I had to look this one up to see what it was.
3.5. Abraded malt is permitted at proportions of up to 100% of the total malt grist at all breweries.
Tetley Beer and Malt Specifications, 1985, malt page 2.
I'll let the scientists do the explaining again.
It has recently been shown that mechanical abrasion of barley grains, by a process which removed only very small quantities of husk, permitted exogeneous gibberellic acid to reach a larger number of aleurone cells, thus increasing the production of enzymes and modification of the endosperm.That sounds fairly harmless.
Abrasion of the grain was achieved by a mechanical hand-mill which consistently rendered the pericarp layer at the nonembryo (distal) end of the grain permeable to gibberellic acid without damaging the embryo or the overlying husk. Micro-scale malting trials using gibberellic acid revealed that malts produced from abraded grain were visually identical with control malts but gave higher hot water extracts.
The present results describe the performance, in pilot malting and brewing plants, of comparatively large quantities of abraded barley.
Malting and Brewing with Abraded Barley, Journal of the Institute of Brewing, Vol. 76, 1970, By G.H. Palmer, J. Barrett and B.H. Kirsop, page 65.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/j.2050-0416.1970.tb03263.x
Now the permitted vatieties of barley.
3.4. Permitted varieties.It may come as a surpprise that Maris Otter, the classic Ale barley variety, was only only allowed in Castlemaine XXXX, a Lager. Halcyon was added later, as it's just written in pencil.
3.4.1. Proctor
3.4.2. Maris Otter*
3.4.3. Mazurka
3.4.4. Golden Promise
3.4.5. Midas
3.4.6. Ark Royal
3.4.7. Triumph*
3.4.8. Keg
3.4.9. Tipper*
3.4.10 Halcyon
* Permitted for Castlemaine XXXX
Tetley Beer and Malt Specifications, 1985, malt page 2.
I don't think I'll bore you with the lager malt specifications. Unless someone insists on it. Otherwise I'll be heading straight onto cask Tetley Bitter.
4 comments:
Was it that Maris Otter was only allowed in the lager beer, or that the starred varieties were allowed in the ales but also the lager?
Dan Klingman,
Maris Otter was only allowed in the Lager.
Have you thought about a tribute to O’ Hara’s Leann Folláin
Maybe that's why I didn't mind 4X so much! Mind you, the adjuncts...
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