Showing posts with label WWI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WWI. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 September 2024

Cairnes Single Stout hops

Over to the hops. At the start of the period, Cairnes used exclusively foreign hops in their Single Stout. Either from Oregon or Belgium. That all changed in the middle of the year.

When English hops appear. There were still Oregon hops, but they were getting older as they all remained from the 1915 harvest. The reason is obvious: imports of American hops dried up. Once the war was over, large quantities of fresher American hops came into the mix. Though there were still some English hops used.

Let’s see how Fullers use of hops compared.

There’s a similar pattern to at Cairnes, where new foreign hops disappear in 1916. Though, in this case, rather than American hops they were Belgian and Germany. After that, it’s all English hops until after war’s end. When lots of French and American hops appear.

“MK”, obviously, stands for Mid-Kent. Not really sure what “B” means. I can’t think of a type of hops that starts with the letter “B”, other than Belgian.

Cairnes Single Stout hops 1914 - 1923
Date Year hop 1 hop 2 hop 3 hop 4
1st Jan 1914 Oregon 1912 Belgium old    
1st Sep 1914 Oregon 1913 Oregon no date Oregon 1912  
7th Jan 1915 Oregon 1913 Oregon 1913 Oregon 1907  
2nd Oct 1916 Oregon 1915 English 1915 Poperinge 1915  
3rd May 1917 Oregon 1915 English 1916    
7th Jun 1917 Oregon 1915 English 1916    
1st Nov 1917 Oregon 1915 English 1916    
3rd Jan 1918 Oregon 1915 English 1916    
2nd May 1918 Oregon 1915 English 1916    
3rd Oct 1918 Oregon 1915 English 1916 English 1917  
3rd Feb 1919 Oregon 1915 English 1917    
2nd Oct 1919 English 1917 English 1918 Pacifics no date  
1st Jan 1920 Oregon 1918 English 1917 English 1918 old Pacifics
15th Apr 1920 Oregon 1918 English 1918    
4th Oct 1920 Oregon 1918 Oregon 1919 English 1919  
3rd Oct 1921 Oregon 1918 Oregon 1919 English 1919 English 1920
2nd Feb 1922 Sonoma 1920 English 1917 English 1920  
1st Jan 1923 English 1921 English 1921 English 1921  
Sources:
Cairnes brewing records held at the Guinness archives, document numbers GDB/SUB/0022 and GDB/BR17/1257.

 

Fullers Porter hops 1914 - 1925
Date Year hop 1 hop 2 hop 3 hop 4 hop 5
18th Nov 1914 MK 1913 Poperinge 1913 Hallertau 1912 Farnham 1913 Tolhurst 1914
17th Feb 1915 Poperinge 1913 B 1913 MK 1913 Tolhurst 1913  
2nd Jun 1916 Tolhurst 1915 MK 1914 Farnham 1914    
4th Aug 1916 Tolhurst 1915 MK 1914 B 1914 old hops  
12th Apr 1917 MK 1915 B 1915      
9th Aug 1917 No. 2 B 1915 Tolhurst 1916 MK 1916    
5th Jan 1918 MK 1916 Tolhuirst 1916      
19th Apr 1918 Farnham 1916 MK 1916      
14th Jan 1919 MK 1917 Poperinge 1914      
10th Feb 1920 Alsace 1917 Alsace 1919 Sonoma 1916 Oregon  
16th Jun 1925 Pacifics 1922 English 1923 English 1924    
Source:
Fullers brewing records held at the brewery.

 

Thursday, 29 August 2024

Cairnes Single Stout sugars 1914 - 1923

Moving on to the sugars, this is where Fullers and Cairnes really diverge. At the start of the war, Cairnes Single Stout had a little under 9% sugar, in the form of glucose. In 1916, that disappears in 1916, and for the rest of the war there’s no sugar at all. Sugar does reappear in 1920, but only in the form of caramel.

Things at Fullers were way, way more complicated. Over the war years, they employed seven different types of sugar. Though in any single brew there were never more than three.

The most popular sugars were glucose and something called Special Dark. I’m guessing that the latter was some sort of dark invert sugar. The quantity used was pretty high at the start and the end of the period covered by the table. I assume restrictions on the supply of sugar was responsible for the drastic reduction in the quantity during the war years.

At Fullers, the proportion of sugar in the grist was far higher than at Cairnes. Starting at over 25%. Even in the most difficult later war years, the amount never fell lower than 6.5%. And for most of the time was well over 10%.

Fullers also used way more caramel, varying between 3% and 7.5%. While at Cairnes it went from zero to a maximum of 2%.

While at Cairnes, even at the start of the war, sugar was less than 10% of the grist. From 1916 on, that was reduced to zero. And, other than caramel, no sugar was used after WW I. 

Cairnes Single Stout grists 1914 - 1923
Date Year pale malt roast barley flaked maize glucose caramel
1st Jan 1914 74.45% 6.50% 9.93% 8.82% 0.30%
1st Sep 1914 70.03% 7.74% 13.34% 8.89%  
7th Jan 1915 71.37% 7.22% 12.69% 8.72%  
2nd Oct 1916 79.62% 7.11% 13.27%    
3rd May 1917 79.62% 7.11% 13.27%    
7th Jun 1917 87.83% 6.84% 5.32%    
1st Nov 1917 87.83% 6.84% 5.32%    
3rd Jan 1918 86.70% 6.88% 6.42%    
2nd May 1918 91.17% 6.74% 2.10%    
3rd Oct 1918 93.33% 6.67%      
3rd Feb 1919 93.33% 6.67%      
2nd Oct 1919 85.42% 7.46% 7.12%    
1st Jan 1920 89.05% 7.66% 3.30%    
15th Apr 1920 87.33% 7.37% 5.29%    
4th Oct 1920 81.76% 8.54% 9.28%   0.41%
3rd Oct 1921 95.33% 3.91%     0.76%
2nd Feb 1922 76.04% 10.18% 12.64%   1.13%
1st Jan 1923 89.36% 8.51%     2.13%
Sources:
Cairnes brewing records held at the Guinness archives, document numbers GDB/SUB/0022 and GDB/BR17/1257.

Fullers Porter sugars 1914 - 1925
Date Year glucose invert Special Dark cane sugar Dark Trivert Porteris caramel total sugar
18th Nov 1914 11.34%   12.60%       3.30% 27.25%
17th Feb 1915 3.83%       9.56%   2.91% 16.30%
2nd Jun 1916           15.84% 6.15% 21.99%
4th Aug 1916     4.90%       3.85% 8.75%
12th Apr 1917 3.44%   6.89%       3.59% 13.92%
9th Aug 1917     1.25% 1.25%     3.92% 6.42%
5th Jan 1918     2.35% 2.35%     3.69% 8.39%
19th Apr 1918 8.59%   4.30% 8.59%     4.42% 25.90%
14th Jan 1919 5.69% 5.69%         7.57% 18.94%
10th Feb 1920       6.92%     4.89% 11.81%
16th Jun 1925     13.50%       4.80% 18.31%
Source:
Fullers brewing records held at the brewery.


Tuesday, 27 August 2024

Cairnes Single Stout grists 1914 – 1923

A Cairnes Special Export Irish Stout label
Back to work, eh? Looking at all the the nutty bolty stuff.

I always try to have a purpose behind all my posts. Usually, that's a book. Either it's part of my research for a book, an excerpt or a recipe that's going into a book. Which is where the Irish material I'm going through throw up a problem. What book is it going in?

The most obvious - and simple - solution would be to start a book called "Ireland!". That would make a lot of sense. But I'm not going to do it. No, not just to be awkward or contrary. I don't feel that I know enough to start on it. My mind is full of unanswered questions about Irish brewing. Far too early to be confident about writing a book about it.

Perhaps I'll feel differently when I've finished going through all the brewing records I photographed earlier this year. Or maybe not. I only got about halfway through the Murphy's records. And I wouldn't mind looking at the ones of Beamish & Crawford, too.

Before I started writing my series of books on UK brewing, I'd already completed a huge amount of the research. All that was left, was filling in a few holes. Nothing that affected the overall picture. I'm far away from that situation when it comes to Ireland.

If you can remember my earlier question, stuff like this is being stored as a future update. In this case, to "Armistice!". Not totally sure where I'd put it. I'm sure I'll be able to find some way of hammering it in. Ireland probably deserves its own chapter, at least. With the restrictions being different there.

Now let’s look at what went into Cairnes Single Stout.  It’s not particularly complicated. Especially when we compare it with Fullers Porter.

Only three elements graced the mash tun: pale malt, roast barley and flaked maize. Which is pretty minimal. And the last of those three wasn’t omnipresent, disappearing for a while in 1918 and 1919. The quantity used having already been drastically reduced.

Interestingly, the percentage of malt increased quite a lot in 1917, coinciding with the reduction and then elimination of flaked maize. This was presumably a reaction to supply difficulties with maize as the German U-boat campaign hotted up.

The proportion of roast barley remained very constant at around 7%, other than for a bit of a wobble in the early 1920s, when it dropped as low as 4% and then shot up to 10%. Not sure why that was.

Looking at Fullers grists, there are some similar patterns. Though their recipes were way more complicated.

There were three malts, the classic London combination of pale, brown and black malt. Though the total amount is similar to at Cairnes, starting at around 70%, rising to a peak of over 90% in 1917.  This was presumably in response to restrictions in supply of maize and sugar.

Which brings us to flaked maize. It kicks off the war at a much lower level than at Cairnes, just a little under 3%. And, just as at Cairnes, it disappears in the later war years.

The other adjunct, oats, appears in tiny quantities, purely for legal purposes so that some of the Stout it was parti-gyled with could be sold as Oatmeal Stout. The larger quantities which appear in 1918 were in the form of oat husks. Not sure if they would get any extract out of those. But why else would they be used?

Cairnes Single Stout grists 1914 - 1923
Date Year pale malt roast barley flaked maize glucose caramel
1st Jan 1914 74.45% 6.50% 9.93% 8.82% 0.30%
1st Sep 1914 70.03% 7.74% 13.34% 8.89%  
7th Jan 1915 71.37% 7.22% 12.69% 8.72%  
2nd Oct 1916 79.62% 7.11% 13.27%    
3rd May 1917 79.62% 7.11% 13.27%    
7th Jun 1917 87.83% 6.84% 5.32%    
1st Nov 1917 87.83% 6.84% 5.32%    
3rd Jan 1918 86.70% 6.88% 6.42%    
2nd May 1918 91.17% 6.74% 2.10%    
3rd Oct 1918 93.33% 6.67%      
3rd Feb 1919 93.33% 6.67%      
2nd Oct 1919 85.42% 7.46% 7.12%    
1st Jan 1920 89.05% 7.66% 3.30%    
15th Apr 1920 87.33% 7.37% 5.29%    
4th Oct 1920 81.76% 8.54% 9.28%   0.41%
3rd Oct 1921 95.33% 3.91%     0.76%
2nd Feb 1922 76.04% 10.18% 12.64%   1.13%
1st Jan 1923 89.36% 8.51%     2.13%
Sources:
Cairnes brewing records held at the Guinness archives, document numbers GDB/SUB/0022 and GDB/BR17/1257.

Fullers Porter grists 1914 - 1925
Date Year pale malt brown malt black malt total malt flaked maize oats total adjuncts
18th Nov 1914 53.88% 11.34% 3.78% 69.00% 2.84% 0.91% 3.75%
17th Feb 1915 60.25% 12.91% 6.46% 79.62% 3.59% 0.49% 4.08%
2nd Jun 1916 52.53% 12.51% 8.76% 73.80% 3.75% 0.46% 4.21%
4th Aug 1916 60.06% 14.71% 11.03% 85.80% 4.90% 0.55% 5.45%
12th Apr 1917 58.54% 13.77% 8.61% 80.92% 5.16%   5.16%
9th Aug 1917 67.38% 14.97% 11.23% 93.58%     0.00%
5th Jan 1918 61.66% 14.09% 10.57% 86.33%   5.29% 5.29%
19th Apr 1918 45.10% 11.28% 8.05% 64.44%   9.67% 9.67%
14th Jan 1919 59.73% 12.80% 8.53% 81.06%     0.00%
10th Feb 1920 59.66% 12.97% 9.08% 81.70% 6.48%   6.48%
16th Jun 1925 64.15%   8.44% 72.59% 8.44% 0.66% 9.10%
Source:
Fullers brewing records held at the brewery.

 


 

Wednesday, 6 September 2023

Let's Brew Wednesday - 1940 Boddington CC

There’s only been a little shaved off the strength of Boddington’s Strong Ale, CC, since the outbreak of war.

Don’t ask me what CC stands for. Or means. Absolutely no fucking idea. None. But dead cool to find a recipe for a Manchester-style Strong Ale.

There’s only been a minimal reduction in the gravity – 1.5º. But this was brewed very early in the year, on 4th January. Having said that, as late as October the gravity remained 1055º

Just as with XX, the flaked maize has been replaced by flaked rice. Though, in contrast to the Mild, the proportion of adjunct has been significantly reduced, roughly halved. The slack being taken up by the base pale malt. There’s also been a significant reduction in the sugar content.

Most, though not quite all, of the hops were English from the 1939 crop. The dry hops were a combination of more English from 1939 and Styrian from 1938. The latter having been kept in a cold store.

1940 Boddington CC
pale malt 8.50 lb 69.19%
crystal malt 60 L 1.50 lb 12.21%
flaked rice 1.50 lb 12.21%
malt extract 0.33 lb 2.69%
No. 3 invert sugar 0.33 lb 2.69%
caramel 1000 SRM 0.125 lb 1.02%
Cluster 170 mins 0.50 oz
Fuggles 170 mins 3.50 oz
Fuggles 30 mins 4.00 oz
Goldings dry hops 0.50 oz
OG 1055
FG 1014
ABV 5.42
Apparent attenuation 74.55%
IBU 97
SRM 18
Mash at 149º F
Sparge at 162º F
Boil time 170 minutes
pitching temp 62º F
Yeast Wyeast 1318 London ale III (Boddingtons)

This recipe is from my recently-released Blitzkrieg!, the definitive book on brewing during WW II.

Get your copy now!

The second volume contains the recipes. But not just that. There are also overviews of some of the breweries covered, showing their beers at the start and the end of the conflict.

Buy one now and be the envy of your friends!



 

 

Monday, 13 February 2023

Whitbread Porter grists 1805 - 1940

Another crazily data-heavy post. Before you ask, I tried to make it into a stacked bar chart, but Excel told me my data was too complicated.

I still think the data in table form does make some trends very visible. Like the near-constancy of brown malt. The rise of black malt and its replacement by chocolate malt. Flirts with sugar in the late 19th century before its definitive adoption in 1902.

No adjuncts. Apart from maybe tiny quantities of oats, which may have been in flaked form. Though they could also have been malted. The records don't specify the form. Their presence is purely on account of Porter being parti-gyled with Stout. Some of which was sold as Oatmeal Stout. The tiny amount of oats was simply there for legal reasons.

The ups and downs of brown malt are also very evident. From a peak of 35% to a low of, well, nothing. Or 3%, if you look at it another way.

Mild malt takes a bow towards the end of Porter's life, making up part of the base malt. I assume for financial reasons.

Whitbread Porter grists 1805 - 1940
Year pale malt brown malt black malt amber malt choc. Malt mild malt white malt oats total sugar
1805 78.95% 21.05%              
1807 66.32% 16.84%   16.84%          
1808 64.76% 35.24%              
1809 76.12% 23.88%              
1811 72.41% 27.59%              
1812 64.76% 17.62%   17.62%          
1813 52.62% 25.51%   21.87%          
1814 77.94% 22.06%              
1815 74.28% 25.72%              
1816 54.56% 26.10%   19.34%          
1817 87.89% 11.82% 0.30%            
1818 69.57% 8.28% 0.41%       21.74%    
1819 91.39% 7.82% 0.78%            
1821 94.78% 4.01% 1.20%            
1822 95.78% 3.07% 1.15%            
1823 75.84% 4.07% 4.07%       16.02%    
1824 95.39% 3.41% 1.19%            
1825 98.80%   1.20%            
1826 98.63%   1.37%            
1827 98.78%   1.22%            
1828 98.82%   1.18%            
1829 98.63%   1.37%            
1830 98.27%   1.73%            
1831 98.44%   1.56%            
1832 88.00% 10.59% 1.41%            
1833 87.06% 11.32% 1.62%            
1834 87.85% 10.09% 2.06%            
1835 88.45% 9.63% 1.93%            
1836 76.58% 20.54% 2.88%            
1837 89.49% 7.93% 2.58%            
1838 85.52% 12.07% 2.41%            
1839 85.52% 12.07% 2.41%            
1840 85.52% 12.07% 2.41%            
1841 81.10% 16.26% 2.64%            
1842 81.10% 16.26% 2.64%            
1843 81.10% 16.26% 2.64%            
1844 80.93% 16.23% 2.84%            
1845 80.93% 16.23% 2.84%            
1846 76.58% 20.54% 2.88%            
1847 77.40% 19.66% 2.95%            
1848 76.42% 20.50% 3.08%            
1849 77.02% 19.56% 3.42%            
1850 76.27% 20.46% 3.27%            
1851 76.27% 20.46% 3.27%            
1852 76.27% 20.46% 3.27%            
1853 77.02% 19.56% 3.42%            
1854 75.83% 20.49% 3.69%            
1855 75.83% 20.49% 3.69%            
1856 76.64% 19.46% 3.89%            
1857 76.64% 19.46% 3.89%            
1858 76.64% 19.46% 3.89%            
1859 75.83% 20.49% 3.69%            
1860 75.83% 20.49% 3.69%            
1861 75.83% 20.49% 3.69%            
1862 76.27% 19.37% 4.36%            
1863 76.27% 19.37% 4.36%            
1864 75.90% 19.28% 4.82%            
1865 80.63% 14.18% 5.20%            
1866 81.01% 14.24% 4.75%            
1867 43.42% 11.03% 6.07%           39.49%
1868 74.20% 9.42% 4.71%           11.67%
1869 72.68% 11.08% 5.54%           10.71%
1870 79.15%
6.03%           14.82%
1871 84.21% 9.87% 5.92%            
1872 94.25%
5.75%            
1873 88.72%
5.28%           5.99%
1874 87.20% 7.38% 5.41%            
1875 75.47% 14.37% 5.75%           4.41%
1876 79.35% 15.11% 5.54%            
1877 79.75% 14.47% 5.79%            
1878 80.67% 13.88% 5.45%            
1879 83.30% 10.69% 6.01%            
1880 84.70% 9.31% 5.99%            
1881 85.67% 7.96% 6.37%            
1882 83.82% 9.37% 6.81%            
1883 80.81% 12.79% 6.40%            
1884 77.14% 14.37% 8.49%            
1885 76.06% 15.75% 8.19%            
1886 84.98% 8.29% 6.73%            
1887 84.98% 8.29% 6.73%            
1888 86.96% 6.78% 6.26%            
1889 84.00% 8.96% 7.04%            
1890 86.94% 6.53% 6.53%            
1890 83.22% 8.70% 8.08%            
1891 78.57% 9.88% 6.97%           4.58%
1892 79.82% 7.02% 7.02%           6.14%
1893 84.00% 8.30% 7.70%            
1894 82.34% 9.74% 7.92%            
1895 85.44% 6.85% 7.71%            
1896 86.31% 6.44% 7.25%            
1898 86.30% 6.58% 7.12%            
1899 86.56% 6.72% 6.72%            
1900 85.67% 7.16% 7.16%            
1901 85.67% 7.16% 7.16%            
1902 80.34% 10.16% 6.77%           2.73%
1903 80.43% 9.65% 6.76%           3.17%
1904 78.29% 9.54% 7.16%           5.01%
1905 78.01% 9.66% 7.25%           5.07%
1906 76.75% 9.83% 7.62%           5.80%
1907 73.74% 10.29% 8.70%           7.27%
1908 74.27% 10.08% 8.53%           7.12%
1909 75.76% 10.19% 8.49%           5.57%
1910 73.66% 10.06% 7.94%           8.34%
1911 72.35% 10.42% 8.23%         0.36% 8.64%
1912 72.89% 10.19% 7.90%         0.33% 8.69%
1913 73.38% 10.39% 8.31%         0.27% 7.64%
1914 74.63% 10.48% 6.29%         0.34% 8.25%
1915 70.19% 10.19% 8.49%        
11.14%
1916 73.31% 10.13% 7.94%        
8.62%
1917 70.35% 10.54% 8.35%        
10.76%
1918 71.97% 12.32% 9.24%        
6.47%
1919 67.49% 11.37% 8.12%         0.71% 12.31%
1920 66.91% 11.33% 8.50%         0.37% 12.89%
1921 62.86% 10.70% 10.17%         0.35% 15.92%
1922 68.39% 11.53% 10.61%         0.61% 8.88%
1924 65.77% 11.44% 2.18%   12.15%     0.36% 8.10%
1925 64.96% 11.25% 3.37%   11.81%     0.74% 7.87%
1926 73.87% 7.09%     9.31%     0.62% 9.10%
1927 72.62% 6.29%     9.35%     0.55% 11.19%
1928 72.26% 6.79%     8.91%     0.49% 11.55%
1929 72.74% 6.83%     8.97%     0.50% 10.96%
1930 72.74% 6.83%     8.97%     0.50% 10.96%
1931 72.71% 6.52%     8.55%     0.61% 11.61%
1932 70.12% 6.75%     8.86%     0.74% 13.53%
1933 71.58% 6.88%     9.03%     0.69% 11.81%
1936 54.57% 6.11%     8.02% 18.46%   0.80% 12.04%
1937 54.28% 6.08%     7.98% 18.36%   0.80% 12.50%
1938 54.42% 6.10%     8.00% 17.61%   1.60% 12.27%
1938 54.57% 6.11%     8.02% 18.46%   0.80% 12.04%
1939 72.83% 6.10%     8.00%     0.80% 12.27%
1940 57.32% 6.07%     7.96% 19.90%   0.80% 7.96%
Sources:
Whitbread brewing records held at the Lonndon Metropolitan Archives, document numbers LMA/4453/D/09/001 to LMA.4453/D/09/126.