Not that Stout was brewed without interruption throughout the war. Some brewers discontinued their Stout and simply sold their Porter as Stout. Once the most draconian limits on gravity were loosened, Stouts were on the menu again. Though obviously at a much lower strength than in 1914.
After the war, Porter in London went into terminal decline, limping through until WW II. While Stout continued to be brewed in large quantities. Though even it was becoming rarer on draught.
Over on the South bank of the river, Courage managed to brew their Stout right through the war. In contrast to Fullers, who dropped their Stout, but continued with their Porter. Courage did the exact opposite, discontinuing their Porter in early 1918 and not bringing it back until 1920.
Though if you look at Courage Stout in 1918, with its puny gravity of 1036.5º, it looks more like a Porter.
I’m surprised that Courage were able to brew a beer over 1060º as late as January 1918. Lucky devils who got to drink it. After surging over 1050º in late 1919, the gravity settled down in the mid-1040ºs right up until WW II. While many brewers opted to brew their Stout as an 8d per pint beer, Courage plumped for a 7d beer.
The hopping rate per quarter (336 lbs) of malt, other than a brief rise in 1915, was in decline throughout the war. Between 1914 1nd 1918 the fall was almost 25%.
Courage Double Stout/Stout 1914 - 1920 | ||||||||
Date | Year | Beer | OG | FG | ABV | App. Atten-uation | lbs hops/ qtr | hops lb/brl |
21st Oct | 1914 | Double Stout | 1078.9 | 1033.2 | 6.05 | 57.89% | 7.20 | 2.33 |
10th Mar | 1915 | Double Stout | 1078.9 | 1033.2 | 6.05 | 57.89% | 7.23 | 2.37 |
22nd Sep | 1915 | Double Stout | 1075.9 | 1032.1 | 5.79 | 57.66% | 8.09 | 2.62 |
1st Dec | 1915 | Double Stout | 1075.9 | 1025.5 | 6.67 | 66.42% | 7.13 | 2.28 |
10th May | 1916 | Double Stout | 1068.7 | 1024.9 | 5.79 | 63.71% | 7.26 | 2.24 |
3rd Jan | 1917 | Double Stout | 1071.7 | 1028.8 | 5.68 | 59.85% | 6.11 | 2.16 |
24th Oct | 1917 | Double Stout | 1063.7 | 1023.3 | 5.35 | 63.48% | 5.98 | 1.87 |
16th Jan | 1918 | Double Stout | 1063.7 | 1021.1 | 5.64 | 66.96% | 5.85 | 1.82 |
2nd May | 1918 | Stout | 1035.5 | 1008.0 | 3.63 | 77.34% | 5.52 | 1.00 |
2nd Jul | 1919 | Stout | 1048.5 | 1011.1 | 4.95 | 77.14% | 5.34 | 1.22 |
1st Oct | 1919 | Stout | 1053.7 | 1014.7 | 5.17 | 72.68% | 5.95 | 1.50 |
21st Jan | 1920 | Stout | 1043.8 | 1013.3 | 4.03 | 69.62% | 5.51 | 1.28 |
Sources: | ||||||||
Courage brewing records held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document numbers ACC/2305/08/247, ACC/2305/08/248, ACC/2305/08/249, ACC/2305/08/250 and ACC/2305/08/251. |
This is an excerpt from my new book on London Stout. Get your copy now!
I've seen it said that porter became completely extinct in British brewing for a few years in the 60s(?) or 70s (not sure when exactly). But would it be more accurate to say surviving porters were simply rebranded and subsumed into the, now weaker, stout lineups post-war? The beer was porter but the label said stout kind of thing?
ReplyDeleteCairnes as early as 1912 was walling its weakest porter single stout.
DeleteOscar