The Porter and Stout grists are unusual in featuring three coloured malts, amber, brown and black. Most provincial breweries had simplified their Stout grists decades earlier to be just pale and black malt.
I’ve no real idea what the sugar was. It looks like “Inality” that it’s described as. Which means nothing to me at all.
The all-malt nature of Tetley’s beers wasn’t to last long, as we’ll see when we look at their beers in 1904.
Tetley grists in 1888 | |||||||
Beer | Style | pale malt | black malt | MA malt | brown malt | amber malt | Inality? |
X | Mild | 66.48% | 22.16% | 11.36% | |||
X1 | Mild | 33.96% | 56.60% | 9.43% | |||
X2 | Mild | 37.50% | 62.50% | ||||
X3 | Mild | 49.49% | 50.51% | ||||
K | Pale Ale | 50.00% | 50.00% | ||||
PA | Pale Ale | 100.00% | |||||
P | Porter | 75.00% | 8.33% | 8.33% | 8.33% | ||
S | Stout | 80.00% | 6.67% | 6.67% | 6.67% | ||
Source: | |||||||
Tetley brewing record held at the West Yorkshire Archives, document number WYL756/44/ACC1903. |
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