It wasn't until I stumbled upon this advert that Greene King had a draught as well as a bottled Burton Ale. Which is intriguing. Especially as it sold for the same price - 1s 3d - as their Best Bitter.
Bury Free Press - Friday 20 May 1949, page 11. |
The question I immediately asked myself was: how strong were Greene King Burton and Best Burton? Time to scan my spreadsheets and take a look at their brewing records.
Unfortunately, I don't have records from spring 1949, just late 1948 and January 1949. Which is just that little bit too early. I'm hoping that the relevant brewing book is one of the ones Henry photographed. And that I will eventually get the pictures off him.
On the upside, I do have quite a few analyses of Green King beers from just a little later. Combining all of this, I've got a pretty good idea of the character of their beers.
Let's take a look at their bottled range first:
Greene King bottled beers 1954 - 1960 | |||||||||
Year | Beer | Style | Price per pint (d) | OG | FG | ABV | App. Atten-uation | colour | Index of Hop Bitter |
1960 | Burton Ale | Brown Ale | 20 | 1033.4 | 1011.7 | 2.80 | 64.97% | 16 | |
1956 | Harvest Brown Ale | Brown Ale | 22 | 1035.2 | 1013.9 | 2.75 | 60.51% | 105 | |
1959 | India Pale Ale | IPA | 20 | 1033.3 | 1010 | 3.02 | 69.97% | 25 | |
1960 | India Pale Ale | IPA | 20 | 1033 | 1007.7 | 3.16 | 76.67% | 25 | |
1960 | India Pale Ale | IPA | 20 | 1033.2 | 1008.5 | 3.20 | 74.40% | 24 | |
1960 | Lager | Lager | 1034.9 | 1006.4 | 3.56 | 81.66% | 9.5 | ||
1960 | Abbot Ale | Pale Ale | 30 | 1048.6 | 1006.7 | 5.24 | 86.21% | 19 | |
1954 | Stout | Stout | 19 | 1034.3 | 1012.7 | 2.79 | 62.97% | 450 | |
1954 | Sweet Stout | Stout | 26 | 1046.6 | 1020.3 | 3.39 | 56.44% | 450 | |
1960 | Suffolk Ale | Strong Ale | 34 | 1056.8 | 1015.7 | 5.14 | 72.36% | 70 | |
Sources: | |||||||||
Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/002 | |||||||||
Which Beer Report, 1960, pages 171 - 173. |
What first strikes me about their bottled Burton Ale is that it looks more like a Brown Ale than a London Burton. It's called BA in the brewing records and, had I not known they brewed a beer called Burton, I would have assumed that it stood for Brown Ale.
From the brewing records, I know that in late 1948 all three of the bottled beers listed, Stout, IPA and Burton Ale, all had an identical OG: 11.1 lbs per barrel, or 1031º. By 1960 that had increased a few degrees to 1033-1034º. They had also expanded their bottled range, which included a higher OG Stout and a stronger Pale Ale in the form of Abbot Ale.
Index of hop bitterness, if you're wondering, seems to be about the same as IBUs. The figure of 16 certainly tallies with what you'd expect from a Brown Ale. London Burton Ales were more heavily hopped than that.
Now their draught beers:
Greene King draught beers 1954 - 1960 | |||||||||
Year | Beer | Style | Price per pint (d) | OG | FG | ABV | App. Atten-uation | colour | Index of Hop Bitter |
1960 | Mild | Mild | 12 | 1030.7 | 1006.05 | 3.20 | 80.29% | 18 | |
1960 | Abbot Ale | Pale Ale | 22 | 1051.3 | 1007.9 | 5.43 | 84.60% | 20 | |
1960 | Best Bitter | Pale Ale | 15 | 1038.4 | 1007.4 | 3.88 | 80.73% | 20 | |
1960 | Bitter | Pale Ale | 15 | 1037.0 | 1006.25 | 4.00 | 83.11% | 33 | |
1960 | Ordinary Bitter | Pale Ale | 13 | 1033.9 | 1005.7 | 3.53 | 83.19% | 26 | |
Sources: | |||||||||
Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/002 | |||||||||
Which Beer Report, 1960, pages 171 - 173. |
Note that the draught beer prices are the same as in 1949. The explanation is that the tax had decreased between 1949 and 1960. Though it also seems that draught Best Burton had disappeared. But, given that it cost the same price as Best Bitter, I'm guessing that its OG was around 1038º. Which is more like a Best Mild than a London Burton. Even in the darkest days of post-war austerity, London Burton had a gravity of over 1040º.
Though it was called IPA Cask within the brewery, the trade name seems to have been plain old Bitter. I wonder when they started calling the draught version IPA in pubs?
1 comment:
Images of the tables, please.
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