Monday, 6 March 2023

Tetley cask Bitter specifications (part four)

You can tell I'm away on my travels by the number of posts I'm dragging from the entrails of that Tetley specifications manual. I'm not even halfway through the first beer.

When you read this, I'll be judging in Blumenau, Brazil. If I haven't dropped dead. You never know when you get older. Hopefully, they won't have me judging low-alcohol Lager.

Getting to the topic, we're looking at boiling. Starting with the basics. Two coppers, each boiled for 90 minutes. The hops split evenly between the coppers and added at the start of the boil. With pre-boil gravities of 1084º and 1030º.

How does that match up with 1945 practice? Then there were three coppers, all boiled for 120 minutes. No details about how the hops were split, nor when they were added. Pre-boil gravities were 1097º, 1023º and 1004º. So, quite dissimilar.

All the sugar in copper 2, but the caramel in copper 1. Adding the sugar to the weaker wort was standard practice.

9. BOILING
  1st Copper
(290 - 320 brls)
2nd Copper
(290 - 320 brls)
Type When Added
a) Addition Sugar NONE ALL Liquid or Crystallised Copper 2/3 full
Caramel ALL NONE  Caramel AB
Tintose IA
Before Boil 
Hops 50% 50% α Acid Target to each Copper After Sugar 
Irish Moss 42 oz/100 brl  36 oz/100 brl  Dry Granulated 30 mins before casting
Casting gravity 84°  30°     
b) Boiling Time (mins) 90 90    
c) Evaporation (%)  10 10    
Source:
Tetley Beer and Malt Specifications, 1985, beer page 4.

I hope you enjoyed that. As much as I'll be enjoying a caipirinha right now.

 

2 comments:

Christoph Riedel said...

Hi Ron, since this is a parti-gyle, did they really just produce one beer with it? Would the reason to parti-gyle at all be that they had two smaller coppers instead of a single big one? Otherwise it would be confusing as to why they chose to go through the effort of parti-gyling...

Ron Pattinson said...

Christoph,

this wasn't a a parti-gyle, just a standard single-gyle brew. You still have two worts, whether you parti-gyle or not. That's the way most brewers operated.