some tasty Optic. 10%ish maize isn’t a ton and you probably won’t taste it but it will reduce the ‘weight’ of the beer making it feel even lighter that an all malt version. Same goes for the Invert…which you can swap right out for plain-old-white-sugar (POWS).
Hops: Similarly hopped like a bunch of other ‘interwar’ beers there are a bunch of similar/same hops from different years. They spread over about 4 years actually. About 60:40 Goldings-type:US Cluster. This beer really isn’t hop focused but has a decent enough amount to at least taste them so choose something you’ve got way too much of…unless it’s CTZ…
Yeast: As with all these old recipes, nothing about yeast what so ever. So go nuts. Pick your favorite; I really like the London III for this baby. Will dry out enough but leave plenty of character behind.
Cask: Standard procedure:
1) let the beer ferment until finished and then give it another day or so. For me right around 5-7 days.
2) Rack the beer to your vessel of choice (firkin, polypin, cornie, whatever).
3) Add primings at ~3.5g/L
4) Add prepared isinglass at 1ml/L
5) ONLY add dry hops at 0.25g/l – 1g/L.
6) Bung it up and roll it around to mix. Condition at 55F or so for 4-5 days and its ready to go. Spile/vent. Tap. Settle. Serve at 55F.
2 comments:
What kind of water treatment do you recommend for these beers? This recipe could be brewed with straight RO water but what if I wanted a more historic water profile?
Did I mention I missed Let's Brew posts? I entered 2 of your recipes in a local homebrew comp and the 1967 Hardy Ale got a bronze and the 1987 Boddington Mild scored a respectable 35
Edward,
I've not seen an analysis of Truman's Burton brewing water. I'd say make it like Bass and Allsopp's, except their waters were quite different.
Congratulations on your success.
Kristen and I have both been very busy. Otherwise they would still appear regularly.
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