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Friday, 10 May 2024

Young's grists in 1975

Grist next. The malt content is pretty high, varying between 76% in the Mild, to 95% in Export Pale Ale. The latter had an impact on some brew of the other Pale Ales, as PA, PAB and SPA were all sometimes parti-gyled with Export Pale Ale. Which left those particular brews with a higher malt content than the standard versions.

The base malt is, in most cases, pale malt. Except sometimes the Pale Ales had mostly PA malt, a posher version of pale malt. And Saxon, which, unsurprisingly, went for lager malt.

Crystal malt only turns up in the three dark beers: Mild, Winter Warmer and Old Nick. Demonstrating once again that crystal malt was by no means universal in Pale Ales, even long after WW II.

One malt appears in every beer: enzymic. Which was used to adjust the pH of the mash.

Flaked maize, UK brewers’ adjunct of choice, shows up in every beer except for the Export Pale Ale parti-gyle. 

Young's grists in 1975
Beer Style pale malt PA malt lager malt crystal malt enzymic malt total malt flaked maize
BMA Mild 61.63%     9.48% 4.74% 75.85% 9.48%
PAB Pale Ale 81.63%       3.22% 84.85% 8.59%
YPV Pale Ale 90.13%       3.26% 93.38%  
PA Pale Ale 27.95% 53.75%     3.22% 84.92% 8.60%
SPA Pale Ale 81.06%       3.33% 84.39% 8.88%
SPA Pale Ale 81.67%       3.22% 84.89% 8.60%
Ram Rod Pale Ale 80.38%   1.09%   3.26% 84.73% 8.69%
EXPA Pale Ale 92.12%       3.33% 95.45% 0.00%
Winter Warmer Strong Ale 68.49%     8.56% 2.85% 79.90% 8.56%
Old Nick Barley Wine 64.29%     9.18% 3.06% 76.53% 9.18%
Saxon Lager     77.19%   5.15% 82.33% 12.86%
Source:
Young's brewing record held at Battersea Library, document number YO/RE/1/44.


5 comments:

  1. I find it amusing when homebrewers usually Americans on forums say that mild should not have crystal malt in it but bitter can.
    Oscar

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  2. I think that's the first time I've read that enzymic malt was used to adjust ph, but then I did a search and it showed there were patents issued in the 1950s which look like they had a connection between enzymic and acidified malt.

    I'm not a scientist so I can't make sense of how the chemistry works out, but it would make sense why those occasional small amounts of enzymic malt appeared in mashes.

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  3. YPV might have been Ram Keg Bitter, which was introduced in 1970 to replace Young’s Keg Bitter (whether the recipe changed as well as the name, I don’t know). I never tried it, though I recall seeing it (almost certainly in a free house, as it wasn’t sold in Young’s tied houses, as far as I remember).

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  4. As an American homebrewer I agree. It's absolutely hilarious. It's because of the recipe books that were ubiquitous in the 2000-2010s thay were based on winning contests as judged by other American palates.

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  5. I thought that enzymic malt extracts, that were quite common, for example in Boddingtons pale bitters, were there to adjust the fermentability of the wort following the lab results of a fast ferment test using current samples of the main malt, rather than the pH.

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