Thursday, 30 October 2025

W.E. & J. Rigden grists in 1884/85

A George Beer & Rigden Milk Stout label featuring a milk bottle with the text "Contains energising carbohydrates extracted from pure dairy milk".
And what about the ingredients in Rigden's beers? Well, let’s take a look. Starting with grains.

The base malt in every beer is pale malt. Nothing unusual there. Note, though, that often there was more than one type of pale malt.

Only the Black Beers contain any other type of malt. Namely brown and black malt. Which leaves them with a very London-like grist. With getting on for a 20% roast malt content. I assume that the proximity to capital was why the grist is so similar to those of London brewers.

Only the three cheapest beers, Table Ale, Beer and AK, contain any adjuncts. In the form of flaked maize. Which lowers the malts percentage to around 65%. While the posher beers have around 75%, or, in the case of the Black Beers, 85%. It’s clear that, in the cheap beers, flaked maize is a direct substitute for base malt.

W.E. & J. Rigden grists in 1884/85
Beer Style pale malt brown malt black malt total malt flaked maize
Beer Mild 69.57%     69.57% 13.04%
AK Pale Ale 64.04%     64.04% 13.48%
AK Stock Pale Ale 77.14%     77.14%  
Special Ale Pale Ale 75.00%     75.00%  
XXK Pale Ale 72.41%     72.41%  
TA Table Ale 64.04%     64.04% 13.48%
XXX Stock Ale 73.77%     73.77%  
P Porter 65.22% 10.87% 6.52% 82.61%  
DS Stout 65.63% 11.72% 7.03% 84.38%  
Source:
Fremlin brewing record held at the Kent Archives, document number U3555/2/GBR/BX2/1/9.

 

 

No comments: