THE LONDON and COUNTRY BREWER
1736
CHAP. VI.
Of Grinding Malts.
As trifling as this Article in Brewing may
seem at first it very worthily deserves the notice of all concern'd therein, for
on this depends much the good of our Drink, because if it is ground too small
the flower of the Malt will be the easier and more freely mix with the water,
and then will cause the wort to run thick, and therefore the Malt must be only
just broke in the Mill, to make it emit its Spirit gradually, and incorporate
its flower with the water in such a manner that first a stout Beer, then an Ale,
and afterwards a small Beer may be had at one and the same Brewing, and the wort
run off fine and clear to the last.
Many are likewise so sagacious as to grind
their brown Malt a Fortnight before they use it, and keep it in a dry Place from
the influence of too moist an Air, that it may become mellower by losing in a
great measure the fury of its harsh fiery Particles, and its steely nature,
which this sort of Malt acquires on the Kiln; however this as well as many other
hard Bodies may be reduced by Time and Air into a more soluble, mellow and soft
Condition, and then it will imbibe the water and give a natural kind tincture
more freely, by which a greater quantity and stronger Drink may be made, than if
it was used directly from the Mill, and be much smoother and better tasted. But
the pale Malt will be fit for use at a Week's end, because the leisureness of
their drying endows them with a softness from the time they are taken off the
Kiln to the time they are brewed, and supplies in them what Time and Air must do
in the brown sorts. This method of grinding Malt so long before-hand can't be so
conveniently practised by some of the great Brewers, because several of them
Brew two or three times a Week, but now most of them out of good Husbandry grind
their Malts into the Tun by the help of a long descending wooden Spout, and here
they save the Charge of emptying or uncasing it out of the Bin (which formerly
they used to do before this new way was discovered) and also the waste of a
great deal of the Malt-flower that was lost when carryed in Baskets, whereas now
the Cover of the Tun presents all that Damage In my common Brewhouse at
London I ground my Malt between two large Stones by the Horse-mill that
with one Horse would grind [blank space] quarters an Hour, But in the Country I
use a steel Hand-mill, that Cost at first forty Shillings; which will by the
help of only one Man grind six or eight Bushels in an Hour, and will last a
Family many Years without hardning or cutting: There are some old-fashion'd
stone Hand-mills in being, that some are Votaries for and prefer to the Iron
ones, because they alledge that these break the Corn's body, when the Iron ones
only cut it in two, which occasions the Malt so broke by the Stones, to give the
water a more easy, free and regular Power to extract its Virtue, than the
Cut-malt can that is more confin'd within its Hull. Notwithstanding the Iron
ones are now mostly in Use for their great Dispatch and long Duration. In the
Country it is frequently done by some to throw a Sack of Malt on a Stone or
Brick-floor as soon as it is ground, and there let it lye, giving it one turn,
for a Day or two, that the Stones or Bricks may draw out the fiery Quality it
received from the Kiln, and give the Drink a soft mild Taste.
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