They certainly seem to have been pleased in Hull.
“Hull Gets Stronger Beer
STRONGER BEER authorised by the Cripps Budget is already on sale in one Hull public-house, one at Beverley and in several Hull clubs. Other brewers expect to get draught beer on the market by the middle of next week, but bottled beer generally will be another few weeks before it is any stronger.
One Hull brewery said. "Just when the stronger beer goes on sale depends partly on what stocks of the old beer licensees have in their cellars."
LUCKY CUSTOMERS
A Hull spokesman for a Midland firm of brewers said. We do not expect our matured beers will be on sale before May 18. It takes something like 21 days to mature. It goes into store for two or three days, and then into customers' cellars. According to what stocks they have, it may take two or three more days before it is on the market. Our stronger bottled beer will not be available for another six weeks."
Another firm of Midland brewers in Hull said, "We have been able to get the stronger beer into one Hull public-house, one at Beverley and several Hull clubs."
LONGER FOR BOTTLED
A Hull bottling firm who handle Danish beers exclusively said, "It will be two or three weeks yet before we get the stronger beer."
The Hull office of a London firm who specialise in bottled beers and stouts said, "Draught beer can be processed and put straight into casks for sale to the licensees. But the procedure with bottled beer is much more complicated and it may be another three weeks or a month before we have it on the market."
Hull Daily Mail - Thursday 27 April 1950, page 3.
You can tell that appeared in a local paper, with its total disregard of everywhere outside the Hull area. From the title of the article you might have thought that it was only Hull lucky enough to be getting stronger beer and everywhere else would have to put up with the weak stuff.
Some interesting nuggets there about the production methods for bottled beer. Namely that they matured ordinary strength bottled beer for three weeks and the strong stuff for 6 weeks.
Who might that London brewer specialising in bottled beer and Stout? My money would be on Whitbread or Watney.
This is how the tax and gravity changed:
Year | tax per standard barrel | average OG |
1949 | 343s 4.5d | 1033.88 |
1950 | 321s | 1036.99 |
And here’s an example of how one London brewer’s beers changed:
Mann bottled beers 1949 - 1950 | ||||||||
Year | Beer | Style | Price | size | OG | FG | ABV | App. Atten-uation |
1949 | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | 16d | pint | 1030.3 | 1004.4 | 3.37 | 85.48% |
1949 | Brown Ale | Brown Ale | 17d | pint | 1032.9 | 1010.2 | 2.94 | 69.00% |
1949 | London Stout | Stout | 17d | pint | 1033.5 | 1012 | 2.78 | 64.18% |
1949 | Rustic Ale | Pale Ale | 22d | pint | 1043.3 | 1007 | 4.73 | 83.83% |
1950 | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | 8.5d | half pint | 1032.6 | 1007.6 | 3.24 | 76.69% |
1950 | Brown Ale | Brown Ale | 9d | half pint | 1035.8 | 1013.3 | 2.91 | 62.85% |
1950 | London Stout | Stout | 8.5d | half pint | 1036.8 | 1013.9 | 2.96 | 62.23% |
1950 | Rustic Ale | Pale Ale | 12d | half pint | 1045.1 | 1011.5 | 4.36 | 74.50% |
Source: | ||||||||
Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/002. |
You can see that on average the gravities increased by around 2º.
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