At least in their Porter. Because from the 1860s, sugar was popping up almost universally in Whitbread’s Stouts. It may seem odd that the cheapest beer was sugar-free. But that’s to misunderstand 19th-century brewing. Sugar was employed for specific purposes. Not as a way of lowering costs.
When sugar does appear in Whitbread’s Porter just after 1900, it doesn’t appear to be a deliberate choice. But simply a result of falling Porter sales. Which meant it was mostly brewed as part of a parti-gyle with Stout. The recipe of which already contained sugar. There was always only going to be one loser in a clash of recipes.
It was a sign of the fading fortunes of Porter before the war that it was rarely brewed single-gyle. In 1900, it was still very much the boss of the parti-gyle. And that it was becoming the junior partner in parti-gyles. The brews from 1902-1903 are about five barrels of Porter to one of Stout. But in 1907, there’s a parti-gyle with almost twice as much Stout as Porter.
The hopping rate, as measured per quarter, continued to drop. From around 8 lbs before 1900, to around 5lbs after 1910. Unless they were using hops with more alpha acid – which is unlikely as Whitbread mostly sourced their hops from Kent and had done for a long while – this change must have impacted the character of the beer.
Whitbread Running Porter grists 1880 - 1914 | ||||||||||
Year | OG | FG | ABV | App. Atten-uation | lbs hops/ qtr | hops lb/brl | pale malt | brown malt | black malt | sugar |
1880 | 1056.5 | 1011.9 | 5.90 | 78.92% | 7.44 | 2.19 | 80.83% | 11.67% | 7.50% | |
1885 | 1055.7 | 1010.8 | 5.94 | 80.60% | 8.90 | 2.05 | 75.95% | 15.19% | 8.86% | |
1890 | 1057.1 | 1012.0 | 5.96 | 78.97% | 9.74 | 2.07 | 83.53% | 8.24% | 8.24% | |
1895 | 1058.4 | 1016.0 | 5.62 | 72.62% | 7.20 | 1.76 | 81.72% | 8.60% | 9.68% | |
1900 | 1055.7 | 1013.0 | 5.65 | 76.65% | 6.48 | 1.49 | 82.54% | 8.73% | 8.73% | |
1905 | 1054.5 | 1014.0 | 5.36 | 74.33% | 7.69 | 1.91 | 77.42% | 12.90% | 9.68% | 5.16% |
1910 | 1052.9 | 1014.5 | 5.08 | 72.59% | 4.96 | 1.15 | 74.86% | 13.71% | 11.43% | 9.14% |
1914 | 1053.0 | 1016.0 | 4.89 | 69.79% | 5.55 | 1.21 | 77.22% | 14.23% | 8.54% | 8.54% |
Sources: | ||||||||||
Whitbread brewing records held at the London Metropolitan archives, document numbers LMA/4453/D/09/075, LMA/4453/D/09/080, LMA/4453/D/09/084, LMA/4453/D/09/090, LMA/4453/D/09/094, LMA/4453/D/09/099, LMA/4453/D/09/104 and LMA/4453/D/09/108. |
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