I'll admit it. I'm a bit of a mad collector when it comes to beer books. (I've just ordered another one: Ross Mackenzie's "A Standard Manual of Brewing and Malting and Laboratory Companion". Please don't tell Dolores.) Sometimes it takes me a while to get around to going through them properly.
Wallenstein Laboratory Communications. Great name for a publication. I stumbled across it when doing some web search or other. It looked like they contained interesting information, so I bought a couple. Most articles are very technical. Stuff about yeast and that sort of thing. At one time I would have found such material deathly dull. Now I'm frustrated by my lack of scientific education. If only I'd taken A-level chemistry. Then I might have understood the organic chemistry bits better.
As usual, I've wandered away from the primary thrust od this post. An article in Communications, published at the end of 1943 about brewing in wartime Britain. Beer in the two world wars is one of my specialist subjects. (And the subject of my subtly-named book "War!".) A lot of the topics covered in the article - like the use of flafed barley and oats - I already knew about. But I wouldn't be bothering you with any of this if I hadn't found much that was new to me. Expect a few more posts over the coming week. That's if I can find room between all Allsopp and Bass posts.
Cask conditioning was pretty much universal in 1940's Britain. Unlike the USA. The problem being, that when something is so common and everyday, people don't bother describing it in detail. They assume it's a waste of time explaining something everyone already knows. Fortunately, this article was written for an American audience. Hence the author relates details he wouldn't have if he'd had British readers in mind.
"Cask conditioning
In Great Britain cask conditioning is done as follows: After the primary fermentation is completed, the top yeast skimmed and most of the remainder has settled to the bottom, the beer is racked into casks containing just enough primary yeast in suspension to promote conditioning in cask; this varies from 0.2 to 2 million healthy cells per cc of beer. To induce quick conditioning and consumption of the beer as nearly as possible within a day or two of its attaining the optimum of condition, just the right concentration of yeast cells and fermentable sugar (whether priming be added for the latter purpose or not) should be present. The casks are maintained at about 55-60º F and rolled at intervals - or if in conditioning tanks the beer is roused - to keep the yeast in suspension. Later the beer is fined very shortly before drinking. Everything depends on the above conditions being controlled, and the beer delivered to the tied house a day or two before it is to be drunk.
The tied house in England, with good pre-war transport facilities available, developed a quick trade in draught beer, and the whole of the brewery was organized to produce and deliver twice per week. Nowadays deliveries are being restricted to once per week. This change has probably had more influence on the quality of the draught beer as consumed than all the technological problems discussed above. Medium and low, especially low-gravity beers, are perishable commodities and should be treated as such. A twice weekly delivery of milk would have alarming effects on a community which does not possess one refrigerator to a hundred working-class houses. The longer storage of the beer enforced in the public house is more often the cause of its deteriorated quality than was the case in peacetime; even in those days, it was here that the brewer most usually failed. Another effect of distribution difficulties has been the frequent practice of brewers who do a considerable trade in a distant town - distant by British standards — to enter into a reciprocal agreement with a firm in that town to supply beer to their consumers. We may take the case of brewery "A" which sells beer in the town in which brewery "B" is situated, while brewery "B" has a good trade in town"A". As a result of the agreement brewery "B" brews special beer to brewery "A's" prescription, as regards original gravity, hop rate, etc., and supplies it as brewery "A's" beer to the latter's licensed houses. Similarly brewery "A" performs the same service for brewery "B" in town "A." Amusing cases are reported such as that of a consumer in "B's" public house drinking what he thinks is "B's" brew and declaring how greatly superior it is to "A's" beer, when, in fact, "A" has made the beer. More often, however, when the beer supplied has been changed for the above reasons there is a notice exhibited stating so, and the consumer knows what he is getting."
"Wallenstein Laboratories Communications, December 1943, Volume VI, number 19" pages 158 - 159.
Priming. It was a key technique in the 20th century. Key to getting cask beer into condition and ready to drink as soon as possible. It seems to have been rather forgotten about, though I'm sure many breweries in Britain do still prime, especially the older ones.
By 1943, the war had put a dent in beer gravities. As you can see from these tables:
Whitbread beers in 1939 |
Date | Year | Beer | Style | OG | FG | ABV | App. Atten-uation | lbs hops/ qtr | hops lb/brl | barrels | lbs hops | qtrs malt | boil time (hours) | boil time (hours) | colour |
9th Aug | 1939 | MS | Stout | 1051.0 | 1015.5 | 4.70 | 69.61% | 6.94 | 1.41 | 290 | 930 | 134 | 1.25 | 1.42 | 19 brown 1 red |
10th Aug | 1939 | P | Porter | 1029.7 | 1007.5 | 2.94 | 74.75% | 6.89 | 0.83 | 65 | 937 | 136 | 1.25 | 1.42 | 15 brown 1 red |
10th Aug | 1939 | LS | Stout | 1045.2 | 1013.5 | 4.19 | 70.13% | 6.89 | 1.26 | 216 | 937 | 136 | 1.25 | 1.42 | 18 brown 1 red |
10th Aug | 1939 | LOS | Stout | 1045.2 | 1013.5 | 4.19 | 70.13% | 6.89 | 1.26 | 190 | 937 | 136 | 1.25 | 1.42 | 18 brown 1 red |
27th Sep | 1939 | PA | Pale Ale | 1048.2 | 1012.0 | 4.79 | 75.10% | 7.33 | 1.41 | 695 | 982 | 134 | 1.17 | 1.08 | 22 |
26th Sep | 1939 | IPA | IPA | 1037.1 | 1008.0 | 3.85 | 78.44% | 10.00 | 1.51 | 740 | 1120 | 112 | 1.5 | 1.75 | 18 |
26th Sep | 1939 | X | Mild | 1033.9 | 1010.5 | 3.10 | 69.03% | 8.27 | 1.11 | 809 | 897 | 108.5 | 1.25 | 1 | 17 + 40 |
25th Sep | 1939 | LA | Mild | 1028.4 | 1009.0 | 2.57 | 68.31% | 8.27 | 0.93 | 30 | 897 | 108.5 | 1.25 | 1 | 11 + 40 |
21st Sep | 1939 | DB | Brown Ale | 1054.5 | 1018.0 | 4.83 | 66.97% | 8.49 | 1.92 | 175 | 1146 | 135 | 1.25 | 1 | 16 + 40 |
21st Sep | 1939 | 33 | Strong Ale | 1061.0 | 1020.0 | 5.42 | 67.21% | 8.49 | 2.15 | 376 | 1146 | 135 | 1.25 | 1 | 18 + 40 |
Sources: Whitbread brewing records held at the London Metropolitan Archives Documents: LMA/4453/D/01/107, LMA/_4453/D/09/126 |
Whitbread beers in 1943 |
Date | Year | Beer | Style | OG | FG | ABV | App. Atten-uation | lbs hops/ qtr | hops lb/brl | barrels | lbs hops | qtrs malt | boil time (hours) | boil time (hours) | colour |
1st Apr | 1943 | IPA | IPA | 1031.2 | 1005.5 | 3.40 | 82.37% | 8.53 | 1.13 | 818 | 921 | 108 | 1.25 | 1.25 | 20 |
3rd Apr | 1943 | PA | Pale Ale | 1038.5 | 1009.5 | 3.84 | 75.32% | 6.03 | 1.01 | 752 | 760 | 126 | 1.08 | 1.25 | 26 |
5th Apr | 1943 | XX | Mild | 1027.8 | 1008.0 | 2.62 | 71.22% | 6.07 | 0.76 | 1605 | 1220 | 201 | 1 | 1.25 | 15 + 40 |
24th Apr | 1943 | XXXX | Strong Ale | 1043.8 | 1013.0 | 4.07 | 70.32% | 6.70 | 1.25 | 292 | 365 | 54.5 | 1 | 0.75 | 17 + 40 |
4th Feb | 1943 | MS | Stout | 1042.5 | 1014.0 | 3.77 | 67.06% | 5.00 | 0.93 | 712 | 660 | 132 | 1 | 1.25 | 19 brown 1 red |
9th Feb | 1943 | LS | Stout | 1039.8 | 1012.0 | 3.68 | 69.85% | 6.52 | 1.13 | 379 | 860 | 132 | 1 | 0.75 | 16.5 brown 1 red |
9th Feb | 1943 | LOS | Stout | 1039.8 | 1012.0 | 3.68 | 69.85% | 6.52 | 1.13 | 379 | 860 | 132 | 1 | 0.75 | 16.5 brown 1 red |
Sources: Whitbread brewing records held at the London Metropolitan Archives Documents: LMA/4453/D/01/110, LMA/_4453/D/09/127 |
XX Mild had fallen below 1030. IPA, their biggest-selling bottled beer, was just above that mark. London Stout and PA (their standard Bitter) don't look that bad by modern standards at 1039. But that's between 7 and 9 points lower than four years earlier. And the gravity cuts were by no means over. Gravities finally hit their nadir in 1947, a couple of years after the ned of hostilities.
MS, in case you're wondering, is Mackeson.
Cask beer remains a product with a limited shelf life. Especially the low-gravity beers which still make up the majority of trade. You can see the sense of weekly deliveries from a fuel conservation point of view. I'd never considered delivery schedules as a possible threat to beer quality.
I love story about drinkers praising beer, not realising it came from a brewery they didn't like. The same phenomenon can be observed in blind tastings. Often drinkers will pick as their favourite a beer they thought they hated.