Monday 7 February 2022

London X Ale 1900 - 1915

It wasn’t only wars which negatively affected UK beer strength. A steady creep of tax increases also had an impact. Not the massive ones seen in WW I and WW II, but still enough to exert a downward pressure on gravities.

This second set of London X Ales has an average gravity of almost 5º lower than the ones from the last two decades of the 19th century. With a to be expected lowering of the alcohol content by 0.5% ABV. Especially as the average rate of attenuation remained exactly the same at just a shade over 75%.

The largest change, however, is in the hopping rate. Looking at the one which is gravity-neutral – per quarter (336 lbs) of malt – it’s fallen by 35%. A fall large enough to have changed the character of the beers. Especially as there wasn’t a switch to higher alpha acid hops. Because of the fall in gravity, the rate per barrel has fallen even more: 45%. 

London X Ale 1900 - 1915
Year Brewer OG FG ABV App. Atten-uation lbs hops/ qtr hops lb/brl
1900 Barclay Perkins 1052.8 1010.0 5.67 81.11% 8.01 1.75
1906 Barclay Perkins 1053.0 1012.7 5.33 75.96% 6.01 1.28
1909 Barclay Perkins 1053.9 1014.4 5.22 73.28% 7.50 1.65
1914 Barclay Perkins 1051.8 1013.9 5.02 73.26% 6.52 1.36
1900 Whitbread 1056.5 1013.0 5.75 76.97% 6.64 1.61
1905 Whitbread 1053.2 1013.0 5.32 75.56% 5.10 1.19
1910 Whitbread 1056.5 1016.0 5.36 71.69% 5.38 1.29
1914 Whitbread 1052.1 1010.0 5.57 80.80% 6.04 1.29
1902 Fullers 1051.0 1011.9 5.17 76.63% 5.43 1.21
1910 Fullers 1052.6 1014.7 5.01 72.08% 5.17 1.21
1914 Fullers 1050.7 1011.6 5.17 77.05% 5.44 2.38
1914 Courage 1054.6 1019.4 4.65 64.47% 4.96 1.05
1900 Truman 1052.6       8.18 1.87
1905 Truman 1052.6       6.27 1.51
1910 Truman 1056.8       4.26 1.06
1915 Noakes 1044.9 1010.5 4.54 76.54% 2.59 0.48
  Average 1052.8 1013.2 5.21 75.03% 5.84 1.39
Sources:
Barclay Perkins brewing records held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document numbers ACC/2305/1/593, ACC/2305/1/599, ACC/2305/1/601 and ACC/2305/1/603.
Whitbread brewing records held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document numbers LMA/4453/D/01/065, LMA/4453/D/01/070, LMA/4453/D/01/076 and LMA/4453/D/01/079.
Fullers brewing records held at the brewery.
Courage brewing record held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number ACC/2305/08/247.
Truman brewing records held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document numbers B/THB/C/181, B/THB/C/186 and B/THB/C/190.
Noakes brewing record held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number ACC/2305/17/34.



 

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Was anything else going on as far as tariffs or other trade restrictions? I'd be curious if there is any warning in beer history about the risks of jingoistic protectionism.

Ron Pattinson said...

Anonymous,

there was a big increase in the cost of brewing licences. As the amount was directly proportional to the quantity of beer produced, it was effectively an extra tax on beer.