Pages

Thursday, 26 December 2019

19th-century Scottish Porter and Stout

Spurred on by their enormous popularity amongst Scottish drinkers, local brewers began to brew their own versions to rival those brewed in England. Though it never quite attained the level of popularity in England, considerable quantities were brewed in Scotland.

Initially, these Scottish versions seem to have closely mimicked the London originals, in the second half of the 19th century Scottish Porter, and more importantly Stout, began to acquire their own unique character.

While most English provincial dropped brown malt from their Porter and Stout grists early in the 19th century, Scottish brewers continued to use it, and to use it large quantities.

By the 1870’s, William Younger had discontinued their Porter and introduced a new range of Stouts, S1, S2 and S3. These were far more lightly hopped than DBS and often contained large quantities of spent hops. S3 had an unusually low gravity for the 19th century, some examples being under 3% ABV. The new Stouts, in contrast to DBS, were not dry hopped.

Throughout this period William Younger aged Porter and DBS in vats. S1, S2 and S3, however, were not vatted.


William Younger Porter and Stout in 1851
Date Beer Style OG FG ABV App. Atten-uation lbs hops/ qtr hops lb/brl
3rd Nov BS Porter 1056 1015 5.42 73.21% 23.87 2.86
11th Oct BS Porter 1057 1017 5.29 70.18% 21.75 3.08
29th Nov BS Porter 1060 1024 4.76 60.00% 27.37 3.17
29th Oct DBS Stout 1078 1015 8.33 80.77% 13.40 5.63
13th Dec DBS Stout 1089 1025 8.47 71.91% 14.00 5.68
Source:
William Younger brewing record held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/2/5.


William Younger Porter and Stout in 1879
Date Beer Style OG FG ABV App. Atten-uation lbs hops/ qtr hops lb/brl
19th Sep S1 Stout 1070 1026 5.82 62.86% 6.47 2.07
6th June S2 Stout 1060 1020 5.29 66.67% 3.33 0.87
13th June S3 Stout 1032 1011 2.78 65.63% all spent hops
11th Aug S3 Stout 1043 1010 4.37 76.74% 4.71 0.86
20th Nov DBS Stout 1073 1035 5.03 52.05% 12.86 5.00
Source:
William Younger brewing record held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number WY/6/1/2/28.


The above is an excerpt from my excellent book on Scottish brewing:





1 comment:

  1. Younger's stouts appear a lot in ads in newspapers in South Asia, Australia and the West Indies in and around the 1880s, so presumably a fair amount of brewing of stouts, as well as pale ales,was for the export market.

    ReplyDelete