Friday 11 December 2020

Scottish Mild in WW II

The war didn’t do anything to help Mild’s fortunes in Scotland. Probably the opposite, as most breweries trimmed their ranges during the conflict. And the first beers to go were always the less fashionable ones. And Mild Ale hadn’t been a popular north of the border for several decades.

As was often the case, William Younger was a big exception. They had brewed a range of Milds between the wars, and continued to do so after all the nastiness began. A larger range than most breweries South of the border. While using the classic X designations common in England before WW I.

Weakest of the Younger bunch of Mild was X Ale. Which was much the same as the weakest class of English Milds. What, pre-war, would have been a 4d per pint Ale in London. Or a standard Mild Ale out in the sticks.

Note that at, the start of hostilities, X Ale was dry hopped. A practice which wasn’t totally standard for Mild Ales, but which was employed by some breweries. But which Younger dropped in 1942, presumably to conserve hops for other more pressing uses.

Kicking off the war at around the minimum finically viable gravity, there was no way X Ale was ever going to survive the war. Especially when there were other Milds in Younger’s portfolio. And, sure enough, in 1942, when the OG of its next sibling, XX, dropped to almost the same level, X Ale was discontinued.

Next up the strength pole was, unsurprisingly, XX. A Mild which wasn’t much stronger, but just enough to differentiate itself from X Ale.

The gravity fell surprisingly little during the war, just 2º. Bugger all, in the scheme of things.

Both the ABV and attenuation level listed are a bit deceptive. Not just for XX, but for all William Younger’s beers. Because the brewing records don’t list the racking gravity, but the cleansing gravity. Which is several degrees higher. Based on analyses of Younger’s beers, the rate of attenuation was mostly 70-75% when sold.

The hopping levels for both X and XX are ludicrously low. Half the level even of a rural brewery like Adnams  and a quarter of that of a large London brewery like Whitbread or Barclay Perkins . When you get to the recipes section you’ll see the result: beers with fewer than 10 IBU (calculated).

Though, as initially, there was a reasonable rate of dry hopping, Younger’s Milds might have had a surprising level of hop flavour, despite the almost total lack of bitterness.

William Younger X Ale 1939 - 1942
Date Year OG FG ABV App. Atten-uation lbs hops/ qtr hops lb/brl dry hops (oz / barrel)
17th Nov 1939 1029.0 1012.0 2.25 58.62% 2.50 0.28 2.03
1st Nov 1940 1028.0 1011.0 2.25 60.71% 2.69 0.25 2.06
15th Aug 1941 1028.0 1012.0 2.12 57.14% 2.19 0.23 1.90
9th Jul 1942 1028.0 1011.0 2.25 60.71% 2.33 0.25 0.00
Sources:
William Younger brewing records held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document numbers WY/6/1/2/76, WY/6/1/2/77, WY/6/1/2/78 and WY/6/1/2/79.

  

William Younger XX Ale 1939 - 1944
Date Year OG FG ABV App. Atten-uation lbs hops/ qtr hops lb/brl dry hops (oz / barrel)
23rd Nov 1939 1032.0 1012.0 2.65 62.50% 2.50 0.31 1.97
10th Oct 1940 1031.0 1012.0 2.51 61.29% 2.35 0.27 1.88
12th Dec 1941 1031.0 1012.0 2.51 61.29% 2.35 0.29 0.00
23rd Jan 1942 1031.0 1012.0 2.51 61.29% 2.35 0.27 4.06
18th Dec 1942 1030.0 1010.0 2.65 66.67% 2.88 0.34 0.00
9th Nov 1943 1030.0 1012.0 2.38 60.00% 2.94 0.35 0.00
9th Apr 1944 1030.0 1013.0 2.25 56.67% 2.94 0.35 0.00
Sources:
William Younger brewing records held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document numbers WY/6/1/2/76, WY/6/1/2/77, WY/6/1/2/78 , WY/6/1/2/79 and WY/6/1/2/81.

 

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