In terms of conditioning, there were Keeping and Running versions. The former being aged for a period of months or years, while the latter was sold young. It’s possible that, as with Porter, aged and fresh versions were blended before sale. After 1860, aged beers fell rapidly out of fashion and only stronger Stouts were vatted.
The standard strength differentiations were Single, Double and Treble Stout. Obviously, in ascending order.
When you throw in Mid-Keeping, Export and extra strong Imperial Stout, a London brewer could easily produce ten different Stouts. Much of this variation was achieved by parti-gyling, through which multiple different strength Stouts could be spun from a single brew.
It should come as no surprise that the stronger the Stout, the more it cost. Here are a few examples, with Porter added in for reference. Porter being the standard-priced beer.
Porter averages out to be about 13.5d per gallon, which works out to around 2d per pint retail. Single Stout averages just shy of 18d per gallon and Double Stout around 20.5d.
All the Keeping Stouts ware vatted before. For a Single Stout, this might be just six to nine months. But for the strongest versions two years wasn’t unusual. As the ageing took place in wood, it’s inevitable that Brettanomyces would have been present.
The price of Stout 1840 - 1860 | ||||
year | Brewery | beer | price per barrel (s) | price per gallon (d) |
1845 | Truman | Prime London Porter | 48 | 16 |
1846 | Barclay Perkins | Porter | 38 | 12.67 |
1852 | John Lovibond | Porter | 36 | 12 |
1855 | A.E. Druce | Porter | 40 | 13.33 |
1855 | Calvert & Co. | Porter | 40 | 13.33 |
Average | 40.40 | 13.47 | ||
1845 | Truman | Prime London Stout | 60 | 20 |
1846 | Barclay Perkins | Stout Porter | 48 | 16 |
1855 | A.E. Druce | Single Brown Stout | 52 | 17.33 |
1855 | Calvert & Co. | Stout | 55 | 18.33 |
Average | 53.75 | 17.92 | ||
1846 | Barclay Perkins | Double Brown Stout | 58 | 19.33 |
1845 | Truman | Prime London Double Stout | 72 | 24 |
1852 | John Lovibond | Double Stout | 48 | 16 |
1855 | A.E. Druce | Double Brown Stout | 64 | 21.33 |
1855 | Calvert & Co. | Double Stout | 67 | 22.33 |
Average | 61.80 | 20.60 | ||
Sources: | ||||
Birmingham Gazette - Monday 07 July 1845, page 3. | ||||
Hampshire Advertiser - Saturday 21 November 1846, page 1. | ||||
"W. Archdeacon's Greenwich & Woolwich directory for 1852" page 2 | ||||
"Food and its adulterations" by Arthur Hill Hassall, 1855, page 51. |
What is the difference between Porter and Stout
ReplyDeleteAnonymous,
ReplyDeletethe quantity of water used. Stout is just the name for stronger versions of Porter.