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Beer in Scotland

Beer in Scotland is mostly produced by breweries in the central Lowlands, which also contain the main centres of population. Edinburgh and Alloa in particular became noted for the export of beer around the world in the 19th century.

The Caledonian Brewery in Edinburgh in 2005
Broughton Brewery in 1979

History edit

 
Edinburgh Ale, 1844, by Hill & Adamson. Perhaps the earliest photograph of men drinking beer

Brewing in Scotland goes back 5,000 years; it is suggested that ale could have been made from barley at Skara Brae and at other sites dated to the Neolithic. The ale would have been flavoured with meadowsweet in the manner of a kvass or gruit made by various North European tribes including the Celts and the Picts. The ancient Greek Pytheas remarked in 325 BC that the inhabitants of Caledonia were skilled in the art of brewing a potent beverage.[1][2]

The use of bittering herbs such as heather, myrtle, and broom[3] to flavour and preserve beer continued longer in remote parts of Scotland than in the rest of the UK. Thomas Pennant wrote in A Tour in Scotland (1769) that on the island of Islay "ale is frequently made of the young tops of heath, mixing two-thirds of that plant with one of malt, sometimes adding hops".[4] Though, as in the rest of Britain, hops had replaced herbs in Scotland by the end of the 19th century, this Celtic tradition of using bittering herbs was revived in Brittany, France, during 1990 by Brasserie Lancelot,[5] and in Scotland by the Williams Brothers two years later.[6]

Even though ancient brewing techniques and ingredients remained in use later in Scotland than in the rest of the UK, the general pattern of development was the same, with brewing mainly in the hands of "broustaris", or alewives, and monasteries, just as it was throughout Europe; though, as with brewing ingredients, the trend was for developments to move more slowly. The Leges Quatuor Burgorum, a code of burgh laws, showed that in 1509 Aberdeen had over 150 brewers – all women; and this compares with figures for London which show that of 290 brewers, around 40% were men.[citation needed] After the Reformation in the 1560s commercial brewing started to become more organised, as shown by the formation in 1598 of the Edinburgh Society of Brewers – though London had formed its Brewers' Guild over 250 years earlier in 1342.[7]

However, after the Acts of Union 1707, new commercial opportunities emerged that proved a substantial stimulus to Scottish brewers. Tax on beer was lower than in other parts of the United Kingdom, and there was no tax on malt in Scotland – this gave Scottish brewers a financial advantage. During the 18th century some of the best-remembered names in Scottish brewing established themselves, such as William Younger in Edinburgh, Robert & Hugh Tennent in Glasgow, and George Younger in Alloa. In Dunbar in 1719, for example, Dudgeon & Company's Belhaven Brewery was founded. Scottish brewers, especially those in Edinburgh, were about to rival the biggest brewers in the world.

 
An Edinburgh brewer's IPA label from 2012

Some available information from brewing and trade records shows that brewers in the India Pale Ale (IPA) export trade in Edinburgh used hops as much as English brewers,[8] and that the strong, hoppy ale that Hodgeson was exporting to India and which became known as IPA, was copied and brewed in Edinburgh in 1821,[citation needed] a year before Allsopp is believed to have first brewed it in Burton. Robert Disher's brewery in the Canongate area of Edinburgh had such a success with his hoppy Edinburgh Pale Ale that the other Edinburgh brewers followed, exporting strong, hoppy Scottish beer throughout the British Empire, and into Russia and America. The beer historians Charles McMaster and Martyn Cornell have both shown that the sales figures of Edinburgh's breweries rivalled those of Dublin and Burton upon Trent.

Charles McMaster, the "leading historian of the Scottish brewing industry" according to Roger Protz,[9] believes that the hard water of Edinburgh was particularly suitable for the brewing of pale ale – especially the water from the wells on the "charmed circle" of Holyrood through Canongate, Cowgate, Grassmarket and Fountainbridge; and that due to the quality of this water, brewer Robert Disher was able to launch a hoppy Edinburgh Pale Ale in 1821. While Martyn Cornell in Beer: The Story of The Pint, shows that when the brewers of Burton in the late 19th century were exporting their hoppy Burton Ales in the form of India Pale Ale, so were the William McEwan and William Younger breweries. When the Burton brewers exported strong malty Burton Ales, so did the Edinburgh brewers, under the name Scotch Ale. The Edinburgh brewers had a very large and well-respected export trade to the British colonies rivalling that of the Burton brewers. By the mid-19th century Edinburgh had forty breweries and was "acknowledged as one of the foremost brewing centres in the world".[10]

 
Pub on Edinburgh's Royal Mile

Some writers, such as Pete Brown in Man Walks into a Pub, believe that beer brewed in Scotland developed to be significantly different from beer brewed in England. The belief is that hops were used sparingly, and that the shilling designation was uniquely Scottish. However, a single pair of records can be cited indicating a similar use of hops in a Scottish pale ale to an English one. Dr John Harrison in Old British Beers gave a recipe for the English brewery Brakspear's 1865 50/- Pale Ale in which 1.8 oz of hops are used per imperial gallon (11 grams per litre),[11] which compares with the Scottish brewery W. Younger's 1896 Ale No 3 (Pale) that also uses 1.8 oz of hops per imperial gallon.[12]

Scotch ales edit

"Scotch ale" was first used as a designation for strong ales exported from Edinburgh in the 18th century.[13] The term has become popular in the US, where strong ales with low hop levels and a malty sweetness which may be available in Scotland under a different name are sold in America as "Scotch ales" and "Scottish ales".[14] As with other examples of strong ales, such as barley wine, these beers tend toward sweetness from residual sugars, malty notes, and full bodies.[15]

Scotch ales are an accepted style in Belgium: Gordon's Highland Scotch Ale, with its thistle-shaped glass is a well-known example, produced by the British-connected John Martin Brewery.

Craft brewing edit

Since 2003, Innis and Gunn, an Edinburgh-based contract brewed virtual brewery whose beers are made in Glasgow, has been producing a range of oaked beers matured in Bourbon barrels.

Inspired by US craft brewers, Fraserburgh's self-styled punk brewers Brewdog produce a varied range of bottled and keg beers. They have attracted considerable attention and controversy for rejecting the real ale format, and for the strength of their beers. After being criticised for brewing an 18.2% ABV beer, they responded with a 0.5% beer called "Nanny State", followed by a series of beers up to 55% ABV.[16]

Shilling categories edit

The shilling categories were based on the invoice price per hogshead (54 imperial gallons (250 L)) during the late 19th century. The stronger or better quality beers paid more beer duty and therefore cost more. Light beers might be in the range 42/- to 48/- (42-48 shilling); Younger's brewery produced heavy beers ranging from 80/- to 160/-.[17] The same shilling designation was used for beer of different types. Usher's, for example, in 1914 brewed both a 60/- (60 shilling) Mild and a 60/- Pale Ale.[18] In 1909 Maclay brewed a 54/- Pale Ale and a 54/- Stout.[19] In 1954 Steel Coulson were still producing both a 60/- Edinburgh Ale and a 60/- Brown Ale on draught, both with a gravity of 1030; the third draught beer was 70/- P.X.A. at 1034.[20] By the 1950s customers would ask for a strength of beer by names such as "heavy" and "export", rather than shillings; these two terms are still widely used in Scotland. Even though the practice of classifying beers by the shilling price was not specific to Scotland, during the cask ale revival in the 1970s Scottish brewers resurrected the shilling names to differentiate between keg and cask versions of the same beers. This differentiation has now been lost.

 
An Edinburgh 90 shilling label

While the shilling names were never pinned down to exact strength ranges, and Scottish brewers today produce beers under the shilling names in a variety of strengths, it was largely understood that:[3]

Light
(60/-) was under 3.5% abv
Heavy
(70/-) was between 3.5% and 4.0% abv
Export
(80/-) was between 4.0% and 5.5% abv
Wee heavy
(90/-) was over 6.0% abv
(/- is read as "shilling" as in "a pint of eighty-shilling, please". The "/-" was the symbol used for "shillings exactly", that is, shillings and zero pence, in the pre-decimal £sd British currency, so the names are read as "60 (or 70 or 80) shilling ale". Terminology for beer expressed the amount only in shillings rather than in pounds and shillings. See also solidus.)

The "wee heavy" (named because it was typically sold in bottles in "nips" of 6 fluid ounces)[17] has become the standard Scottish-style brew in the United States, and many brewers are now using non-traditional peated malts in the recipes.[3]

Breweries in Scotland edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ A history of beer and brewing By Ian Spencer Hornsey, Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain)
  2. ^ The Ale Trail (1995)Rodger Protz
  3. ^ a b c Gilmour, Alastair (2012). "Scotland". In Garrett Oliver (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Beer. Vol. 1 (1st ed.). New York City: Oxford University Press Inc. pp. 1174–1176.
  4. ^ Thomas Pennant, A Tour in Scotland and Voyage to the Hebrides, 1772, New Ed. (Birlinn Ltd, 1998) ISBN 1-874744-88-2
  5. ^ "Cervoiserie Lancelot". Ratebeer.com. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
  6. ^ "Williams Brothers (Heather Ales)". Ratebeer.com. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
  7. ^ J. Wormald, Court, Kirk, and Community: Scotland, 1470-1625 (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1991), ISBN 0748602763, pp. 172–3.
  8. ^ William Younger's and Usher's brewing records at the Scottish Brewing Archive
  9. ^ . beer-pages.com. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
  10. ^ Charles McMaster: "Edinburgh Brewing capital of the Northern Hemisphere?" in Beer Glorious Beer Edited by Barrie Pepper and Roger Protz, ISBN 1-899163-46-8
  11. ^ Harrison, John (2013) [1976]. Old British Beers and How to Make Them. Durden Park Beer Circle. ISBN 978-0-9517752-1-9.
  12. ^ William Younger's brewing records at the Scottish Brewing Archive
  13. ^ The Younger Centuries, by David Keir, 1951, page 22
  14. ^ "Caledonian Edinburgh Scotch Ale from Caledonian (S&N, Heineken), an English Strong Ale style beer". Ratebeer.com. 5 November 2010. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  15. ^ "Ale Styles Guide – IPA & Ale Beer Styles | Beer of the Month Club". The Microbrewed Beer of the Month Club. Retrieved 27 December 2018.
  16. ^ Naylor, Tony (3 March 2010). "Big thirst for small beer". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 March 2015.
  17. ^ a b "The Shilling System". Scottish Brewing. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  18. ^ Usher's brewing records at the Scottish Brewing Archive
  19. ^ Maclay's brewing records at the Scottish Brewing Archive
  20. ^ Steel Coulson production records at the Scottish Brewing Archive

Sources

  • Martyn Cornell Beer: The Story of The Pint
  • Merryn Dineley 2004 'Barley, Malt and Ale in the Neolithic' BAR S1213 John & Erica Hedges, Oxbow Books
  • Michael Jackson The World Guide to Beer

External links edit

  • SIBA Scotland
  • CAMRA
  • Scottish Beer & Pub Association
  • The History of Beer in Scotland & the True Origins of Scottish Ale

beer, scotland, this, article, about, beer, produced, scotland, style, beer, scotch, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed. This article is about beer produced in Scotland For the style of beer see Scotch ale This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Beer in Scotland news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Beer in Scotland is mostly produced by breweries in the central Lowlands which also contain the main centres of population Edinburgh and Alloa in particular became noted for the export of beer around the world in the 19th century The Caledonian Brewery in Edinburgh in 2005 Broughton Brewery in 1979 Contents 1 History 2 Scotch ales 3 Craft brewing 4 Shilling categories 5 Breweries in Scotland 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Edinburgh Ale 1844 by Hill amp Adamson Perhaps the earliest photograph of men drinking beer Brewing in Scotland goes back 5 000 years it is suggested that ale could have been made from barley at Skara Brae and at other sites dated to the Neolithic The ale would have been flavoured with meadowsweet in the manner of a kvass or gruit made by various North European tribes including the Celts and the Picts The ancient Greek Pytheas remarked in 325 BC that the inhabitants of Caledonia were skilled in the art of brewing a potent beverage 1 2 The use of bittering herbs such as heather myrtle and broom 3 to flavour and preserve beer continued longer in remote parts of Scotland than in the rest of the UK Thomas Pennant wrote in A Tour in Scotland 1769 that on the island of Islay ale is frequently made of the young tops of heath mixing two thirds of that plant with one of malt sometimes adding hops 4 Though as in the rest of Britain hops had replaced herbs in Scotland by the end of the 19th century this Celtic tradition of using bittering herbs was revived in Brittany France during 1990 by Brasserie Lancelot 5 and in Scotland by the Williams Brothers two years later 6 Even though ancient brewing techniques and ingredients remained in use later in Scotland than in the rest of the UK the general pattern of development was the same with brewing mainly in the hands of broustaris or alewives and monasteries just as it was throughout Europe though as with brewing ingredients the trend was for developments to move more slowly The Leges Quatuor Burgorum a code of burgh laws showed that in 1509 Aberdeen had over 150 brewers all women and this compares with figures for London which show that of 290 brewers around 40 were men citation needed After the Reformation in the 1560s commercial brewing started to become more organised as shown by the formation in 1598 of the Edinburgh Society of Brewers though London had formed its Brewers Guild over 250 years earlier in 1342 7 However after the Acts of Union 1707 new commercial opportunities emerged that proved a substantial stimulus to Scottish brewers Tax on beer was lower than in other parts of the United Kingdom and there was no tax on malt in Scotland this gave Scottish brewers a financial advantage During the 18th century some of the best remembered names in Scottish brewing established themselves such as William Younger in Edinburgh Robert amp Hugh Tennent in Glasgow and George Younger in Alloa In Dunbar in 1719 for example Dudgeon amp Company s Belhaven Brewery was founded Scottish brewers especially those in Edinburgh were about to rival the biggest brewers in the world nbsp An Edinburgh brewer s IPA label from 2012 Some available information from brewing and trade records shows that brewers in the India Pale Ale IPA export trade in Edinburgh used hops as much as English brewers 8 and that the strong hoppy ale that Hodgeson was exporting to India and which became known as IPA was copied and brewed in Edinburgh in 1821 citation needed a year before Allsopp is believed to have first brewed it in Burton Robert Disher s brewery in the Canongate area of Edinburgh had such a success with his hoppy Edinburgh Pale Ale that the other Edinburgh brewers followed exporting strong hoppy Scottish beer throughout the British Empire and into Russia and America The beer historians Charles McMaster and Martyn Cornell have both shown that the sales figures of Edinburgh s breweries rivalled those of Dublin and Burton upon Trent Charles McMaster the leading historian of the Scottish brewing industry according to Roger Protz 9 believes that the hard water of Edinburgh was particularly suitable for the brewing of pale ale especially the water from the wells on the charmed circle of Holyrood through Canongate Cowgate Grassmarket and Fountainbridge and that due to the quality of this water brewer Robert Disher was able to launch a hoppy Edinburgh Pale Ale in 1821 While Martyn Cornell in Beer The Story of The Pint shows that when the brewers of Burton in the late 19th century were exporting their hoppy Burton Ales in the form of India Pale Ale so were the William McEwan and William Younger breweries When the Burton brewers exported strong malty Burton Ales so did the Edinburgh brewers under the name Scotch Ale The Edinburgh brewers had a very large and well respected export trade to the British colonies rivalling that of the Burton brewers By the mid 19th century Edinburgh had forty breweries and was acknowledged as one of the foremost brewing centres in the world 10 nbsp Pub on Edinburgh s Royal Mile Some writers such as Pete Brown in Man Walks into a Pub believe that beer brewed in Scotland developed to be significantly different from beer brewed in England The belief is that hops were used sparingly and that the shilling designation was uniquely Scottish However a single pair of records can be cited indicating a similar use of hops in a Scottish pale ale to an English one Dr John Harrison in Old British Beers gave a recipe for the English brewery Brakspear s 1865 50 Pale Ale in which 1 8 oz of hops are used per imperial gallon 11 grams per litre 11 which compares with the Scottish brewery W Younger s 1896 Ale No 3 Pale that also uses 1 8 oz of hops per imperial gallon 12 Scotch ales editMain article Scotch ale Scotch ale was first used as a designation for strong ales exported from Edinburgh in the 18th century 13 The term has become popular in the US where strong ales with low hop levels and a malty sweetness which may be available in Scotland under a different name are sold in America as Scotch ales and Scottish ales 14 As with other examples of strong ales such as barley wine these beers tend toward sweetness from residual sugars malty notes and full bodies 15 Scotch ales are an accepted style in Belgium Gordon s Highland Scotch Ale with its thistle shaped glass is a well known example produced by the British connected John Martin Brewery Craft brewing editSince 2003 Innis and Gunn an Edinburgh based contract brewed virtual brewery whose beers are made in Glasgow has been producing a range of oaked beers matured in Bourbon barrels Inspired by US craft brewers Fraserburgh s self styled punk brewers Brewdog produce a varied range of bottled and keg beers They have attracted considerable attention and controversy for rejecting the real ale format and for the strength of their beers After being criticised for brewing an 18 2 ABV beer they responded with a 0 5 beer called Nanny State followed by a series of beers up to 55 ABV 16 Shilling categories editThe shilling categories were based on the invoice price per hogshead 54 imperial gallons 250 L during the late 19th century The stronger or better quality beers paid more beer duty and therefore cost more Light beers might be in the range 42 to 48 42 48 shilling Younger s brewery produced heavy beers ranging from 80 to 160 17 The same shilling designation was used for beer of different types Usher s for example in 1914 brewed both a 60 60 shilling Mild and a 60 Pale Ale 18 In 1909 Maclay brewed a 54 Pale Ale and a 54 Stout 19 In 1954 Steel Coulson were still producing both a 60 Edinburgh Ale and a 60 Brown Ale on draught both with a gravity of 1030 the third draught beer was 70 P X A at 1034 20 By the 1950s customers would ask for a strength of beer by names such as heavy and export rather than shillings these two terms are still widely used in Scotland Even though the practice of classifying beers by the shilling price was not specific to Scotland during the cask ale revival in the 1970s Scottish brewers resurrected the shilling names to differentiate between keg and cask versions of the same beers This differentiation has now been lost nbsp An Edinburgh 90 shilling label While the shilling names were never pinned down to exact strength ranges and Scottish brewers today produce beers under the shilling names in a variety of strengths it was largely understood that 3 Light 60 was under 3 5 abv Heavy 70 was between 3 5 and 4 0 abv Export 80 was between 4 0 and 5 5 abv Wee heavy 90 was over 6 0 abv is read as shilling as in a pint of eighty shilling please The was the symbol used for shillings exactly that is shillings and zero pence in the pre decimal sd British currency so the names are read as 60 or 70 or 80 shilling ale Terminology for beer expressed the amount only in shillings rather than in pounds and shillings See also solidus The wee heavy named because it was typically sold in bottles in nips of 6 fluid ounces 17 has become the standard Scottish style brew in the United States and many brewers are now using non traditional peated malts in the recipes 3 Breweries in Scotland editMain article List of breweries in ScotlandSee also edit nbsp Beer portal nbsp Scotland portal Beer in the United Kingdom Tall fountReferences edit A history of beer and brewing By Ian Spencer Hornsey Royal Society of Chemistry Great Britain The Ale Trail 1995 Rodger Protz a b c Gilmour Alastair 2012 Scotland In Garrett Oliver ed The Oxford Companion to Beer Vol 1 1st ed New York City Oxford University Press Inc pp 1174 1176 Thomas Pennant A Tour in Scotland and Voyage to the Hebrides 1772 New Ed Birlinn Ltd 1998 ISBN 1 874744 88 2 Cervoiserie Lancelot Ratebeer com Retrieved 2 July 2012 Williams Brothers Heather Ales Ratebeer com Retrieved 2 July 2012 J Wormald Court Kirk and Community Scotland 1470 1625 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 1991 ISBN 0748602763 pp 172 3 William Younger s and Usher s brewing records at the Scottish Brewing Archive origins of pale ale and india pale ale beer pages com Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 2 July 2012 Charles McMaster Edinburgh Brewing capital of the Northern Hemisphere in Beer Glorious Beer Edited by Barrie Pepper and Roger Protz ISBN 1 899163 46 8 Harrison John 2013 1976 Old British Beers and How to Make Them Durden Park Beer Circle ISBN 978 0 9517752 1 9 William Younger s brewing records at the Scottish Brewing Archive The Younger Centuries by David Keir 1951 page 22 Caledonian Edinburgh Scotch Ale from Caledonian S amp N Heineken an English Strong Ale style beer Ratebeer com 5 November 2010 Retrieved 12 August 2014 Ale Styles Guide IPA amp Ale Beer Styles Beer of the Month Club The Microbrewed Beer of the Month Club Retrieved 27 December 2018 Naylor Tony 3 March 2010 Big thirst for small beer The Guardian Retrieved 11 March 2015 a b The Shilling System Scottish Brewing Retrieved 20 April 2017 Usher s brewing records at the Scottish Brewing Archive Maclay s brewing records at the Scottish Brewing Archive Steel Coulson production records at the Scottish Brewing Archive Sources Martyn Cornell Beer The Story of The Pint Merryn Dineley 2004 Barley Malt and Ale in the Neolithic BAR S1213 John amp Erica Hedges Oxbow Books Michael Jackson The World Guide to BeerExternal links editSIBA Scotland CAMRA Scottish Beer amp Pub Association The History of Beer in Scotland amp the True Origins of Scottish Ale Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Beer in Scotland amp oldid 1219538767, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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