Of which there were five. Which is quite a lot for a brewery that specialised in Pale Ales. Unsurprisingly, most of it was pale malt. Though there was also some high-dried malt in a couple of beers. Not so odd in a dark beer like Cooper. More unusual in a Pale Ale like BB.
Interestingly, all three Black Beers have chocolate malt rather than black malt as the main roasted element. I have seen that elsewhere – for example at Whitbread – but it only started much later, after WW I. Fremlin definitely seem to have been early adopters.
Porter and Stout also both contain brown malt. That favourite London ingredient. Which means these beers must have been similar in character to the equivalent beers from the capital.
It’s fascinating to see how quickly Oat Stout spread. I assume that’s why malted oats turn up in the Porter and Stout. Compared to the Oatmeal Stouts brewed after WW I, the percentage of oats is quite high. Also, it malted form. Whereas later it was almost always in flaked form.
The malt percentage is fairly decent, mostly around 70%-75%.
| Fremlin malts in 1897 | |||||||
| Beer | Style | pale malt | high dried malt | brown malt | choc. malt | malted oats | total malt |
| X | Mild | 70.59% | 70.59% | ||||
| H | Pale Ale | 72.00% | 72.00% | ||||
| BA | Pale Ale | 69.77% | 69.77% | ||||
| BA C | Pale Ale | 70.59% | 70.59% | ||||
| BA L | Pale Ale | 75.00% | 75.00% | ||||
| BB | Pale Ale | 35.29% | 35.29% | 70.59% | |||
| BB L | Pale Ale | 75.00% | 75.00% | ||||
| PA | Pale Ale | 70.59% | 70.59% | ||||
| PA L | Pale Ale | 72.00% | 72.00% | ||||
| IPA | IPA | 70.59% | 70.59% | ||||
| Pilsener | Pilsener | 80.00% | 80.00% | ||||
| P | Porter | 40.24% | 14.63% | 10.98% | 7.32% | 73.17% | |
| Cooper | Porter | 42.86% | 18.37% | 12.24% | 73.47% | ||
| DS | Stout | 63.91% | 7.10% | 5.33% | 3.55% | 79.88% | |
| Source: | |||||||
| Fremlin brewing record held at the Kent Archives, document number U3555/2/F/Bx2/1/22. | |||||||


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