THE LONDON and COUNTRY BREWER
1736
CHAP. VIII.
The London Method of Brewing.
In a great Brewhouse that I was concern'd
in, they wetted or used a considerable Quantity of Malt in one Week in Brewing
Stout-beer, common Butt-beer, Ale and small Beer, for which purpose they have
River and Well Waters, which they take in several degrees of Heat, as the Malt,
Goods and Grain are in a condition to receive them, and according to the
Practice there I shall relate the following Particulars, viz.
For Stout Butt Beer.
This is the strongest Butt-Beer that is Brewed from brown Malt, and often sold for forty Shillings the Barrel, or six
Pound the Butt out of the wholesale Cellars: The Liquor (for it is Sixpence forfeit in the London Brewhouse if the word Water is named) in the Copper
designed for the first Mash, has a two Bushel Basket, or more, of the most hully Malt throw'd over it, to cover its Top and forward its Boiling; this must be
made very hot, almost ready to boil, yet not so as to blister, for then it will be in too high a Heat; but as an indication of this, the foul part of the Liquor
will ascend, and the Malt swell up, and then it must be parted, look'd into and felt with the Finger or back of the Hand, and if the Liquor is clear and can but
be just endured, it is then enough, and the Stoker must damp his fire as soon as possible by throwing in a good Parcel of fresh Coals, and shutting his Iron vent
Doors, if there are any; immediately on this they let as much cold Liquor or Water run into the Copper as will make it all of a Heat, somewhat more than
Blood-warm, this they Pump over, or let it pass by a Cock into an upright wooden square Spout or Trunk, and it directly rises thro' the Holes of a false Bottom
into the Malt, which is work'd by several Men with Oars for about half an Hour, and is called the first and stiff Mash: While this is doing, there is more
Liquor heating in the Copper that must not be let into the mash Tun till it is very sharp, almost ready to boil, with this they Mash again, then cover it with
several Baskets of Malt, and let it stand an Hour before it runs into the Under-back, which when boiled an Hour and a half with a good quantity of Hops
makes this Stout. The next is Mash'd with a cooler Liquor, then a sharper, and the next Blood-warm or quite Cold; by which alternate degrees of Heat, a
Quantity of small Beer is made after the Stout.
For Brewing strong brown Ale called Stitch.
This is most of it the first running of the Malt, but yet of a longer Length than is drawn for the Stout; It has but few
Hops boiled in it, and is sold for Eight-pence per Gallon at the Brewhouse out of the Tun, and is generally made to amend the common brown Ale
with, on particular Occasions. This Ale I remember was made use of by [Blank
space] Medlicot Esq; in the beginning of a Consumption, and I heard him say, it did him very great Service, for he lived many Years afterwards.
For Brewing common brown Ale and
Starting Beer.
They take the Liquors from the brown Ale as for the Stout, but draw a greater Quantity from the Malt, than for Stout or
Stitch, and after the fifth and second Mash they Cap the Goods with fresh Malt to keep in the Spirit and Boil it an Hour; after this, small Beer is made of the
same Goods. Thus also the common brown Starting Butt-Beer is Brewed, only boiled with more Hops an Hour and a half, and work'd cooler and longer than the brown
Ale, and a shorter Length drawn from the Malt. But it is often practiced after the brown Ale, and where a Quantity of small Beer is wanted, or that it is to be
Brewed better than ordinary, to put so much fresh Malt on the Goods as will answer that purpose.
For Brewing Pale and Amber Ales and Beers.
As the brown Malts are Brewed with River, these are Brewed with Well or Spring Liquors. The Liquors are by some taken
sharper for pale than brown Malts, and after the first scalding Liquor is put over, some lower the rest by degrees to the last which is quite Cold, for their
small Beer; so also for Butt-Beers there is no other difference than the addition of more Hops, and boiling, and the method of working. But the reasons
for Brewing pale Malts with Spring or hard Well waters, I have mentioned in my
second Book of Brewing.
For Brewing Entire Guile Small
Beer.
On the first Liquor they throw some hully Malt to shew the break of it, and when it is very sharp, they let in some cold
Liquor, and run it into the Tun milk warm; this is mash'd with thirty or forty pulls of the Oar, and let stand till the second Liquor is ready, which must be
almost scalding hot to the back of the Hand, then run it by the Cock into the Tun [cask], mash it up and let it stand an Hour before it is spended off into the
Under-back: These two pieces of Liquor will make one Copper of the first wort, without putting any fresh Malt on the Goods; the next Liquor to be Blood-warm,
the next sharp, and the next cool or cold; for the general way in great Brewhouses is to let a cool Liquor precede a sharp one, because it gradually
opens the Pores of the Malt and Goods, and prepares the way for the hotter Liquor that is to follow.
The several Lengths or Quantities of Drinks that have been made from Malt, and their several Prices, as they have been sold at a common Brewhouse.
For Stout-Beer, is commonly drawn one Barrel off a quarter of Malt, and sold for thirty Shillings per Barrel
from the Tun. For Stitch or strong brown Ale, one Barrel and a Firkin, at one and twenty Shillings and Fourpence per Barrel from the Tun. For common
brown Ale, one Barrel and a half or more, at sixteen Shillings per Barrel, that holds thirty two Gallons, from the Tun. For Intire small Beer, five
or six Barrels off a Quarter, at seven or eight Shillings per Barrel from the Tun. For Pale and Amber Ale, one Barrel and a Firkin [small cask], at one Shilling per Gallon from the Tun.
London and Country Brewer - Preface and Contents