Tuesday 1 October 2019

William Younger’s beers in 1939

To say that Younger brewed a baffling range of beers is no overstatement. While most Scottish brewers limited themselves to three or four different strengths of Pale Ale, a Strong Ale and perhaps a Stout.

When war erupted, Younger were brewing seven Pale Ales, three Mild Ales, two Strong/Scotch Ales and a Stout. In total, thirteen. And that’s just in the Abbey brewery

It’s odd that Younger produced three Pale Ales – Pale XXPS, XXPS and LAE – at identical gravities. The only difference being the hopping rate, which went from 3 lbs per quarter (336 lbs) of malt for XXPS, to 4.75 lbs per quarter for LAE.

I’m pretty confident that LAE was an exclusively bottled beer and XXPS exclusively draught. Pale XXPS I’m not sure about but, as the name doesn’t include Btlg, I’m reasonably confident that this was also a bottled beer.

The three gravity levels of the Pale Ales – 1033º, 1040º, 1046º, 1053º - fit nicely into the pre-war strength bands. In London, these would have equated to beers retailing at 5d, 6d, 7d and 8d per pint, respectively. Though, as beer was generally a little more expensive in Scotland, the actual process in Edinburgh were probably 1d per pint more.

Similarly, the three Mild Ales fit into the 4d, 5d and 6d per pint categories. It’s extremely unusual for a Scottish brewery to have been producing three different Mild Ales in the 1930s. Most didn’t produce a single genuine Mild Ale. Though I suspect that a weak Pale Ale coloured with caramel at racking time was often used as a substitute for Mild.

Most Scottish breweries made a Strong/Scotch Ale (what it was called depended on which side of the border you were: Strong Ale in Scotland, Scotch Ale in England) along the lines of Younger’s No. 1.

But No. 3 seems to have been a style of beer exclusive to Younger. Possibly it existed on account of the trade they did in London. Certainly in the 1950s No. 3 took the place of Burton Ale in the pubs supplied by Younger. They brewed a surprisingly large amount of it, as you’ll see in the second table.

This is based on a fairly random selection of photographs of the Abbey Brewery brewing book from late 1939 and early 1940. But I think it gives a reasonable idea of the relative amounts being produced of each different beer. The four most common – No. 3, LAE, XXP Btlg and XXPS – account for around 70% of what was brewed.


William Younger Abbey beers 1939 - 1940
Date Year Beer Style OG FG ABV App. Atten-uation lbs hops/ qtr hops lb/brl
29th Nov 1939 1 Strong Ale 1084 1028.0 7.41 66.67% 4.74 1.60
23rd Nov 1939 3 Strong Ale 1053 1015.0 5.03 71.70% 3.00 0.60
14th Nov 1939 DBS Btlg Stout 1066 1023.0 5.69 65.15% 6.06 1.59
17th Nov 1939 X Mild 1029 1012.0 2.25 58.62% 2.50 0.28
23rd Nov 1939 XX Mild 1032 1012.0 2.65 62.50% 2.67 0.31
4th Dec 1939 XXX Mild 1037 1012.0 3.31 67.57% 2.50 0.36
1st Apr 1940 XP Btlg Pale Ale 1033 1010.0 3.04 69.70% 4.71 1.22
22nd Nov 1939 XXP Btlg Pale Ale 1040 1013.0 3.57 67.50% 4.21 0.63
6th Dec 1939 XXPS Btlg Pale Ale 1040 1011.0 3.84 72.50% 4.21 0.57
22nd Nov 1939 Pale XXPS Pale Ale 1046 1014.0 4.23 69.57% 4.13 0.73
4th Dec 1939 LAE Pale Ale 1046 1012.0 4.50 73.91% 4.78 0.82
28th Nov 1939 XXPS Pale Ale 1046 1012.0 4.50 73.91% 3.04 0.52
24th Nov 1939 Ext Pale Ale 1053 1014.0 5.16 73.58% 5.40 1.10
Source:
William Younger brewing record held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/2/76.



William Younger Abbey beers 1939 - 1940
Beer Style No. of brews barrels %
1 Strong Ale 4 456 2.92%
3 Strong Ale 23 2947 18.90%
DBS Btlg Stout 6 767 4.92%
Ext Pale Ale 5 613 3.93%
LAE Pale Ale 25 3343.5 21.44%
Pale XXPS Pale Ale 6 804 5.16%
X Mild 2 126 0.81%
XP Btlg Mild 2 188.5 1.21%
XX Pale Ale 8 908.5 5.83%
XXP Btlg Pale Ale 15 1876.5 12.03%
XXPS Pale Ale 20 2668.5 17.11%
XXPS Btlg Pale Ale 1 141.5 0.91%
XXX Mild 7 755 4.84%
Total        15,595
Source:
William Younger brewing record held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/2/76.

No comments: