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I have no idea what an 18th century porter tasted like so I wouldn't know how to go about making one because copying recipes isnt possible with modern ingredients, I fear.
Doesn't mean we shouldn't use old recipes and see what happens of course. But I've focused my brewing on working out how to make beers that suit my tastes with the ingredients I can get hold of today. I don't go for low bitterness beers so I tend to increase the IBUs in some styles, like porter.
18th century brewing will have been a very inconsistent, and localised, affair. Think about the farmhouse brewers encountered by Lars Garshol in Scandinavia and East Europe. Random yeasts, bacteria, tree branches, home malted and kilned grains. Different kilning methods. Different mashing and boil ing capabilities.
Black patent malt appeared in the late 18th century I think and was used to improve efficiencies alongside pale malt. Did beer suddenly change at that point? Or was there so much variety that it was just another variation, and the cost reduction gave it dominance?
I wouldn't want to kid myself I was making an 18th century beer and i doubt anybody else here does either. It's fun to look into the past and to use what we find to inform what we do.
The first porter I brewed was the published recipe for Fullers London Porter and it was great. I tend to brew porters along those lines with a combination of crystal, brown and roast malt. I use different crystal and roast malts. Choc or black usually, but I've also used choc rye and choc wheat. I like what brown malt brings. I've put amber malt in too. I think black malt, crystal and modern brown malt were created to be used with pale malt to sort of mimic what historic brewing malt was like, approximately. So I don't tend to use things like Chevallier in a porter as it will be masked to a considerable degree. I've done it though and it's a fine thing to do. For me a single malt beer with Chevallier is very like a beer made with pale malt and crystal so why not use pale and crystal in a dark beer instead?
I'm just thinking out loud, I find this stuff interesting but I'm just an amateur home brewer with no specific knowledge. |
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