Martyn Cornell and Dominic Driscoll were arguing about whether Northern Bitters were more heavily hopped than Southern ones to take into account the use of a sparkler, which would reduce the perceived bitterness.
It just so happens that I've written a large number of recipes for Bitters from all over the country. Part of the process being to calculate the IBUs using BeerSmith. I wouldn't take the numbers as gospel, but they give a general idea.
Are the Northern versions more Bitter than Southern ones? Well, yes and no. Boddington Bitter comes out top at 48 IBU. But Tetley comes bottom at 14 IBU. While all the London beers in the table are reasonably well-hopped.
Surprisingly, for a brewery in the middle of hop country, most of Shepherd Neame's beers weren't that bitter. Other than their PA.
About the only real discernible pattern is in the Scottish beers. Which are mostly not very bitter at all. Except for the Maclay beers.
Bitter on the eve of WW II | ||||
Year | Brewery | Beer | OG | IBU |
1939 | Adnams | PA | 1039 | 33 |
1939 | Barclay Perkins | IPA | 1044 | 30 |
1939 | Barclay Perkins | XLK (trade) | 1046 | 30 |
1939 | Barclay Perkins | PA | 1053 | 38 |
1939 | Boddington | IP | 1045 | 48 |
1939 | Drybrough | 54/- | 1032 | 19 |
1939 | Drybrough | 60/- | 1038 | 21 |
1939 | Drybrough | 80/- | 1050 | 26 |
1939 | Fullers | AK | 1033.5 | 35 |
1939 | Fullers | XK | 1039.5 | 40 |
1939 | Fullers | PA | 1050 | 43 |
1939 | Lees | Bitter | 1047 | 30 |
1939 | Maclay | PA 5d | 1032 | 28 |
1939 | Maclay | PA 6d | 1038 | 30 |
1939 | Maclay | PA 7d | 1042 | 32 |
1940 | Shepherd Neame | AK | 1030.5 | 19 |
1940 | Shepherd Neame | BB | 1038 | 21 |
1940 | Shepherd Neame | PA | 1047 | 39 |
1940 | Shepherd Neame | SXX | 1055 | 28 |
1941 | Tetley | Bitter | 1038 | 14 |
1939 | Truman | Pale 2 | 1047.5 | 27 |
1939 | Truman | Pale 1B | 1053.5 | 30 |
1939 | Whitbread | IPA | 1037 | 36 |
1939 | Whitbread | PA | 1048 | 29 |
1938 | William Younger | XP | 1037 | 14 |
1938 | William Younger | XXP | 1042 | 16 |
1939 | William Younger | XXPS | 1046 | 12 |
1939 | William Younger | Export | 1054 | 22 |
Sources: | ||||
various brewing records |
2 comments:
Even as late as the mid 1970s Boddingtons IP was fiercely bitter. I was living in Cardiff where Brains beers were more malt forward and on visiting Manchester for the first time to see my cousin we went out to his local Boddies pub. First thing I noticed was the beer looked more like lager, then the first sip was a shock. I can still remember it.
The 1977 CAMRA Good Beer Guide described Boddington as "exceptionally bitter"
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