The recipe is pretty simple: just base malt and sugar. With not the slightest indication of what that type of sugar might be. I’ve gone for cane sugar. It could also have been some sort of invert. There really was just a single type of base malt. What’s more surprising is that it was Scottish.
At just 5 lbs per quarter (336 lbs) of malt, the hopping rate is pretty low. A lot lower than Usher’s Pale ales, which received 98 lbs per quarter. There were two types of hops: Californian from the1883 harvest and Alsace from 1884.
| 1885 Thomas Usher 60/- B | ||
| pale malt | 8.00 lb | 88.89% |
| cane sugar | 1.00 lb | 11.11% |
| Cluster 90 min | 0.75 oz | |
| Cluster 60 min | 0.75 oz | |
| Strisselspalt 30 min | 0.50 oz | |
| OG | 1041.5 | |
| FG | 1015 | |
| ABV | 3.51 | |
| Apparent attenuation | 63.86% | |
| IBU | 39 | |
| SRM | 4 | |
| Mash at | 155º F | |
| Sparge at | 175º F | |
| Boil time | 120 minutes | |
| pitching temp | 59º F | |
| Yeast | WLP028 Edinburgh Ale | |
For those who missed it, this is my short video on 60/-.

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