English Brown Ales
Once upon a time, all beers were dark beers.
Malt is the ingredient that gives beer color. Malt, or germinated
barley, needs to be dried before it can be used to brew beer and
prior to the 17th century, crude malt drying techniques left the
malt dark or smoky. The result - a dark, or smoky beer. While the
flavors of brown beers centuries ago probably varied a good bit from
what we know today, the color of beer was often brown, or darker.
Today,
malt is available in a wide range of strains and colors, with the
darker malts providing the color of a Brown Ale. Brown Ales
are brewed with caramel or darker malts to create both color and
flavor, though Brown Ales lack the heavy use of roasted malts that
are more commonly used in Porters and Stouts. This gives English
Brown Ales a rich color and flavor, without making a beer that is
overly heavy and dark.
History
As with many other beer styles including Pale Ales, Porters and
Stouts, Brown Ales originated in England and were being brewed in
some form well before the 17th century and the advent of other
English styles. Knowing what beers were like prior to the 17th
century is very difficult, because few records exist today of
exactly how those beers were brewed or what types of beers were
popular, but we can guess and infer what early beers were like based
on the technologies and resources that we know were available to
early brewers as well as from historical references in literature,
diaries or other historical documents.
We do know that Brown Ales, in general, originated in England. There
are references made to them in books and documents dating back to
the 17th century and it can be inferred that many darker beers
brewed prior to the development of the Porter style (1720) were
brewed with ingredients and processes that would have yielded
something very close to the modern English Brown Ale. Prior to 1700,
most available malts were dark or brown in color, so most every beer
would have been dark in color.
Porters were starting to become popular in England in the 1720's
with Stouts eventually following Porters. During this time,
references to many versions of Brown Ale also begin to appear and it
starts to become clear that the Brown Ale is something of a lighter
version of the Porter in many cases. Today, the Mild version of the
English Brown Ale is particularly like a lighter or lower gravity
version of a Porter.
Though the terminology used in the 18th century is different than
the terminology today, it is clear that Brown Ales were being brewed
at that time that are similar to the Brown Ales we know today. A
brewer might have called his Porter or Stout a "Brown beer" in
reference to the color alone, but some brewing recipes exist from
the period that are obviously intended to produce what we know today
as a Brown Ale.
Brown Ales virtually disappeared in the 19th century as Pale Ales
became popular
Food Pairings
Brown
Ales pair beautifully with red meats and chocolate. English Browns
are great with pork, while American Browns tend to favor beef. Great
foods with almost any Brown Ale would be apple pie, pork with
brown sauce, beef vegetable soup and cheddar cheese.
English Brown Ale Variants
English Brown Ales are typically divided into
three main categories: Mild, Southern English and Northern English
Brown Ales.
When talking about English Brown Ales,
we normally exclude the American version of the Brown Ale, which is
classified with American Ales. The American Brown Ale is typically a
much richer, maltier and hoppier version of the English style. Like
many other beer styles, the American version is something of an
exaggerated version of the style. To some extent, the American
version of the Brown Ale is somewhere between the English version
and a Porter in terms of malt character and strength.
Mild
A light-flavored,
malt-accented beer that is readily suited to drinking in quantity.
Refreshing, yet flavorful. Some versions may seem like lower gravity
brown porters.
In modern terms, the name
"mild" refers to the relative lack of hop bitterness (i.e. less hoppy
than a pale ale, and not so strong). Originally, the "mildness" may have
referred to the fact that this beer was young and did not yet have the
moderate sourness that aged batches had.
Milds are somewhat rare these days and it is extremely hard to
find examples of them in the United States outside of the occasional
brewpub version. Moorhouse Black Cat is one of the few widely available
commercially bottled examples in the US.
Southern English Brown Ale
In England,
the traditional Brown Ale is often split into two categories based on
geography; the Northern English Brown Ale and the Southern English Brown
Ale.
The Southern English Brown
Ale is a rarity indeed, both in the United States and in England. Even
in England, bottled versions are rare and in the United States it might
be possible to find one in a brewpub from time to time, but none are
bottled.
Historically, the Southern
Brown Ale is a malty sweet, rich beer that is not typically as strong as
the Northern Brown Ale. It can be confused with a lighter version of a
Sweet Stout due to its malty sweet character.
Northern English Brown Ale
The
Northern English Brown Ale is the type of beer that many beer drinkers
expect when they think of an English Brown Ale. Widely available in the
United States in bottles are Newcastle Brown and Samuel Smith Nut Brown,
as well as many American micro brewery examples. The Northern Brown Ale
relies more on hops than its southern counterpart and while they usually
have a malt base much like a Southern, the more assertive hop character
creates the perception of a drier and nutty character than the Southern
version. In fact, many of these beers are referred to as "Nut Browns"
and that phrase can even appear in the name of the beer.
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English Brown Ales?
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