Sunday 14 January 2024

Perry Beers just after WW II

Continuing on the Irish theme, we're taking a look at the beers of a small brewery in the aftermath of WW II.

To say there had been a cull in Perry’s beers across the war would be an understatement. Only two remain: XX and IPA. Leaving a range of beers which doesn’t look particularly Irish.

In particular, the lack of a Black Beer of any description. During the war, Perry brewed two: Porter and XX Stout. The latter seems to have been dropped during the war, the former just after its end.

Both have, as you would expect, reduced gravities. More extreme in the case of IPA, down from 1052º to 1038º. While XX has only lost 7º. The changes leave the two with the same 1038º gravity.

What’s the difference between the two, then? Rather more hops in the IPA and rather more black malt in the XX, to put it simply. The hopping rates (per quarter) are much the same as before the war. As is the rate of attenuation.

IPA no longer includes crystal malt. And neither it nor XX has any malt extract.

The supply situation has obviously improved, due to the presence of American hops. Being from Yakima gives it rather the look of a modern beer. The vast majority of the hops are English and American, as pre-war.

Really not much more to discuss here, given the limited number of beers and ingredients.

Perry beers in 1947
Beer Style OG FG ABV App. Atten-uation lbs hops/ qtr hops lb/brl
XX Mild 1038 1011.5 3.51 69.74% 4.97 0.85
IPA IPA 1038 1013.0 3.31 65.79% 6.62 1.10
Source:
Perry brewing records held at the local studies department of Laois county library.

 

Perry grists in 1947
Beer Style OG pale malt black malt hops
XX Mild 1038 96.18% 3.82% English, Yakima
IPA IPA 1038 99.35% 0.65% English, Yakima
Source:
Perry brewing records held at the local studies department of Laois county library.

 

This is an excerpt from my recently-released Blitzkrieg!, the definitive book on brewing during WW II.

Get your copy now!

The second volume contains the recipes. But not just that. There are also overviews of some of the breweries covered, showing their beers at the start and the end of the conflict.

Buy one now and be the envy of your friends!

Both volumes are also available on Kindle:

Volume I

Volume 2

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

How similar was Ireland's brewing industry taxing to the UK?

Ron Pattinson said...

Anonymous,

the tax system was exactly the same, based on: OG before fermentation, reckoned in standard barrels of 1055º. Though the rates of tax weren't the same.

Anonymous said...

Were the tax rates at all similar? I don't have a good sense of how their economies compared after WW II or rhe financial needs of the governments, except things were very different in the two places.

Anonymous said...

As someone Irish person utterly stagnant but we had some hope with a Clann na Poblachta Fine Gael elected post war government which set out the successful eradication of TB in Ireland but its downfall was Noel Browne’s Mother and Child scheme.

Oscar