Though this isn’t going to be a huge, long description. This being parti-gyled with the PAB we’ve already seen. Obviously, there’s just a little bit more of everything in this. Not a huge amount more, as the gravities aren’t that different.
Ordinary was a smaller part of Young’s output than it was later to become. It says much of the different beer landscape in 1960 that the batches of X Ale were much bigger than of PA: 250 barrels to 150 barrels. The situation would be very different a decade later, as Mild’s popularity in London collapsed. By the middle of the 1970s, few London pubs sold cask Mild. Many sold no Mild at all.
It’s a shame that this period of Young’s records doesn’t record the bitterness level. My guess is, based on later versions where it is given, that it was around 35 EBU.
| 1960 Youngs PA | ||
| pale malt | 6.75 lb | 79.82% |
| flaked maize | 1.00 lb | 11.82% |
| pale malt extract | 0.33 lb | 3.90% |
| No. 1 invert sugar | 0.375 lb | 4.43% |
| caramel 500 SRM | 0.002 lb | 0.02% |
| Fuggles 120 min | 1.00 oz | |
| Goldings 30 min | 1.00 oz | |
| OG | 1038 | |
| FG | 1003.3 | |
| ABV | 4.59 | |
| Apparent attenuation | 91.32% | |
| IBU | 26 | |
| SRM | 4.5 | |
| Mash at | 152º F | |
| Sparge at | 174º F | |
| Boil time | 120 minutes | |
| pitching temp | 59º F | |
| Yeast | WLP002 English Ale | |
Listen to brewer John Hatch explain how they brewed at Youngs in the 1990s.


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