Saturday, 6 June 2026

Let's Brew - 1939 Youngs Porter

A Youngs Porter pumpclip featuring a drawing of a ram.
The biggest surprise about this beer is that it exists at all. These were the very final days of London Porter. In a couple of years, it would have totally disappeared from London pubs.

With a gravity in the mid-1030ºs, it’s a typical 5d per pint beer. Which is the price class that was usual for London Porter in its final days.

Moving onto the grist, it’s much the same as in 1932. With four malts: mild, amber, black and crystal. A slightly odd combination for a London brewer. Where mild/pale, brown and black malts were more usual. The lack of brown malt is notable, as that was the signature flavour of London Black Beers.

The sugars are a bit of a problem, as there’s a proprietary sugar described as “OM”. I’m guessing that this is a sugar specifically designed for Oatmeal Stout. As a substitute, I’ve upped the No. 3 invert and flaked oats.

There were two types of Kent hops, one from the 1938 and one from the 1939 harvest. 

1939 Youngs Porter
mild malt 4.75 lb 61.29%
black malt 0.50 lb 6.45%
amber malt 0.75 lb 9.68%
crystal malt 120 L 0.50 lb 6.45%
flaked oats 0.75 lb 9.68%
No. 3 invert sugar 0.50 lb 6.45%
Fuggles 120 min 1.125 oz
Fuggles 30 min 1.125 oz
OG 1035
FG 1011
ABV 3.18
Apparent attenuation 68.57%
IBU 29
SRM 23
Mash at 152º F
Sparge at 170º F
Boil time 120 minutes
pitching temp 60º F
Yeast WLP002 English Ale

 

Friday, 5 June 2026

What is underlet mashing?

Another little video prompted by a viewer request. I explain underlet mashing, a favourite technique of English brewers for more than a century. 

 

More price list fun

To follow on from my post about London draught beers in the 1930s, here's Whitbread's price list from 1934.

A Whitbread draught beer price list from 1934. Covering Porter, Stout, Light Ale, X Ale, Pale Ale and '33.

As it includes the prices for various cask sizes, it must be a trade list, That is, for publicans. Though it does include the public bar price per pint. In the posher rooms, such as the saloon or lounge, 1d more per pint would have been charged.

To put the cask into context, in 1914, a 36-gallon barrel of X Ale cost 36/- That was for a beer of 1050º. While 1934 X Ale was 1036º. That's about 2.5 times more expensive and 28% weaker. Quite a change. The reason? Extra tax piled on as a result of WW I.

What else can I spin out of this scrap of source material? The final line. Where XXX is crossed out, replaced by 33. A more expensive beer.

Why is the new beer call '33? Because that's when the disastrous tax increase of 1931 was reversed. To celebrate. Whitbread bumped up the gravity of their Burton Ale from 1045º to 1061º*. While also bumping up the price by 1d per pint. I think I would have been able to live with that. But I'm a pisshwead, as Mikey keeps reminding me.

Interesting that Porter and Stout come first on the list. That must be a hangover of Whitbread's time as an early Porter brewer. And one of the largest.

Oh, the Light Ale. That was dark. A piss-weak Dark Mild. Slightly confusing, the name. 

 

 

* Whitbread brewing records held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document numbers LMA/4453/D/01/099 and LMA/4453/D/01/100. 

Thursday, 4 June 2026

Scottish brewing myths debunked

Another short video, this time debunking the most popular myths about Scottish brewing  A subject very dear to my heart.

 

London draught beers in the late 1930s

A Taylor Walker Oatmeal Stout label.
Lucky old London had a pretty decent range of draught beers available in the 1930s. Around a dozen, split over Mild Ales, Pale Ales, Burton Ales, Porters and Stouts. 

Were all the London brewers knocking out a dozen different draught beers? No, they weren’t. I haven’t found one brewery that produced every single type. My favourite Barclay Perkins comes closest with nine.

One slight caveat: for brewers where I don’t have brewing records, there may well be some beers missing. In those cases, I’m dependent on the Whitbread and Truman Gravity Books. And which beers those two brewers bothered to get analysed.

Only one type of beer was produced by every brewery: 7d Pale Ale. The equivalent of Ordinary Bitter.  All but Fullers produced a 5d Mild Ale. Unsurprising, as X Ale was the most popular type of beer. Unless they blended it up from the other two Mild Ales.

Most brewers also had a cheaper, 4d Mild Ale. It’s an interesting one, that. As I know that the quantities brewed by Whitbread and Barclay Perkins were pretty modest. Far less than of the 5d version. It’s interesting that continued to brew it, even though the market was quite small. Without parti-gyling, it probably wouldn’t have been financially viable.

It’s fascinating that ten of the twelve breweries were still making a Porter. Despite sales collapsing disastrously after WW I.

The more expensive type of Burton Ale, the 8d version, was pretty popular, too. Every brewery produced at least one Burton Ale. And several brewers made both a 7d and an 8d version.

Fullers was unique in having no draught Stout. Really odd, that. Every other brewer had one either in the 7d or 8d class.

Every brewery had at least one of these types: Mild Ale, Pale Ale, Burton Ale, Porter/Stout. Which I suppose makes sense, as that would be the typical range of draught beers in a London pub. 

London draught beers in the late 1930s
type price per pint OG BP Ch C F M C M TW T Wa We Wh Y
Ale 4d 1030 X X X X X X   X X   X X
X 5d 1036 X X X   X X X X X X X X
XX 6d 1042 X     X X              
PA 6d 1042     X X               X
PA 7d 1048 X X X X X X X X X X X X
PA 8d 1054 X X X X X       X X    
KK 7d 1048   X     X X   X X X    
KK 8d 1054 X X X X X   X     X X X
KKK >10d >1070 X     X               X
Porter 5d 1036 X X X X   X X X   X X X
Stout 7d 1048   X X   X X   X X X X  
Stout 8d 1054 X           X X       X
Sources:
A Whitbread 1934 price list
Truman Gravity Book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number B/THB/C/252.
Whitbread Gravity book held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number LMA/4453/D/02/001.
Fuller's brewing records held at the brewery
Young's brewing record held at Battersea Library, document number YO/RE/1/8.
Barclay Perkins brewing record held at the London Metropolitan Archives, document number ACC/2305/01/622.

 

Brewery key:
BP Barclay Perkins
Ch Charrington
C Courage
F Fullers
M C Mann Crossman
M Meux
TW Taylor Walker
T Truman
Wa Watney
We Wenlock
Wh Whitbread
Y Young

 

 

Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Let's Brew Wednesday - 1940 Youngs XXXX Ale

A Young's Burton Ale label featuring a drawing of a ram.
I’m lumping this in with the 1939 brews because . . well, I don’t have an example from 1939 and this was brewed barely into 1940, on January 19th.

Surprisingly, the gravity is a couple of degrees higher than in 1932, at a very impressive 1081º.  That’s very high for a draught beer, which is what I believe this was. The quantities brewed were also reasonably large: this batch, for example, was of 51 barrels.

Before WW I,  KK, a standard Burton Ale, was almost as strong as this. The versions from Whitbread and Barclay Perkins were both around 1075º. What a glorious time to have been alive. Little wonder they had so many problems with drunkenness.

No shock, on the other hand, that it was parti-gyled with XXX and X Though the recipe of this brew was slightly different from some others, in that the base malt was 100% mild malt. Rather than a mix of mild and pale malt.

There were two types of Kent hops, both from the 1938 harvest, one of which had been cold stored. 

1940 Youngs XXXX Ale
mild malt 13.75 lb 80.29%
crystal malt 120 L 1.375 lb 8.03%
malt extract 0.50 lb 2.92%
No. 3 invert sugar 1.375 lb 8.03%
caramel 1000 SRM 0.125 lb 0.73%
Fuggles 120 min 2.00 oz
Fuggles 30 min 2.00 oz
OG 1081
FG 1030
ABV 6.75
Apparent attenuation 62.96%
IBU 38
SRM 26
Mash at 153º F
Sparge at 170º F
Boil time 120 minutes
pitching temp 58º F
Yeast WLP002 English Ale

 

Tuesday, 2 June 2026

What is Burton Ale?

Another of my short videos. This time looking at Burton Ale, a London staple for the first half of the 20th century. Today, sadly, just a single example exists: Young's Winter Warmer.

 

Augustiner Edelstoff

An Augustiner Heller Maibock poster with a drawing of a goat.
Since the weather has turned warm, I've mostly been drinking Augustiner Edelstoff on my weekly visit to Butcher's Tears.

It's a lovely drinking beer. Light, but with enough flavour to jkeep you interested. Perfect for casual afternoon drinking. Nothing too distracting.

I do love Austiner's beers.It's hard to beat their Helles when it's served Bayerischer Anstich (straight from a wooden cask). But it's a very delicate beer that doesn't come over as well in the bottle. Edelstoff fares much better.

What style of beer is Edelstoff? I'd call it a Spexial. A pale Lager that's stronger than a Helles. Many Bavarian breweries make one. With a gravity of around 13º Plato and 5.6% ABV.

The classic way would be to call the weaker one a Helles Lagerbier and the stronger one a Helles Export. Though that system has largely broken down since WW II. Agustner do call their standard beer Helles Lagerbier. So ther eis still that.

I'm glad I can get hold of a decent Lager when I'm out. It's depressingly difficult in Amsterdam. Mostly, it's just Pils of varying degrees of awfulness. Edelstoff is a class better. And better class.

I thought you might want a change from Youngs. If only for a day. 

Monday, 1 June 2026

Youngs beers in 1939

A Youngs Pale Ale label featuring a drawing of a ram.
Let’s take look at Young’s beers just as WW II was erupting.

The brewing records have eight beers, split into four groups: 2 Mild Ales, 2 Pale Ales, Porter and Stout, 2 Strong Ales. Quite neat, that. These were brewed in three parti-gyles, the Pale Ales, Porter and Stout, Mild and Strong Ales. Again, very neat.

There are still two Mild Ales, A and X Looking like typical 4d and 5d per pint beers. Some London brewers, such as Barclay Perkins, also had a Mild Ale in the 6d per pint class, clocking in at 1043º.  At least watery A was just about intoxicating, at just a sliver under 3% ABV.

The two Pale Ales are 6d and 7d per pint beers. As with the Mild Ales, the top-class draught version – an 8d per pint beer – is missing. Barclay Perkins did have an example of this type, called simply PA, which had a gravity of 1053º.  

There’s been a general reduction in hopping rates since 1932, Mild and Strong Ales are down by about 1 lb per quarter (336 lbs) of malt. The Pale Ales are down by a couple of pounds. That brew of PA was a single-gyle outlier. Usually, the rate was 8 lbs per quarter. The only beers where the hopping remained unchanged were Porter and Stout.

The rate of attenuation looks lower than in 1932. I wouldn’t read too much into that. Final gravities are all over the place in the brewing records. There was considerable variation between brews. Starting gravities, on the other hand, are exactly the same, every time. That’s the joy of parti-gyling. Total control of OG.

I’m quite surprised by the quantities of Porter brewed. More than of the Stout. With batches as large as 90 barrels. Whitbread, a much larger brewery, had Porter brewed just 20 to 50 barrels at a time. Was all Youngs Porter sold on draught? Or bottled as some sort of Stout?

The Stout, for once, is full strength, as an 8d per pint beer. Many London brewers – Whitbread, Watney, Charrington and Courage, for example – lacked a draught Stout in this class.  

XXX is a typical London draught Burton Ale. Or, at least, a typical 8d per pint version. These were in the mid-1050ºs. Whilst 7d per pint examples were around 1048º. 

A couple of other brewers in London had offerings around the same strength as XXXX. Barclay Perkins had KKKK at 1078.5º.  And Fullers Old Burton Extra, a little weaker, at 1069º.  Both XXXX and KKKK were seasonal beers, only sold in the colder months.  

Youngs beers in 1939
Beer Style OG FG ABV App. Atten-uation lbs hops/ qtr hops lb/brl
A Mild 1029 1006.6 2.96 77.08% 6.14 0.71
X Mild 1035 1007.8 3.60 77.84% 6.19 0.85
PA Pale Ale 1048 1011.1 4.88 76.92% 10.45 1.99
PAB Pale Ale 1039 1009.4 3.88 75.71% 7.98 1.22
P Porter 1035 1011.1 3.16 68.34% 7.00 0.97
S Stout 1053 1017.2 4.74 67.60% 7.00 1.47
XXX Strong Ale 1057 1019.4 4.98 65.98% 5.86 1.33
XXXX Strong Ale 1081 1029.9 6.76 63.07% 5.86 1.90
Source:
Young's brewing record held at Battersea Library, document number YO/RE/1/8.

 

Sunday, 31 May 2026

What is English Brown Ale?

Another of my little videos. This time explaining the shooting star of a beeer style, English Brown Ale.

 

Cost price of Young's beers in 1939/1940

A Youngs Oatmeal Stout label featuring a drawing of a ram.
It seems that Youngs had more than eight beers in their range. In the last page of the brewing record there’s a table of cost prices (at least, that’s what I assume they are) of all their beers. And there are twelve of them.

Where did the other four come from? My guess is that they are the bottled beers. Tweaked versions of the draught beers. And hence not in the brewing books.

OS (Oatmeal Stout) and FS (probably Family Stout) must have been magicked up from the Porter and Stout. Probably by blending the two together in different proportions. That might explain the large quantity of Porter being brewed.

Bot. PA looks like it was just a bottled version of PAB. Though wasn’t that a bottling beer? Maybe there was a draught version of PAB, too. AA? I’ve no idea what that was. Some sort of Pale Ale? Or Brown Ale? Could it be X with 2º added in primings?

The price immediately jumps after September 1939, when war broke out. An emergency budget raised the tax on beer from 80/- per standard barrel (36 Imperial gallons with an OG of 1055º) to 104/-. Prompting quite a large increase in the cost price.

There was a further increase in the tax in April 1940 to 135/- per standard barrel. Resulting in another leap in the cost price in May 1940. One which would have been greater, had Youngs not reduced the gravity of all their beer by 1º that month. 

Cost price of Young's beers in 1939/1940
Beer XXXX XXX X A PA PAB S P Bot. PA AA OS FS
OG 1080 1057 1035 1029 1048 1039 1053 1035 1039 1037 1046 1037
July - 97/1 49/8 35/3 79/2 57/6 94/4 53/- 57/6 51/4 72/5 52/-
August - 97/11 49/11 35/2 79/5 57/3 92/7 55/- 57/3 51/5 74/5 53/-
September 151/3 98/1 52/1 37/7 81/5 59/8 92/9 54/4 59/8 52/7 73/4 53/-
October - 116/4 73/3 59/1 103/- 78/11 119/- 80/1 78/11 73/7 98/11 75/-
November 178/1 119/2 73/7 59/6 103/3 79/4 120/11 74/5 79/4 73/7 94/5 71/6
December 178/4 123/1 75/- 59/4 103/1 79/7 120/9 78/6 79/7 73/9 96/9 74/2
January 181/6 124/- 73/8 60/10 102/- 80/10 121/9 81/3 80/10 72/- 98/8 77/-
February 175/2 121/8 74/- 59/6 104/- 81/7 120/3 80/8 81/7 73/4 97/11 78/-
March 184/4 122/4 76/1 59/8 105/2 80/5 123/6 81/10 83/2 72/11 102/4 79/4
  - - 96/5 78/8 126/5 103/1 158/9 - 103/1 91/9 136/4 105/1
April 174/7 125/1 78/4 62/- 106/- 80/8 128/5 83/2 83/5 74/- 106/4 83/4
May - 146/10 96/- 77/4 125/11 102/11 156/9 104/3 102/11 91/3 130/- 101/6
June - 151/10 93/4 81/- 128/5 102/8 156/- 106/8 102/8 92/3 131/- 105/6
Source:
Young's brewing record held at Battersea Library, document number YO/RE/1/8.

 

 

Saturday, 30 May 2026

Let's Brew - 1939 Youngs XXX Ale

A Youngs Burton Ale label featuring a drawing of a ram.
Parti-gyled with the two Mild Ales was XXX, Young’s Burton Ale. What eventually became Winter Warmer. Though, at this point it must have been a year-round beer, as this example was brewed in July.

With a gravity in the mid 1050ºs, it’s a typical 8d per pint beer. It also looks very much like a pre-WW I London X Ale. It’s an indication of just how much WW I knocked down the strength of Mild Ale.

Obviously, the recipe is essentially the same as for X and A. With a base that’s a combination of mild malt and pale malt. Along with some crystal malt for body and colour. And malt extract for extra enzymes. Additional colour comes from No. 3 invert sugar and caramel.

There are two types of Kent hops, one from the 1937 harvest and one from 1938. 

1939 Youngs XXX Ale
pale malt 2.25 lb 18.49%
mild malt 7.75 lb 63.68%
crystal malt 120 L 0.75 lb 6.16%
malt extract 0.33 lb 2.71%
No. 3 invert sugar 1.00 lb 8.22%
caramel 1000 SRM 0.09 lb 0.74%
Fuggles 120 min 1.50 oz
Fuggles 30 min 1.50 oz
OG 1057
FG 1024
ABV 4.37
Apparent attenuation 57.89%
IBU 33
SRM 19
Mash at 153º F
Sparge at 170º F
Boil time 120 minutes
pitching temp 59º F
Yeast WLP002 English Ale

 

Friday, 29 May 2026

What is parti-gyling?

I explain parti-gyling. Real parti-gyling, as performed by traditional UK breweries. And, no, it doesn't mean using each running to make a different beer.

 

Back from my holidays

I recently returned from a trip to Bangkok and Saigon. I would write the trip up. Except that it wasn't really a beery trip. And it was with Mikey.

Just so you aren't disappointed, I am going to post pictures of my breakfasts. As I know you always look forward to those. Quite a diverse set of breakfasts compared to those on my South American trips. 

I would also post photos of all the beers I drank. Except there weren't that many of them And most of them were crap. Just boring, industrial Pale Lager. I mostly drank cocktails. Why? Because I'm a decadent bastard.

Anyway, here are the breakfasts. In chronological order.


A bacon baguette.

Two bacon baguettes and a cocktail.

Some pork thing, rice and a glass of whisky and coke.

Two eggs over easy, bacon and a cup of coffee.

Two eggs over easy and bits of baguette.

Two eggs over easy and bits of baguette.

Two different types of fruit on a plate.

Chunks of watermelon on a plate.

A bacon baguette.
Scrambled egg and fried potato.