Today it's the turn of Scotland. Actually, more like just Edinburgh.
"The visitor to Scotland will need to know that mild and bitter are not locally used terms. Heavy beer is the equivalent to best bitter; there is very little mild sold outside England. Heavy is also IPA, and below this strength are No.3 Scotch Ale, XX and X. No.3 is a sweet, full-flavoured beer, stronger than most English best milds, and is available on draught and in bottle in London and elsewhere in England.
The ale which is in the tradition of the old-time strong Edinburgh ales is the No.1, sold on draught and in bottles. It is a handsome beer, of mellow sweet flavour, of the same strength as Barclay's Winter Brew, and coming into the group of strong ales that retail between three shillings and twopence and three shillings and sixpence a pint. To-day, when bottled, it tends to be rather strongly carbonated.
Double Century, a full, spicy nut brown ale, was bottled first in 1949. For strength it comes rather above the run of national beers but below the strong ales.
Younger's brown ales and sweet stouts are stronger than the run of popular brown ales and stouts in England. They have a popular light pale ale which is called Holyrood Pale Ale in England and Wee Willie in Scotland. There is also Monk Export, fully fermented before bottling, and pasteurized, paler, more bitter, and of a similar strength to No. 3 Scotch Ale.
Of the other Edinburgh breweries' products, few reach Southern England. Wm McEwan's have many tied houses in Newcastle and the North. Robert Younger of St. Anns Brewery, Edinburgh have recently announced that they are bottling for the first time a range of beers that include Export, Strong Ale and Pale Ales; a Heavy Oat Creme Stout, a lighter Sweet Stout, and and Old Edinburgh Ale. Thomas Ushers, not to be confused with the Wiltshire brewery of the same name, bottle a Pale Ale, a Golden Rule Ale, Strong, Pale and Export Ales and a Sweet Stout."
"The Book Of Beer" by Andrew Campbell, 1956, pages 207-208.
Younger's No.3. I can rememebr brewing a clone of that back in the early 1970's. When it wasn't being brewed commercially. (A bit like now.)
Here are details of Yonger's beers of the period:
Wm. Younger beers in the 1950's | |||||||||||
Year | Beer | Style | Price | size | package | Acidity | FG | OG | Colour | ABV | attenuation |
1950 | Brown Ale | Brown Ale | 11d | half | bottled | 0.05 | 1011.4 | 1032.6 | 40 + 27 | 2.74 | 65.03% |
1950 | Double Century Ale | Strong Ale | 1/6d | half | bottled | 0.07 | 1020.1 | 1058.4 | 40 + 9 | 4.96 | 65.58% |
1950 | Scotch Ale | Scotch Ale | half | bottled | 0.12 | 1017.5 | 1087.6 | 5 + 40 | 9.21 | 80.02% | |
1951 | Sweet Stout | Stout | 1/2d | half | bottled | 0.06 | 1019.5 | 1035.7 | 1 + 10 | 2.08 | 45.38% |
1951 | X | Mild | 13d | pint | draught | 1029.98 | 72 | ||||
1952 | "Monk" Export | Pale Ale | 1/1d | half | bottled | 0.07 | 1011.6 | 1046.9 | 24 | 4.59 | 75.27% |
1952 | X | Mild | 14d | pint | draught | 1033.48 | 92 | ||||
1952 | Scotch Ale | Scotch Ale | bottled | 0.11 | 1021.7 | 1083.5 | 8 + 40 | 8.07 | 74.01% | ||
1953 | Century Ale | Strong Ale | 1/6d | half | bottled | 0.05 | 1021.4 | 1056.4 | 71 B | 4.52 | 62.06% |
1953 | Monk Export | Pale Ale | 1/3d | half | bottled | 0.05 | 1009 | 1044.9 | 29 B | 4.67 | 79.96% |
1953 | Strong Ale | Strong Ale | 1/2.5d | nip | bottled | 0.05 | 1024.2 | 1071.2 | 9 + 40 | 6.09 | 66.01% |
1953 | X | Mild | 14d | pint | draught | 1033.31 | 82 | ||||
1954 | Nourishing Stout | Stout | 1/2d | half | bottled | 0.05 | 1021.6 | 1046.3 | 1 + 16 | 3.18 | 53.35% |
1954 | Monk Export Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | 0.05 | 1008.9 | 1046.7 | 26 | 4.92 | 80.94% | ||
1954 | Capital Stout (Lactose present) | Stout | 1/4d | half | bottled | 0.04 | 1019.7 | 1046.5 | 250 | 3.45 | 57.63% |
1954 | Double Century Ale | Brown Ale | 18d | half | bottled | 0.05 | 1023.3 | 1056.6 | 80 | 4.29 | 58.83% |
1955 | 90/- Sparkling Ale | Pale Ale | 1/- | half | bottled | 0.04 | 1006.8 | 1032 | 32 | 3.27 | 78.75% |
1955 | 90/- Holyrood Ale | Pale Ale | 1/- | half | bottled | 0.04 | 1006.7 | 1031.6 | 35 | 3.23 | 78.80% |
1955 | IPA | 9.5d | half | bottled | 0.04 | 1006.9 | 1030.2 | 22 | 3.02 | 77.15% | |
1955 | X | Mild | 14d | pint | draught | 1030.24 | 96 | ||||
1955 | Sweet Stout | Stout | 15d | half | bottled | 0.05 | 1017.5 | 1034.9 | 200 | 2.24 | 49.86% |
1955 | No. 1 Strong Ale | Scotch Ale | 15d | nip | bottled | 0.04 | 1024.3 | 1071.4 | 80 | 6.11 | 65.97% |
1955 | Monk Export Ale | Pale Ale | 15d | half | bottled | 0.05 | 1010.6 | 1044.8 | 21 | 4.44 | 76.34% |
1956 | "Wee Willie" Brown Ale | Brown Ale | 1/- | half | bottled | 0.04 | 1009.6 | 1033.5 | 70 | 3.10 | 71.34% |
1956 | Wee Willie PA | Pale Ale | 11d | half | bottled | 0.05 | 1006.4 | 1031.1 | 25 | 3.21 | 79.42% |
1956 | Brown Ale | 1/1d | half | bottled | 0.06 | 1013.2 | 1046.8 | 75 | 4.36 | 71.79% | |
1957 | Double Century Ale | Strong Ale | 2/2d | 16 oz | bottled | 0.06 | 1018.6 | 1051.5 | 80 | 4.25 | 63.88% |
1957 | Monk Export Ale | Pale Ale | 2/2d | 16 oz | bottled | 0.05 | 1010.3 | 1045.6 | 20 | 4.59 | 77.41% |
1957 | Brown Ale | 1/2d | half | bottled | 0.05 | 1013.1 | 1046.6 | 55 | 4.34 | 71.89% | |
1959 | Capital Stout | Stout | 15d | half | bottled | 1021.6 | 1043.7 | 376 | 2.84 | 50.57% | |
1959 | Sweet Stout | Stout | 14d | half | bottled | 1013.1 | 1033.3 | 300 | 2.61 | 60.66% | |
1959 | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | 12d | half | bottled | 0.02 | 1008 | 1029.9 | 24 | 2.74 | 73.24% |
1959 | Holyrood Ale | Pale Ale | 10d | half | bottled | 0.04 | 1006.5 | 1028.7 | 30 | 2.78 | 77.35% |
1959 | XXP Bitter | Pale Ale | 22d | pint | draught | 0.04 | 1005.7 | 1030.4 | 21 | 3.21 | 81.25% |
1959 | Keg Bitter | Pale Ale | 19d | pint | draught | 0.04 | 1007.8 | 1043.7 | 55 | 4.68 | 82.15% |
Sources: | |||||||||||
Whitbread Gravity Book | |||||||||||
Truman Gravity Book |
Can't see much evidence there of Younger's Sweet Stouts and Brown Ales being stronger than English equivalents. Other than the Edinburgh Brown Ale, which was in the high 1040's. Note the puny gravity of their 90/- Ale. Not quite what some style Nazis would have you believe a 90/- was like.
Those two 90/– bottled beers with almost the same gravity look suspiciously as if one was the bottle-conditioned version of the other.
ReplyDeleteAny chance you recall that Youngers No. 3 clone recipe. This beer has for whatever reason taken on legendary status for me though it was well before my time. I've brewed the 1913 42% Maize version from your book, I'd be interested to see how it evolved over the years.
ReplyDeleteHundreds of posts about Harp and nothing in response to Scotch Ale.
ReplyDeleteIt just shows how long ago it has been since decent beer came out of Scotland. No-one can remember any.
Everyone remembers Harp, though, and everyone probably thinks they could have done better. And they're possibly right.
Scotch Ale, eh? That's another for the to-brew list... after Lichtenheiner, though.
Stuart P, there's better beer being brewed in Scotland now than any time in the last century.
ReplyDeletethe prices for draught beer in 1959 seem expensive i seem to remember that was the price of beer in Dundee in 1970.
ReplyDeleteAnon. - can I call you that? - these could be the London prices. They were recorded by two London brewers.
ReplyDelete