The gravity is pretty weedy for a beer of the period. Even for a cheap Mild Ale. Assuming 2d is the price per pint, in London you’d have got a beer of around 1050º for that amount.
It’s a pretty simple recipe. Just one malt, one adjunct and one sugar. There’s really very little to it at all. Though around a quarter of the pale malt was made from Californian barley. The rest being Irish.
Given the extremely pale colour, it wouldn’t surprise me I some caramel was added for colour correction.
The hops were split 50-50 between Oregon and English, both from the 1913 harvest.
1914 Cairnes 2d Ale | ||
pale malt | 5.00 lb | 66.67% |
flaked maize | 1.00 lb | 13.33% |
glucose | 1.50 lb | 20.00% |
Cluster 120 mins | 1.25 oz | |
Fuggles 60 mins | 0.75 oz | |
Fuggles 30 mins | 0.50 oz | |
OG | 1038 | |
FG | 1012 | |
ABV | 3.44 | |
Apparent attenuation | 68.42% | |
IBU | 44 | |
SRM | 3 | |
Mash at | 152º F | |
Sparge at | 170º F | |
Boil time | 120 minutes | |
pitching temp | 58.5º F | |
Yeast | Wyeast 1084 Irish ale |
3 comments:
OK, I admit it, I'm a yank and milds still confuse me. Looking at this recipe --- very pale color, highly hopped (BU/GU > 1), mashed fairly cool --- I would assume this is a bitter if all I had to go on were the recipe. Yet it's listed (I assume) as a mild in the brewing records.
Other than maybe the price, what distinguishes this from a typical bitter? How can I tell the difference from just the recipes?
Jonathan
Seems quite bitter compared to the mild ales of the 1940’s onwards.
Oscar
I wonder if people asked for this as a pint of Cairnes or a pint of mild, or I guess even a pint of tuppence?
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