Monday 28 June 2021

Dutch Pils before WW II

Access to the Heineken Gravity Book has prompted me to expand the section about the Netherlands in "Blitzkrieg!". I'm finding it a useful insight into what happened on the other side of the conflict. In some ways it's a mirror image of what happened in the UK. While in Holland things went downhill quickly after the summer of 1942, in the UK beer strengths remained the same in the second half of the war. Unlike in WW I.

Heineken Pils was about dead on average for Holland. Though there was a surprising degree of variation amongst rival beers, especially in terms of ABV.

The gravities are mostly pretty similar – there’s only 0.66º Plato between the highest and the lowest. Yet, due to huge variance in the degree of attenuation, there’s a difference of over 1% ABV. Due to crappy attenuation, Phoenix Pils was barely over 4% ABV. Hardly stronger than Heineken Lagerbier.

Dutch Pils before WW II
Date Year Brewer Town OG Plato FG Plato ABV App. Atten-uation Colour
14th Dec 1939 Amstel Amsterdam 11.87 2.20 5.10 82.17% 0.58
14th Dec 1939 Oranjeboom Rotterdam 11.81 2.42 4.93 80.26% 0.68
14th Dec 1939 Phoenix Amersfoort 11.45 3.59 4.08 69.61% 0.49
14th Dec 1939 ZHB Den Haag 11.85 3.58 4.30 70.77% 0.52
14th Dec 1939 Drie Hoefijzers Breda 11.94 3.12 4.64 74.77% 0.43
14th Dec 1939 Van Vollenhoven Amsterdam 11.69 3.08 4.51 74.54% 0.85
14th Dec 1939 Grolsch Groenlo 12.01 2.82 4.81 77.36% 0.53
30th Jan 1940 Bavaria Lieshout 12.11 2.22 5.36 82.38% 0.5
    Average   11.84 2.88 4.72 76.48% 0.57
Source:
Rapporten van laboratoriumonderzoeken naar producten van Heinekenbrouwerijen in binnen- en buitenland en naar producten van andere brouwerijen held at the Amsterdamse Stadsarchief, document number 834 - 1794.



 

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