Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Brooklyn Bitter

Today I’m brewing Brooklyn Bitter a strong bitter loosely based Young’s Special London Ale. Brooklyn Bitter will not be as strong as Special London Ale as its intended for draft consumption and it will be a touch darker but I do intend to infuse some of the striking hop character that Special London Ale used to present.

I say Special London Ale used to present a striking hop character as I picked up a bottle yesterday, the first to be marked Bedford, perhaps they have run out of tankered beer from London to blend or have just used up the old labels, and it was a very different beast. It looked like the Special London Ale of old, it smelt like the Special London Ale of old, but on the palate a sweet malt accented beer was revealed with very little bitterness. Where did the IBUs go?! The balance was far more like that of its former neighbour Fullers ESB and certainly not the beer that Michael Jackson described as possibly containing a whole hop garden in every bottle. Anyway I digress.

Brooklyn Bitter’s grist of Maris Otter malt, medium crystal and a touch of patent is currently mashing in burtonised liquor, once it is in the kettle it will be bittered with fuggels with large amounts of goldings being added late in the boil, finally s-04 will be added, hopefully it turns out well.

4 comments:

Kieran Haslett-Moore said...

yeast pitched , I over shot my gravity alittle, 1060 so its definitly in SLA territory.

Martin said...

Say it ain't so - Special London emasculated?? My favourite bottled beer of all time, that one. I was worried about what Bedford would do to it but I hung on to a tiny little hope that they would maintain it as it was.

By the way, Happy New Year. I've joined the homebrewing fraternity now and my third batch should be going into the fermenter later today. All OK so far!

Martin

Kieran Haslett-Moore said...

try it yourself, however thats the consensus in this house.
Hope the brews are turning out well.

Martin said...

So how did the Brooklyn Bitter turn out?

My Yankiwi Pale is currently cold conditioning. I plan to give it a couple of weeks at 2 degrees before bottling. I tasted a bottle of Birkby Bitter (batch #1) at the weekend after a couple of months of bottle ageing and it had developed nicely. Some nice blackcurranty/liquorice type notes.