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Sunday, 13 August 2023

Southwestern Bitter in 1972

Been fumbling about in the manuscript of "Keg!". Not writing long chunks. Just filling in holes. Which is how I work. And I'm sure every other author. Lay out the structure of chapters and subheadings. Then just slowly fill all the empty bits in. When I can be arsed.

I should have started earlier turning my 1970's posts into book blogs, as I like to call them. Paragraphs or even just sentences that end up in my books.  

My fumbling about has got me up to 30,000 words and 105 pages. This is a section I wrote yesterday.

The set from Southwest England is shockingly large. Especially as it includes some tiny breweries in the homebrew houses of the Blue Anchor and Three Tuns.

It has the lowest average price of 13p. And also includes the cheapest beer of all, Devenish Bitter at just 11.5d. Though, having a weedy gravity of just under 1030º, it’s the weakest Bitter of all. In terms of both gravity and ABV.

While we’re talking about Devenish, Saxon looks very much like a keg version of the Bitter. Just costing 1p a pint more. Great that keg surcharge, isn’t it? Both beers look very much like the regional style of Boy’s Bitter. A type of Bitter with a gravity and bitterness level closer to a Light Mild.

Best value are beers from the handful of surviving homebrew pubs, the Blue Anchor and Three Tuns. With the Bitter from the latter being the best value of all the beers analysed. While Blue Anchor Spingo had the highest OG of any of the beers, almost 10º higher than number two.

Quite an odd set, really. As it contains both the strongest and weakest beers. Which, overall, has the second-highest average OG.

These Bitters also include those with the worst degree of attenuation. Both Blue Anchor beers barely creep above 60% attenuation.

Southwestern Bitter in 1972
Brewer Beer Price per pint (p) º gravity per p % ABV per p OG FG ABV App. Atten-uation
Devenish Saxon 12.5 2.47 0.22 1030.9 1010 2.70 67.64%
Devenish Bitter 11.5 2.57 0.23 1029.6 1008.8 2.70 70.27%
Hall & Woodhouse Forum 14 2.92 0.28 1040.9 1010.8 3.90 73.59%
Blue Anchor Ordinary 12 2.98 0.23 1035.8 1014.1 2.80 60.61%
Hall & Woodhouse Badger Best 13 3.12 0.31 1040.5 1009.7 4.00 76.05%
Blue Anchor Spingo 16 3.24 0.26 1051.9 1019.4 4.20 62.62%
Three Tuns Bitter 12 3.42 0.35 1041 1008.7 4.20 78.78%
Average   13 2.96 0.27 1038.7 1011.6 3.50 69.94%
Source:
Daily Mirror July 10th 1972, page 15.


4 comments:

  1. Three Tuns bitter the best value for money.
    Oscar

    ReplyDelete
  2. Is Spingo a regional variant of Stingo or something else entirely?

    ReplyDelete
  3. My recollection of drinking these West Country bitters in the mid-1970s was that they tended to be on the sweet side, and were all dark amber in colour. It was a real regional marker.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That is interesting I had heard and seen about regional style bitters.
      Oscar

      Delete