Friday 12 February 2010

Kilning ca 1905

Not Southby today, you lucky devils. This time its Baker from a couple of decades later. The topic is malting.

High-dried malt. I've been trying to get clear in my mind exactly what is was. Partly because those flipping Truman's Burton logs are full of the stuff. The text below makes it sound like something half-way between pale and amber malt. Though the way its use is described, it strikes me as perhaps being more like Mild Ale malt with maybe a touch more colour.


"KILNING

This most important operation is divided into two stages, drying and curing. During the curing the character of the product is finally determined. The drying is effected by passing large volumes of warm air through the layer of malt. A high temperature is avoided at first, otherwise the diastase would be crippled or destroyed, and the starch gelatinised. During the drying process the malt is frequently forked and turned over, so that a free passage of air may be ensured.

On the first day of kilning, the temperature does not exceed 95° to 100° F. During the second day this is slowly raised to 120° to 125°, the third day to 140° to 150°, the fourth day the malt is finished off at the desired temperature. This is allowed to fall gradually, and the malt is heaped up on the kiln. The time during which a malt is kept on the kiln varies according to the quantity; some maltsters dry and cure in forty-eight hours, but the majority take three or four days. The object in view is gradually to raise the temperature to a maximum, and maintain it for a length of time sufficient to enable the heat to penetrate to the centre of the individual corns. During the curing process the diastatic capacity is greatly restricted, the malt is rendered friable, and the flavour is developed.

Varieties of malt:—

Pale malt for pale ale brewing is finished off at a temperature of . . 180°-200° F.
High dried malt for mild ale and stouts 200°-225° F.
Amber malt for mild ale and stouts 225°-240° F.

Brown malt is dried off rapidly over a wood fire. It has a much higher colour than amber malt, and no diastatic capacity. Black or patent malt is malt which is roasted, so as to produce the maximum amount of colouring matter. Roasted barley is now largely used in place of black malt, as it is cheaper and in most cases gives equally satisfactory results.

In this country malt is cured by exposure to the products of combustion from the kiln furnace. Curing by indirect heat, viz. the products of combustion being excluded from actual contact with the malt, is not usual in the United Kingdom, but is practised more in Continental and American maltings. Probably the part played by the products of combustion in conferring flavour on the malt has been much exaggerated. Excellent beers have been obtained from malts cured by indirect heat."
Source: "The brewing industry" by Julian L. Baker, 1905, pages 27 - 28.

I haven't forgotten Southby. More to come from him. On malt and brewing water.

2 comments:

Gary Gillman said...

In the 1763 account the gentleman from Hertfordshire refers to "high dried brown malt", which had to be different again. He refers too to the dark colour of the resultant beer. This must have been a kind of malt mild or pale malt finished off rapidly but retaining diastatic capacity as we have discussed earlier. That was a brown stout recipe after all..

Gary

Gary Gillman said...

The last paragraph is rather thought-provoking, since most older accounts seem to stress, except for brown malt, the need to avoid a smoky taste in malt.

Probably a relativity factor can be implied here, but still, here we read essentially that a smoky taste is part of the palate of English beer.

The products of combustion would have include wood and even if coke or coal was meant as well, one has to conclude from the tenor of the remarks that these too imparted a quality indirect heat would not.

This suggests to me the palate of English beer was different before 1900 for this reason alone.

Gary