Wednesday 31 December 2008

Even more Guinness between the wars

Stout, Porter and Guinness. Three of my favourite topics. Today they all come together in a coming together sort of way.

One of the common misconceptions about Guinness is that the "Dry Stout" style it represents has been around since Moses was in nappies. And that an essential ingredient has always been roast barley. You can guess what I'm going to say now: both ideas are utter crap.

I'll start with Guinness in the 1920's and 1930's. Until 1917, Guinness Extra Stout had the same gravity as Foreign Extra Stout: 1074º. Like all other UK beers, government legislation drastically reduced its gravity as the war progressed. Though, due to the somewhat laxer rules applied to Ireland, not as drastically as English beers. The nadir was 1049º in 1918. Not that bad when you think Mild was mostly 1027º. And higher than the gravity of Guinness today.

Between the wars, the gravity of Guinness Extra Stout was pretty constant at 1055º. Take a look:

Take a look at the apparent attenuation. It's mostly around 75%. That's very different from post-1950 Guinness. But more of that tomorrow.

Whitbread also brewed a beer called Extra Stout. Which too had an OG of 1055º. And attenuation of about 75%. It has a profile very similar to Guinness. Though the grists are different. Whitbread Extra Stout had this grist:

pale malt 73%
brown malt 7%
oats 0.5%
chocolate malt 7%
sugar 14%

Guinness Extra Stout used a combination of pale, amber and roast malt. I think. Or maybe just pale and roast malt. Definitely no brown or chocolate.

2 comments:

The Woolpack Inn said...

Thanks Ron. I like proven misconceptions...I had wondered about stout...

I'm looking forward to further historical developments of the style.

Anonymous said...

Inspired by Ron's reports of some 1800's porters using amber malt and British beers in general often using some American hops from the later 1800's, I put together a blend of beers which I thought might approximate to a late 1800's London Whitbread or other stout. Alternatively it might serve as a kind of three threads.

I combined 2 parts each Canadian- brewed Guinness Extra Stout (the Maritimes-brewed version sold in glass bottles in the U.S.) and a craft Imperial Stout brewed in Florida, and one part Budweiser American Ale, a new amber ale from A/B richly hopped with Cascades.

It was very good, it had a roasty taste with a depth of malt flavour, a faint lactic edge from the Imperial Stout, and emphatic but balanced hop taste.

I toasted 2009 and Ron, Zythophile, Pete Brown and others for their fine beer blogs and continuing expansion of beer knowledge, historical and other.

Gary