Friday, 24 April 2026

Hanging around

I'm up early. At 7:20. Feeling fairly crap. After a shower, I feel a bit better. 

Judging is due to start at 9 AM. Right. No way that will happen. 10:30 AM is guess. At the earliest.

I go upstairs for breakfast. No bacon, sadly. There are both scrambled and fried eggs, mind. I go for the former and cheese. Followed by fruit. It’s not a bad spread. With boiled eggs, too. Pastries, cheese, salami. Not bad at all. It almost makes up for the lack of bacon. Almost.

I send the family a picture of my breakfast. I know they’re fascinated by what I eat when I’m away. And I don’t want to disappoint them. 

A breakfast of scrambled egg, cheese, coffee and orange juice.

Surprise, surprise. The start of judging is delayed. First to 10. Then to 12:30. We are in South America, after all. At least we aren’t just hanging around at the judging venue.

I spend the time laying around in my room. Only punctuated by a quick trip to the supermarket around the corner. Where I buy bananas and milk.

At the judging location – the restaurant La Parrilla del Guatón Jerez – there’s some more hanging around. At first outside, then inside.

At 13;30, they still aren’t ready. And we have lunch. Which is a steak and potato salad. A pretty nice steak. I order a beer to go with it. A half litre. Normally, I’d never drink beer during a judging day. Just feel like a beer.

A plate of steak and potato salad. Along with a pint of amber beer in a handled mug.

I don’t forget to send the family a picture of my steak. I’m sure that they’ll love to see what I’m eating. 

While eating, I have a chance to talk to some of the other judges. Who are a sociable bunch.

Judging is in the same place. Finally kicking off at around 15:00. Only six hours late. A record, I think. Luckily, 3.5 hours of the wait were in my hotel room. Though I could have got up 90 minutes later. Which would have been nice.

I’m table captain. With Valeria, a local I’ve judged with before, and Columbian Jose. Not sure if being the captain is a good thing. Will it mean more work? I hope not. I hate work. That’s why I retired at 63.

My judging table, with Valeria and Jose. In the background is another table of judges, fiddling with their phones or laptops.

We start with five non-alcoholic beers. That's always fun. They’re surprisingly good. Well, surprisingly non-horrible. Mostly.

After that, it’s pretty much all UK styles. Which is par for the course, when I’m the table captain. Not sure it it’s a good or a bad thing, 

At least Irish Red isn’t on the list. A style I’ve judged six or seven times. And never had an even vaguely decent beer. It’s not just a matter of personal taste. They were technically bad beers, with serious faults. My heart always drops when I see the style on my schedule.

Most of the flights are pretty small, just a couple of beers. Which I like. Other than Scottish Export, of which there are nine examples. Probably about as many as are brewed in Scotland nowadays.

Three glasses partially full with amber beer.

The captaincy doesn’t involve much extra work. Thankfully. Other than clicking a couple of buttons. And, after my career in IT, I’m rather good at clicking buttons.

There’s only one beer with butyric acid – baby sick – across all the flights. Which is a plus. 

Some of our scores are quite far apart. But we manage to come to a consensus without too much arguing. And keep up a pretty decent pace.

We don’t award a huge number of medals. Just a silver and a couple of bronzes.

It's getting late and we still aren't done. We finish at 20:00, with four beers unjudged. We'll do them tomorrow. Despite only judging for five hours, I feel knacked. It’s been an odd and slightly frustrating day.

The plan is to go to brewpub Mango. I decide to give it a miss and go back to the hotel. It’s just getting too late. Even if I just have a couple of beers, with travelling time, I’ll be lucky to be back in the hotel by 23:00.


I buy a sandwich in the hotel, feeling to knackered to walk around the corner to the supermarket. I watch Champions League quarter final highlights on Ziggo. While sipping a little hotel whisky. Just for medicinal purposes, obviously.

When I’ve finished my sandwich, I realise that I haven’t sent the family a photo of it. Hopefully they don’t notice. I’d hate to let them down.

I turn in at 23:00. It's an early start tomorrow. We're being picked up at 7:45. Well, that's the plan. Let's see if that actually happens.

Just a couple of sips of whisky. I’m too desperate for sleep to drink more. Andrew would be so disappointed in me.



La Parrilla del Guatón Jerez

Av. Padre Hurtado 1460, 
Vitacura,
Santiago.
http://www.laparrilladelguatonjerez.cl/


Disclaimer: Copa ACI paid for my accommadation, some meals and some beer. 

 

You can fins a video report of my trip here: 

Thursday, 23 April 2026

Long journey south

 It's a late start. My flight is at 21:10. I get a cab at 18:00.

“How much Spanish do you know, Dad?” Alexei asked yesterday.

“Not quite as much as Portuguese.”

“Practically none, then”

“I know some words. Banos. Gracias.Por favor.”

“As I said, practically none”

“It’s all I really need.”

“Old people like you always need to know where the toilets are.”

“Exactly.”

“I was taking the piss, Dad.”

“I know.”

“You’re weird.”

“I know.”

The airport isn't too busy, as it's getting late. It's not long before I'm in the lounge grabbing whisky. and a little something to eat. Though I do drop by the duty free to get some hotel whisky. I’m amazed to be able to afford an Islay whisky: Bunnahabhain

Two glasses of whisky sitting on a table.

I don't go crazy. As I've a long flight. A very long flight. 18 hours, all told. Too long to turn up smashed. Being deeply cynical about the food I’ll be served on the flight, I get down some food ballast.

The flight is pretty full. Almost every seat taken. Just before we take off, a flight attendant comes along and says something to the woman next to me. Who then disappears off somewhere. I assume she's been upgraded. Just after take-off, she returns. Which is a bummer. Where has she been? 

After an hour or so they feed us some slop. It's just about edible. Especially after I sharpen up my wine with some illicit whisky miniatures.

A KLM meal. It's hard to identify everything, There's chicken and green beans, a round thing, some sort of salad, some white stuff and a bread roll.

Eating done, I have a good kip. A long kip. Like seven hours. Then I doze for another couple of hours. Which is the best way to handle such a long flight. The first leg to Buenos Aires is 13.5 hours. I don't even watch anything until the last couple of hours. When we're served a breakfast. Of which I just eat the fruit.

We have the fun of deplaning in Buenos Aires. And going through security again. Before hanging around at the gate for a while. Such a joy, early in the morning.

The plane is much emptier on the second leg, with both the seats to my left empty. Which would give me a great view if the Andes. If the wing weren't in the way.

We’re served a warm, savoury pastry. I eat some of it. My stomach is playing up a bit. Just what I need.

As we start to descend into Santiago, there's a cloud layer completely obscuring the city. Or is it smog? It's hard to tell from up here. Let’s hope it’s the former. For the sake of my lungs.

A large chunk of aeroplane wing, with a bit of the Andes and lots of cloud in the background.

I dodge the long queue for immigration with my oldie priority. Of which I'm very thankful.

All the time gained is lost as I wait ages for my bag to pop out. I thought it was supposed to have priority?

My lift is waiting for me. Thankfully. I had a couple of airport transfers not show up recently. Which was dead fucking annoying. 

We rumble along the motorway for a while. Past light industrial units and dusty hills. My hotel is on the other side of town. But tunnels makes the journey relatively short.

Soon I'm checking into my hotel. Unfortunately, my room isn't free. Luckly, Chris arranges for me to use the room of a couple of German judges while they're out exploring the city.

I'm just starting to get nicely relaxed when the phone rings. It's reception telling me that my room is ready. Great!

Despite kipping on the plane, I'm knacked. And spend most of the day dozing on the bed vaguely watching NHK English service.

My stomach isn't feeling great. Nor is my left side, where there’s a throbbing pain. And I can't get properly to sleep. I don’t even feel like drinking any of my duty-free whisky. Oh, the joys of growing old!

Chris is supposed to pick me up at 18:45 to take me to the judges' dinner at Flannery’s Irish Geo Pub. He hasn't turned up by 19:20 and I take an Uber with Mike Hall.

A group of beer judges drinking in a pub. In the backgrounda couple of barstaff stand behind a bar.

With my stomach turning somersaults, I can't eat or drink much. I manage a token chip and a few mouthfuls of beer before heading back to the hotel. Where I turn in almost immediately. It's only 22:00. I don’t even have a sip of hotel whisky.

With my stomach still feeling shit and the pain in my side, I have a disturbed sleep. Waking multiple times. Bum.



Flannery’s Irish Geo Pub
Encomenderos 379, 
Las Condes,
Santiago.

 

You can fins a video report of my trip here:

 

Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Let's Brew Wednesday - 1960 Youngs SX Ale

A Youngs Brown Ale label featuring a drawing of a ram.
The relative popularity of Mild is demonstrated by Youngs brewing two of them. This being the stronger of the pair.

Not that it’s that much stronger. Just 3º of gravity. And 0.2% ABV. So minimally stronger, really. Far smaller quantities were brewed than standard X Ale. For example, in this parti-gyle there were 241 barrels of X and just 45 barrels of SX.

The recipe, obviously, is identical to X Ale. Just the quantities are slightly larger. I find the inclusion of malt extract. Specifically, diastatic malt extract. Presumably, the enzymes are the reason for its inclusion.

Same hops as in X Ale. English from the 1958 and 1959 harvests.

1960 Youngs SX Ale
mild malt 5.00 lb 68.38%
crystal malt 150 L 0.67 lb 9.16%
flaked maize 1.00 lb 13.68%
pale malt extract 0.1875 lb 2.56%
No. 3 invert 0.33 lb 4.51%
caramel 500 SRM 0.125 lb 1.71%
Fuggles 105 min 1.33 oz
OG 1034
FG 1007
ABV 3.57
Apparent attenuation 79.41%
IBU 20
SRM 19
Mash at 150º F
Sparge at 170º F
Boil time 105 minutes
pitching temp 60º F
Yeast WLP002 English Ale

 

 


Listen to brewer John Hatch explain how they brewed at Youngs in the 1990s.  

Tuesday, 21 April 2026

Santiago, April 2026

Another travel video. South America again. Chile, to be precise.

 

Beer production in East and West

A Steiger Vollbier Hell label with the outline of two men stepping on a step with a large barrel in the background.
Yes, more DDR stuff. At least I've thrown in some stuff about West Germany, too.

The DDR was behind the West in terms of consumption per capita for most of its existence. Just about catching up towards the end. What does that tell us? Well, just that the East recovered more slowly from WW II. And beer output took a while to catch up with unfulfilled demand.

Would people have drunk more in the DDR in the 1950s and 1960s if it had been available? Probably. Assuming they had the money to pay for it. But the production capacity and raw materials simply weren't there to brew more beer.

Getting on for three litres a week is quite a lot of beer. That's probably about as much as I drink nowadays. Along with a couple of litres of whisky.

I've not much more to say. Just lean back and admire the numbers. They deserve that.

Beer production and consumption in the 2 bits of Germany 1950 - 2000
  DDR BRD
Year Production Soft Drinks Production Beer Per capita consumption Beer in liters Beer consumption Per capita consumption in liters
1950 923 3,820 22 18,176 35.6
1955 1,416 11,772 52   67
1960 3,546 13,424 68.5 52,633 94.7
1965 4,765 13,633 79.5 72,063 122.1
1970 6,470 16,642 95.7 85,603 141.1
1975 11,443 20,380 119.2 91,408 147.8
1980 13,094 23,633 139.7 89,820 145.9
1985 14,409 24,288 140 88,977 145.8
1989 17,661 24,843 141 88,586 142.7
1990       98,283 142.7
1991       113,871 141.9
1992       114,424 142
2000       103,309 125.6
Source:
Die Brau- und Malzindustrie in Deutschland-Ost zwischen 1945 und 1989, VLB, 2016, page 301.

 

Monday, 20 April 2026

DDR beer production by Bezirk in 1987

A Berliner Pilsner Spezial label with the silhouette of a bear carrying a tray of beers.
Some more lovely numbers from "Die Brau- und Malzindustrie in Deutschland-Ost zwischen 1945 und 1989". As you all know, you can never have too many numbers.

I really like this set of numbers because they teach me something new. That there was a lot of tank beer in the DDR. I hadn't realised that there was any at all. 

I drank a lot of draught beer in Berlin. Given that almost 60% of draught beer was in tank form, the odds are that I drank it. And quite a bit, too. Without taking a look in the cellar, there was no way to tell. Unless you could find a chatty waiter.

The top three beer-producing Bezirks were, in descending order, Dresden, Karl-Marx_stadt and Berlin. Between them, they accounted for 37% of beer production. The least productive Bezirks were Cottbus and Franfurt an der Oder (both on the Polish border), Neubrandenburg and Schwerin (both in the North). Areas that weren't very heavily populated or industrialised.

A majority of beer was in bottled form everywhere, except Neubrandenburg and Franfurt an der Oder. Both Bezirks with relatively small beer production.

With regards to tank beer, in most Bezirks it was more common than kegs. I'd love to know more about when tanks were installed. And if they were still being installed in 1989. In the UK, tanks really went out of fashion in the 1980s. Not sure if it still exists at all. 

DDR beer production by Bezirk in 1987
Bezirk Beer Production in 1000 hL  
  Bottle Draught Tank total
Cottbus 207.9 52.3 0 260.2
Dresden 2130 423 869 3422
Erfurt 1094.1 271 384.9 1750
Gera 859.5 215.1 362.3 1436.9
Halle 1319.5 456.5 536 2312
Karl-Marx-Stadt 2051.3 344 751 3146.3
Leipzig 1441 506.7 335.3 2283
Magdeburg 1255.2 364.8 200 1820
Neubrandenburg 404 185 331 920
Potsdam 702.9 262.7 366.6 1332.2
Rostock 923 175 354 1452
Schwerin 724 127 86 937
Suhl 576.5 148 106 830.5
Franfurt an der Oder 173.3 99 131.1 403.4
Berlin 1693 466.2 639.8 2799
total 15,555.20 4,096.30 5,453.00 25,104.50
Source:
Die Brau- und Malzindustrie in Deutschland-Ost zwischen 1945 und 1989, VLB, 2016, page 301.

DDR beer production by Bezirk in 1987 (%)
Bezirk Bottle Draught Tank
Cottbus 79.90% 20.10% 0.00%
Dresden 62.24% 12.36% 25.39%
Erfurt 62.52% 15.49% 21.99%
Gera 59.82% 14.97% 25.21%
Halle 57.07% 19.74% 23.18%
Karl-Marx-Stadt 65.20% 10.93% 23.87%
Leipzig 63.12% 22.19% 14.69%
Magdeburg 68.97% 20.04% 10.99%
Neubrandenburg 43.91% 20.11% 35.98%
Potsdam 52.76% 19.72% 27.52%
Rostock 63.57% 12.05% 24.38%
Schwerin 77.27% 13.55% 9.18%
Suhl 69.42% 17.82% 12.76%
Franfurt an der Oder 42.96% 24.54% 32.50%
Berlin 60.49% 16.66% 22.86%
total 61.96% 16.32% 21.72%
Source:
Die Brau- und Malzindustrie in Deutschland-Ost zwischen 1945 und 1989, VLB, 2016, page 301.

 

 

 

Sunday, 19 April 2026

The Berlin brewing industry in 1944

A Schultheiss Malzbier label featuring a man in 16th-century dress holding a large mug of beer.
Getting numbers for brewing in Germany in WW II isn't an easy task. I only have very incomplete information. Mostly, for the  early war years.

It may well be that there is no accurate information for the final chaotic months of the war. When people had lots of other things to worry about. And brewing statistics weren't much of a priority. If brewing was taking place at all.

That's why I was so happy to find these numbers for brewing in Berlin in 1944.

I'm fairly gobsmacked at the total quantity produced: almost 4 million hl. Though that does include drinks other than beer. And I imagine that most of the beer was so weak as to be barely recognisable as beer.

There are 21 breweries in total. Of which, 11 were in East Berlin. Interesting, that. As West Berlin was double the size of East Berlin. However, the two largest breweries, Kindl Neuköln and Schulthess Kreuzberg, were both in the West.

Several companies operated multiple breweries: Schulthess 6, Engelhardt 3, Kindl 2 and Löwenbrauerei 2. With these spread across the East and West sections of the city. Which made things complicated. In the 1980s, there were beers branded Schultheiss and Kindl in both the East and West. Using exactly the same logos, even though they were completely separate enterprises. 

Key operational data of Berlin breweries 1944
Brewery Production of beer and beverages in hl Total employees Special production/headcount in hl/a Special production/Total workforce in hl/a Energy consumption in kg/hl 2)
Berliner Bürgerbräu 201,915 211 1309 914 13.62
Böhmisches Brauhaus-Löwenbrauerei 268,628 354 1226 783 16.25
Bergschloß-Brauerei 104,821 107 1442 957 22.7
Bötzow-Brauerei 113,311 218 776 513 18.15
Engelhardt-Brauerei, Abt. Stralau 161,607 203 1468 817 17.44
Engelhardt-Brauerei, Abt. Pankow 155,730 183 1426 874 20.07
Engelhardt-Brauerei, Abt. Charlottenb. 55,215 78 1222 689 13.25
Groterjan-Brauerei 276,270 420 1083 622 7.45
Hochschul-Brauerei 1) 30,503 57 824 535 21.98
Monopol-Brauerei 97,724 99 1396 1303 18.28
Kindl-Brauerei. Abt, Neukölln 392,522 508 1570 837 20.76
Kindl-Brauerei. Abt, Weißensee 272,657 321 1855 931 22.17
Schloß-Brauerei 2) 150,972 185 1399 851 17.58
Schultheiss-Brauerei, Abt. Kreuzberg 421,659 511 1310 872 14.42
Schultheiss-Brauerei, Abt. NO 304,497 524 675 563 18.25
Schultheiss-Brauerei, Abt. Schönh. Al. 245,648 326 1150 802 11.46
Schultheiss-Brauerei, Abt. Spandau 233,024 351 938 693 16.88
Schultheiss-Brauerei, Abt. Nd.-Schw. 220,137 254 1121 899 16.15
Schultheiss-Brauerei, Abt. Stromstr. 193,899 335 830 604 14.08
Willner Brauerei 14,167 41 616 383 26.44
Total 3,914,906 5,286      
1) Already bomb damaged
2) In kilograms of hard coal at 6600 heat units/kg
Source:
Die Brau- und Malzindustrie in Deutschland-Ost zwischen 1945 und 1989, VLB, 2016, page 111.

 

Saturday, 18 April 2026

Let's Brew - 1960 Youngs X Ale

A Youngs Brown Ale label featuring a drawing of a ram.
At the start of the 1960s, Youngs were still brewing pretty large quantities of Mild. By the end of the decade, they were making rather less. As Mild rapidly fell out of favour in London.

It’s a fairly typical Mild of the period, being dark and pretty watery. The grist is quite simple, just mild and crystal malt along with some flaked maize and sugar. At least, I think it’s flaked maize. It just says “flakes” in the brewing record. In the 1980s and 1990s, that was flaked torrefied barley. I’m guessing that in these earlier records, it means the more usual flaked maize.

There were two types of sugar: No. 3 invert and CDM (Caramelised Dextro-Maltose). For the latter, I’ve substituted straight caramel. Which should be close enough. Unless, by some miracle, you can get hold of real CDM.

Two types of English hops, one from the 1958 harvest and one from 1959. 

1960 Youngs X Ale
mild malt 4.50 lb 67.75%
crystal malt 150 L 0.50 lb 7.53%
flaked maize 1.00 lb 15.05%
pale malt extract 0.1875 lb 2.82%
No. 3 invert 0.33 lb 4.97%
caramel 500 SRM 0.125 lb 1.88%
Fuggles 105 min 1.25 oz
OG 1031
FG 1005.5
ABV 3.37
Apparent attenuation 82.26%
IBU 19
SRM 18
Mash at 150º F
Sparge at 170º F
Boil time 105 minutes
pitching temp 60º F
Yeast WLP002 English Ale

 

 


Listen to brewer John Hatch explain how they brewed at Youngs in the 1990s.  

Friday, 17 April 2026

Beer in the DDR (part 7)

More individual DDR beer styles. 

What I like about the standards for DDR beers is that they are so specific that you could easily brew beers based on them. Also using the rules on ingredients, for example, on the malt percentages, and hop types and quantities. It's a dream of mine to have a DDR beer festival, with examples of all the different styles. Oddly, no-one seems that keen on brewing these beers. Which is a shame. Get in touch if you fancy giving any of these styles a try.

Getting back to the slides, Märzen is another style which exists in the standards documents and for which I have labels, but which seemed to be extremely rare. I certainly never came across it. Which is a shame, as it sounds like an interesting beer. Strangely, it was unfiltered, but pasteurised. And only came in bottles.

Extra is another odd one. A sort of Schankbier version of Helles. It's another type that I can't remember ever seeing. And one which didn't have an equivalent in the West.

Weizenbier was so rare that I don't even have a label for it. Meaning I don't even have an idea of which breweries might have brewed it. The OG was a bit lower than in the West, where Weizen was usually over 12º Plato.

Lichtenhainer was a local style, only found around Jena in Thüringen. It was so obscure, that it doesn't even show up in the standards documents. It died out in the early 1980s.

Gose is brewed all over the place now. It was only brewed sporadically in the DDR, disappearing between 1966 and 1985. In its brief revival in the late 1980s, it was brewed at the Berliner Weisse brewery. Presumably because they were experienced in sour beer production. I spent years trying to track it down in the 1990s. Now every fucker makes one.

What was DDR beer like? Much better than its reputation. There were some excellent beers brewed. Sure, there were some crap ones. But that's true everywhere. I've been sticking up for it for the last 30-odd years. Many of those slagging DDR beer off never really drank any of it.

The Berliner Weisse was better than any of the West Berlin versions. Many of the Pilsators were excellent. As good as the Pale Lagers brewed in Czechoslovakia. Those form Mühlhausen and Sternquell were particularly good. And the standard Pilsners of Berlin were pretty decent.

The Gothaer beers were shit, mind.

This is the end of the presentation. Feel free to ask questions in the comments. 





 




 

 

Thursday, 16 April 2026

Starting from zero

A Potsdam Pilsner Spezial label with drawings of an 18th-century soldier and Marstall am Lustgarten.
After the war, in what would become the DDR, the brewing industry faced some serious problems. Ones which the western part of Germany didn't have. These were caused by a combination of the division of Germany and the loss of territories to the East. 

The biggest of these problems were:

  • no hop growing
  • limited malting barley cultivation
  • uneven distribution of breweries
  • no brewing equipment manufacturers


The first two were agricultural problems, which needed to be addressed by encouraging the cultivation of hops and malting barley. The former had been exclusively grown in western parts of Germany. While much malt had been sourced either from the northern parts of West Germany or territory which now belonged to Poland.

Before the war, breweries in West Berlin had supplied much of the area around Berlin. With the country divided, new sources of beer needed to be found. Especially as the breweries in East Berlin didn't have the capacity to pick up the slack. One of the long-term solutions was to construct a large brewery in Potsdam, just outside Berlin.

It wasn't until the 1960s that the manufacture of brewing equipment really got underway. Even then, it could never produce enough to meet demand. I can understand now why many breweries were still using outdated equipment. It wasn't through laziness or a reluctance to invest. There just wasn't enough equipment available for everyone. And certain breweries - notably exporters like Radeberger and Wernesgrüner - got first dibs on the goodies.

People often bang on about the economic miracle of post-war West Germany. What the DDR achieved is far more impressive. It started from a much worse position. And, unlike West Germany, didn't have Marshall Plan money poured into it. Quite the opposite, with the Soviets actively removing industry and raw materials from the East.

This information is taken from Die Brau- und Malzindustrie in Deutschland-Ost zwischen 1945 und 1989, VLB, 2016, page 103.
 

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Let's Brew Wednesday - 1996 Youngs Best Malt Ale (2)

A Youngs Brown Ale label featuring a drawing of a ram.
Brewed just nine days later than the previous Best Malt Ale was this very different version. Higher in gravity and with a very different grist.

Interestingly, despite the higher gravity, a lower degree of attenuation leaves it barely stronger in ABV terms.

Brewed single-gyle, this iteration has basically the same grist as Winter Warmer. Except that there’s no torrefied barley. And looks more like versions from the late 1970s. As with most Dark Milds, there’s no malt darker than crystal. With much of the colour coming from sugar.

They were obviously playing around with the recipe as the hopping rate is much higher than the version brewed a few days earlier. Almost double, in fact. So much so, that I didn’t need to adjust the quantities of hops for once. A much longer boil also boosted the bitterness level.

The hops themselves were two English types, with no vintage indicated.

1996 Youngs Best Malt Ale (2)
pale malt 5.50 lb 76.07%
crystal malt 150 L 0.67 lb 9.27%
glucose 0.75 lb 10.37%
molasses 0.25 lb 3.46%
caramel 2000 SRM 0.06 lb 0.83%
Fuggles 125 min 1.75 oz
OG 1034
FG 1011
ABV 3.04
Apparent attenuation 67.65%
IBU 27
SRM 15
Mash at 153º F
Sparge at 165º F
Boil time 125 minutes
pitching temp 64º F
Yeast WLP002 English Ale

 


Listen to brewer John Hatch explain how they brewed at Youngs in the 1990s.