THE LONDON and COUNTRY BREWER
1736
CHAP. I.
Of the Nature of the Barley-Corn, and of the proper Soils and Manures for the Improvement thereof.
This Grain is well known to excel all
others for making of Malts that produce those fine British Liquors, Beer
and Ale, which no other Nation can equalize; But as this Excellency cannot be
obtain'd unless the several Ingredients are in a perfect State and Order, and
these also attended with a right judgment; I shall here endeavour to treat on
their several particulars, and first of Soils.
This Grain I annually sow in my Fields on diversities of Soils,
and thereby have brought to my knowledge several differences arising therefrom.
On our Red Clays this Grain generally comes off reddish at both ends, and
sometimes all over, with a thick skin and tuff nature, somewhat like the Soil it
grows in, and therefore not so valuable as that of contrary qualities, nor are
the black blewish Marly Clays of the Vale much better, but Loams are, and
Gravels better than them, as all the Chalks are better then Gravels; on these
two last Soils the Barley acquires a whitish Body, a thin skin, a short plump
kernel, and a (unreadable) flower, which occasions those, fine pale and amber
Malts made at Dunstable, Tring and Dagnal from the Barley
that comes off the white and gravelly Grounds about those Places; for it is
certain there is as much difference in Barley as in Wheat or other Grain, from
the sort it comes off, as appears by the excellent Wheats that grow in the marly
vale Earths, Peas in Sands, and Barley in Gravels and Chalks, &c. For our
Mother Earth, as it is destinated to the service of Man in the production of
Vegetables, is composed of various sorts of Soils for different Seeds to grow
therein. And since Providence has been pleased to allow Man this great privilege
for the imployment of his skill and labour to improve the same to his advantage;
it certainly behoves us to acquaint ourselves with its several natures, and how
to adapt an agreeable Grain and Manure to their natural Soil, as being the very
foundation of enjoying good and bad Malts. This is obvious by parallel
Deductions from Turneps sown on rank clayey loamy Grounds, dressed with noxious
Dungs that render them bitter, tuff, and nauseous, while those that grow on
Gravels, Sands and Chalky Loams under the assistance of the Fold, or Soot, Lime,
Ashes, Hornshavings, &c. are sweet (unreadable) and pleasant. 'Tis the same
also with salads, Asparagus, Cabbages, Garden-beans and all other culinary Ware,
that come off those rich Grounds glutted with the great quantities of
London and other rank Dungs which are not near so pure, sweet and
wholsome, as those produced from Virgin mould and other healthy Earths and
Manures.
There is likewise another reason that has brought a disreputation
on some of the Chiltern-barley, and that is, the too often sowing of one and the
same piece of Ground, whereby its spirituous, nitrous and sulphureous qualities
are exhausted and worn out, by the constant attraction of its best juices for
the nutriment of the Grain: To supply which, great quantities of Dungs are often
incorporated with such Earths, whereby they become impregnated with four,
adulterated, unwholsome qualities, that so affect the Barley that grows therein,
as to render it incapable of making such pure and sweet Malts, as that which is
sown in the open Champaign-fields, whose Earths are constantly rested every
third Year called the Fallow-season, in order to discharge their crude,
phlegmatick and sour property, by the several turnings that the Plough gives
them part of a Winter and one whole Summer, which exposes the rough, clotty
loose parts of the Ground, and by degrees brings them into a condition of making
a lodgment of those saline benefits that arise from the Earths, and afterwards
fall down, and redound so much to the benefit of all Vegetables that grow
therein, as being the essence and spring of Life to all things that have root,
and tho' they are first exhaled by the Sun in vapour from the Earth as the
spirit or breath thereof, yet is it return'd again in Snows, Hails, Dews, etc.
more than in Rains, by which the surface of the Globe is saturated; from whence
it reascends in the juices of Vegetables, and enters into all those productions
as food, and nourishment, which the Creation supplies.
Here then may appear the excellency of steeping Seed-barley in a
liquor lately invented, that impregnates and loads it with Nitre and other Salts
that are the nearest of all others to the true and original Spirit or Salt of
the Earth, and therefore in a great measure supplies the want thereof both in
inclosure and open Field; for even in this last it is sometimes very scarce, and
in but small quantities, especially after a hot dry Summer and mild Winter, when
little or no Snows have fell to cover the Earth and keep this Spirit in; by
which and great Frosts it is often much encreased and then shews itself in the
warmth of well Waters, that are often seen to wreak in the cold Seasons. Now
since all Vegetables more or less partake of those qualities that the Soil and
Manures abound with in which they grow; I therefore infer that all Barley so
imbibed, improves its productions by the ascension of those saline spirituous
particles that are thus lodged in the Seed when put into the Ground, and are
part of the nourishment the After-Crop enjoys; and for this reason I doubt not,
but when time has got the ascendant of prejudice, the whole Nation will come
into the practice of the invaluable Receipt published in two Books, entituled,
Chiltern and Vale Farming Explained, and, The Practical Farmer;
both writ by William Ellis of Little Gaddesden near
Hempstead in Hertfordshire, not only for Barley, but other
Grains.
But notwithstanding Barley may grow on a light Soil with a proper
Manure; and improved by the liquor of this Receipt, yet this Grain may be
damaged or spoiled by being mown too soon, which may afterwards be discovered by
its shrivelled and lean body that never will make right good Malt; or if it is
mown at a proper time, and if it be housed damp, or wettish, it will be apt to
heat and mow-burn, and then it will never make so good Malt, because it will not
spire, nor come so regularly on the floor as that which was inned dry.
Again, I have known one part of a Barley-crop almost green at
Harvest, another part ripe, and another part between both, tho' it was all sown
at once, occasion'd by the several situations of the Seed in the Ground, and the
succeeding Droughts. The deepest came up strong and was ripe soonest, the next
succeeded; but the uppermost, for want of Rain and Cover, some of it grew not at
all, and the rest was green at Harvest. Now these irregularities are greatly
prevented and cured by the application of the ingredients mentioned in the
Receipt, which infuses such a moisture into the body of the Seed, as with the
help of a little Rain and the many Dews, makes it spire, take root and grow,
when others are ruined for want of the assistance of such steeping.
Barley like other Grain will also degenerate, and become rank,
lean and small bodied, if the same Seed is sown too often in the Soil; 'tis
therefore that the best Farmers not only change the Seed every time, but take
due care to have it off a contrary Soil that they sow it in to; this makes
several in my neighbourhood every Year buy their Barley-seed in the Vale of
Ailsbury, that grew there on the black clayey marly Loams, to sow in
Chalks, Gravels, etc. Others every second Year will go from hence to
Fullham and buy the Forward or Rath-ripe [mature or ripe ahead of time] Barley that grows there on
Sandy-ground; both which Methods are great Improvements of this Corn, and
whether it be for sowing or malting, the plump, weighty and white Barley- corn,
is in all respects much kinder than the lean flinty Sorts.
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