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Tuesday, 26 December 2023

Inside 1970s Mild Ale

I’m lucky enough to have quite a few brewing records for different Milds. No such a surprise, as just about every brewery was still making one in the 1970s. They come from diverse set of breweries, in different geographic locations and of different sizes. That heterogeneity is reflected in the character of the beers.

The gravities come from a very narrow band – 1030º to 1033º – despite there being a Best Mild (Boddington BM) present. Though wildly differing degrees of attenuation leave a broader spread of ABVs. Ranging from just 2.38% ABV to a mighty 3.9% ABV.

Five of the fourteen examples come in under 3% ABV. Which isn’t great. That’s in the waste of time drinking range. Interesting how many different results there were from very similar starting gravities.

Talking of differences, the hopping rates are all over the place. From a very minimal 2.62 lbs per quarter (336 lbs) of malt to a pretty hefty 6.49 lbs. With the average about splitting the difference at 4.43 lbs. Though there only a couple of beers that really had hopping at around that level.

I’m reluctant to draw too many conclusions from the IBU numbers, as most are calculated. With quite a few unknowns involved. Around 20 IBU would seem to be fairly typical. Though with some examples a good bit lower.

All three shades of Mild are represented: pale, semi-dark and dark. Fallstaff, Boddington and Whitbread being examples, respectively. I find it fascinating that the move of Mild from pale to dark, started at the end of the 19th century, has never been fully completed. With some beers stuck halfway and others not even started on the journey.

Don’t pay too much attention to the colour listed for Drybrough 60/-. It being Scottish, I’m sure that it was coloured up to a variety of darker shades at racking time.

Mild Ale 1969 - 1985
Year Brewer Beer OG FG ABV App. Atten-uation lbs hops/ qtr hops lb/brl colour IBU
1977 Adnams XXX 1032.0 1014.0 2.38 56.25% 5.73 0.78 17 20
1971 Boddington BM 1032.5 1003.0 3.90 90.77% 5.11 0.67 41 19
1971 Boddington XX 1030.5 1003.0 3.64 90.16% 5.67 0.76 75 19
1970 Drybrough B 60/- 1030.8       2.62 0.33 22 11
1975 Elgood MM 1030.0 1005.5 3.24 81.53% 4.00 0.47 60 13
1969 Fremlin XX 1033.0 1006.0 3.57 81.82% 6.49 0.65 56 19
1968 Fullers H 1031.2 1009.4 2.89 69.86% 4.98 0.58 84 17
1972 Higson H 1030.0       3.61 0.46 60 12
1971 Shepherd Neame MB 1031.3 1010.5 2.75 66.45% 3.26 0.44 100 13
1969 Truman LM 1031.9 1010.8 2.79 66.09% 4.13 0.52 105* 17
1972 Whitbread B. Mild 1030.8 1007.9 3.03 74.35% 3.10 0.41 105* 15
1985 Tetley Mild 1032.0 1007.0 3.31 78.13%     56* 24*
1985 Tetley Falstaff 1032.5 1006.5 3.44 80.00%     29* 26*
1971 Watney Special Mild 1032.0 1010.0 2.91 68.75%   0.80 76* 21
  Average   1031.5 1007.8 3.15 75.35% 4.43 0.57 63.3 17.6
Sources:
Adnams brewing record held at the brewery.
Boddington brewing record held at Manchester Central Library, document number M693/405/134.
Drybrough brewing record held at the Scottish Brewing Archive, document number D/6/1/1/9.
Elgood brewing record held at the brewery
Fremlin brewing record held at the Kent Archives, document number U3555/2/F/Bx2/1/93.
Fullers brewing record held at the brewery.
Higson brewing record.
Shepherd Neame brewing book held at the brewery, document number 1971 H-5O5.
Truman brewing record held by Derek Prentice.
Whitbread brewing record held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/09/141.


 

1 comment:

  1. With the Drybrough B 60/- being the most lightly hopped of them all as well as one of the weakest, does it make any difference to the averages if you take it out of the list altogether (seeing as it’s really a Pale Ale and not a true Mild)?

    I imagine there were a fair few English breweries who party-gyled their Mild with the Bitter too and it messes with my mental categories.

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