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BITTER
The pint is one of the icons of Britain â and to most people today the beer in that iconic pint must be bitter, the amber-brown, malty beer strongly flavoured with hops that everyone imagines in the hands of Britons as they drink at an old oak table in a thatched-roof country pub, or while they enjoy an evening song around a battered piano in a cheery street-corner boozer. Except that bitter, while undoubtedly one of Britainâs greatest contributions to the world of beer, only became the countryâs favourite drink in the early 1960s.
The origins of bitter, especially considering its popularity, are surprisingly obscure. There does not appear to have been a beer called âbitterâ much before the time that Queen Victoria came to the throne in 1837. What seems to have happened is that the name âbitterâ came about because drinkers wanted to differentiate the well-hopped, matured pale ales, which were gaining a place in brewersâ portfolios around the country by the start of the 1840s, from the sweeter, less-aged and generally less hopped mild ales that, until then, had been almost the only alternative to porter and stout for most drinkers for more than a century.
Porter, which was slowly losing its enormous popularity when William IV died, after 100 years as the nationâs top seller, was always called âbeerâ. Even in the 1930s if you ordered simply âbeerâ in certain pubs in âmean neighbourhoodsâ you were likely to be served porter, no further questions asked. If you didnât want porter you asked for âaleâ. What you got for âaleâ was young, mild, sweet and, at that time around 1840, pale as well, being made generally entirely from pale malt. What to call it, then, when a new type of beer, pale, but tart, aged and hoppy, began appearing in pubs?
Brewers named, and continued to name, the new hoppier drink âpale aleâ. The London brewer Whitbread listed âpale ale, mild ale, stout and Burtonâ as the âfour chief types of beer todayâ, and many of the beers we think of today as bitters are still called âpale alesâ by their makers. Truman, Hanbury and Buxton brewed beers at its Burton upon Trent brewery called PA1 and PA2 for pale ales one and two. The first was its strong Ben Truman bitter, the second its standard bitter. When Young & Co.âs Ram brewery in Wandsworth, South London, closed in 2006, it still sent its âordinaryâ bitter out in casks labelled PA for Pale Ale, exactly the same as when it was first brewed in 1864, while casks of its special bitter are marked âSPAâ. In 1952 Marstonâs of Burton gave its best pale ale the name Pedigree Pale Ale, while London Pride was originally advertised by its brewer, Fuller, Smith & Turner, as London Pride pale ale; today no drinker would call Pedigree or Pride anything except brands of bitter.
However, there were no pump-clips on the handles of the beer engines in Victorian pubs (pump-clips did not appear until the 1930s and did not come into wide use until the 1950s) and while brewers could dictate the nomenclature of the new drink on labels of the bottled versions (which is why we have bottled pale ale, not bottled bitter), drinkers themselves could decide what they were going to call the draught version when they ordered it. They kept the name âaleâ for the old, mild style of drink and called the new one by a name that defined and contrasted it â bitter beer, âbitterâ for short. The ale/bitter, rather than mild/bitter dichotomy lasted for at least 120 years on the customersâ side of the bar in some areas: Tom Berkley, who was a trainee pub manager in the early 1950s in Poplar, East London, close to the docks, had to learn quickly that when the stevedores walked in and said simply âghissileâ, they wanted mild, while bitter was more specifically âpinta biâerâ.
From the start, âpale aleâ and âbitterâ were synonyms. The very first mention of the term âbitter beerâ in The Times comes on 5 September 1842, in a small advertisement for âAshbyâs Australian Pale Aleâ, made by the Quaker-founded Ashbyâs brewery in Staines, Middlesex, a few miles up the Thames from London, which âis the most pleasant of all the different sorts of bitter beer that we have ever tastedâ, according to a newspaper quoted in the ad.
The best evidence for the idea that brewers and the public regarded pale ale and bitter beer as interchangeable synonyms comes with the âgreat strychnine libelâ of 1852. In March that year, a French professor, Monsieur Payen, claimed that large amounts of strychnine were being exported from France to England for use instead of hops to give beer a bitter flavour. The libel was repeated in an English medical journal, the Medical Times and Gazette, which wrote:
A letter appeared in The Times on 29 March under the heading âBitter Beerâ, calling the wider publicâs attention to the French claim. This was answered by a broadside from the brewers intended to bring down M. Payenâs canard, including a letter the next day from Michael Thomas Bass, head of one of Burton upon Trentâs biggest brewers and one of the biggest exporters of pale ale to India. Bass said:
Bassâs letter makes no distinction between bitter beer and pale ale and neither did a follow-up story published in The Times on 12 May 1852 under the heading âAlleged adulteration of pale ales by strychnineâ. This was about a report commissioned from two professors of chemistry in England by Henry Allsopp, head of another big Burton upon Trent brewer, which said: â⌠the charge of adulteration is totally unfounded, and the bitter beer drinker may dismiss all fears of being poisoned some day while quietly enjoying his favourite beverage.â
In the mid-nineteenth century, the new pale bitter drink was particularly in vogue with young middle-class and upper middle-class consumers as something visibly different from the sweeter milds and black porters of the working classes. In the novel The Adventures of Mr. Verdant Green, an Oxford Freshman, by Cuthbert Bede (the pseudonym of an Oxford don, the Reverend Edward Bradley), written around 1853, the Oxford undergraduates who populate its pages all drink bitter beer, which one of the characters calls âdoing bittersâ. Not everybody welcomed this new drink; in 1850 an editorial in The Times said that while âamong the wealthier classes beer has been much superseded by light winesâ, among âthe middle ranks the iniquitous compound termed âbitter beerâ bids fair to drive out the old British drink as completely as the Hanoverian rat exterminated that indigenous breed which is now only visible in the Isle of Portland.â Two years later the newspaper, talking about âthe âpale aleâ of upper-class drinkersâ and allegations of under-sized pints, said: âIf we were forced to drink a pint of âbitter beerâ for dinner we candidly own that we shouldnât care how small the measure was.â
By 1855 Punch magazine was making jokes about the âfast young gentsâ who drank âbitter beerâ living an âembittered existenceâ. A few years later, in 1864, the music hall artist Tom Maclagan, dressed as a fashionable âswellâ in a top hat and monocle and with nine-inch-long âDundrearyâ sideburns, was performing a song in praise of âBassâs Bitter Beerâ, with the sheet music advertising India Pale Ale on the back page. The growing popularity of pale bitter ales among âfast young gentsâ and swells (probably because pale ales were expensive and visibly different in the newly untaxed beer glasses that were then replacing pewter and china mugs in saloon bars) was intimately connected with the growth of Burton upon Trent as a brewing centre.
Pale ale had been around probably since the 1640s, after the invention of coke (coal with its toxic volatile elements removed). Maltsters could not use ordinary coal to dry the green malt, it poisoned their product, but they could use coke instead of wood or straw. This meant, with a more reliable fuel, they could control the temperature of the malt kilns, and thus the colour of the finished malt, more easily. With the invention and increasing use of the saccharometer in the eighteenth century, brewers were able to discover that pale malt contains more fermentable material than darker malts, and it was often used in the eighteenth century to brew strong, pale, heavily hopped October or stock beers, which matured for twelve months or more. However, these were expensive, because coke was more expensive than wood to dry malt and they were generally drunk only by the wealthy.
At the end of the eighteenth century a market for these stock pale ales grew up in India, where they were very popular with the civil servants (clerks and bureaucrats) and military servants (officers in its private armies) of the East India Company, the giant trading concern that ended up running much of the sub-continent. Before the reign of George IV, the biggest supplier to the Indian market was a brewer called Hodgson from Bow, on the eastern edge of London, close to the East India Companyâs docks. But the brewers of Burton upon Trent in Staffordshire began brewing a version of pale bitter beer in the 1820s to compete with Hodgson in the India market. This beer was originally known under a variety of names, including âpale ale as prepared for Indiaâ, but by the late 1830s it had become known as âIndia Pale Aleâ or âEast India Pale Aleâ.
Although the brewers of the time scarcely knew why, the well waters of Burton, naturally laden with calcium sulphate thanks to the beds of gypsum deep below the town, were perfect for brewing highly-hopped, sparkling pale ales. The gypseous brewing liquor used by the townâs brewers assisted the coagulation of proteinaceous matter during boiling (the âhot breakâ), which would otherwise cause cloudiness in the beer. It allowed a higher hop ratio without bringing out harshness from the hops in the way that the carbonate-high waters used by London brewers did; took less colour out of the malt, producing paler beers even from already pale malts and promoted yeast growth during fermentation.
The arrival of the railway in Burton upon Trent in 1839 enabled the Staffordshire townâs brewers to start sending the pale, hopped beers of the kind they shipped to India to customers around Britain as well, without having to pay the huge charges and suffer the inevitable pilfering they faced when sending their beers by canal. Their trade leapt by 50 per cent in a year and continued to climb rapidly. Within a few years other brewers had to offer similar pale bitter beers themselves to compete.
Before the 1840s the few advertisements for brewers in local newspapers normally listed only ale (in three separate grades, X, XX and XXX) and porter. One of the first brewers outside London and Burton to offer a bitter beer in the style of IPA was Thomas Henry Wyatt of the Bridge Street brewery, Banbury in Oxfordshire, who was advertising âVery Fine Pale Bitter Ale (India)â in July 1843 at the high price of 17d a gallon, the most expensive beer on his list. An advertisement from 1851 from Laws and Company of the Chevalier brewery in Kingâs Lynn, Norfolk declared: âPale Bitter Beer! Laws and Company, Family Brewers, have succeeded in producing an excellent article, which they are selling to families at 1s a gallonâ, showing a cheaper version of bitter-flavoured pale ale was now available.
The same year Hall & Woodhouse, then still at the Anstey brewery near Blandford, Dorset, said pale ale had ârecently been addedâ to its brews. A year later, 1852, Nanson & Co. of the Ladyâs Bridge brewery in Sheffield was advertising âBitter Beerâ. But these were rarities. Through the 1850s most brewers seem to have carried on advertising just ale and porter. From the 1860s, however, many brewers had started brewing pale ales and were selling both an IPA and a lower-priced âbitter aleâ. In 1875 Henry Earle of the Barnet brewery, Middlesex, listed three different grades of âbitter alesâ, IPA, BA and LBA, in descending order of strength and price.
Other brewers followed a similar pattern, though not always with a beer called IPA in the range. Michael Bowyer of the Stoke brewery, Guildford, Surrey, for example, brewed three different bitter ales in 1887: PA light bitter at 15s a kilderkin (18 gallon cask), implying an OG (original gravity â See Glossary for explanation) of around 1040 and a retail price of 3d a (quart) pot, about the cheapest brew in any Victorian pub; BA bitter ale at 18s a kilderkin, 4d a pot, with an OG of around 1045 to 1050; and BBA strong stock bitter at 27s a kilderkin, an OG of around 1070 and a retail price of 7d a pot.
The term âbitterâ never crossed the Atlantic as the name of a local-brewed beer style, perhaps because it came into being after the time of maximum English immigration to North America, though plenty of brewers in Canada and the New England states brewed pale ales for their customers. It occurs, however, in South Africa, Australia and New Zealand, where emigration from Britain was strong during the 1840s and 1850s, a time when the word was coming into use in British pubs. In 1868, in the recently founded town of Newcastle, Natal, William Peelâs Umlaas brewery, a direct ancestor of the later South African Breweries, was selling âPale Bitter Aleâ at 2s a gallon. In Australia the style kept its full name, rather than being shortened to just âbitterâ, so that the South Australian brewery in Adelaide produced West End XXX Bitter Beer and Southwark Bitter Beer, while Tooheyâs Standard brewery in Sydney sold Standard Bitter Ale, and its rival, Toothâs, made Sydney Bitter Ale. Australian brewers also called their bottled versions of the beer âbitter aleâ or âbitter beerâ, rather than pale ale, as in Britain. By the 1920s in Australia, however, âbitterâ as a style meant simply a slightly darker type of beer compared to local lager, served cold and brewed with bottom-fermenting yeast: Castlemaine XXXX, for example, called a lager in the UK, is known as a âbitter aleâ in its Queensland home.
At least one author, writing anonymously in 1884, regarded the development of Burton IPA as the invention of bitter beer in general. However, there was a style of hopped pale ale that existed independently of the IPA tradition, which went by the name KK or AK. Although the K style of bitter pale ale was probably an old one, evidence is lacking: one of the first mentions in print is in 1855 in an advertisement for the Stafford brewery, which was selling âPale India Aleâ at 18d a gallon, and AK Ale, âa delicate bitter aleâ, at 14d a gallon. The Burton brewer James Herbert said of AK ale: âThis class of ale has come very much into use, mostly for private families, it being a light tonic ale, and sent out by most brewers at 1s per gallon. The gravity of this Ale is usually brewed at 20lbâ, which is 1056 OG.
Other evidence suggests that Herbert was wrong in his estimation of the strength of AK, though it was certainly a popular style. A single edition of the Richmond and Twickenham Times, dated 8 July 1893, carries advertisements from five different brewers in south and west London, four of whom offered a beer called AK or KK, all indeed priced at 1s a gallon, which suggests an OG of 1045 to 1050. Professor Charles Graham, in his talk to the Society of Chemical Industry in 1881, confirmed the original gravity of AK as 1045, with an alcohol-by-weight of 4.3 per cent (5.4 per cent abv, which seems rather high), while Burton bitter, he said, has an OG of 1064 and an abv of 5.4 per cent. AK was matured for slightly less time than other pale ales: In 1898 Dr Edmund Moritz, describing beer types to a parliamentary committee on beer, spoke of light pale ales, or AK, kept two to three weeks before delivery, while other pale ales were kept for up to a month.
Brewers seem to have maintained a deliberate difference between the two types of bitter beer: lower-gravity, lighter-coloured, less-hopped AK light bitters, served relatively soon after brewing; and slightly darker, hoppier, stronger âpale alesâ, often designated PA, stored for some time before sending out. The brewing books of Garne & Sons of Burford, Oxfordshire, in 1912 show AK being brewed at an OG of 1040 and with a colour of 14, a reddish-brown hue, while PA was brewed to an OG of 1056 and with a colour of 18, a darker, medium brown. The difference is confirmed by contemporary comments on the two beers. Alfred Barnard, the late-Victorian drinks writer, sampled an AK brewed by Rogers of Bristol in 1889, which he described as âa bright sparkling beverage of a rich golden colour and ⌠a nice delicate hop flavourâ. Of Whitbreadâs Pale Ale, on the other hand, a more standard bitter, he wrote that it tasted âwell of the hopâ, though it too looked âboth bright and sparklingâ. Crowleyâs brewery in Croydon High Street, Surrey, in 1900 described its AK in one of its advertisements as âa Bitter Ale of sound quality with a delicate Hop flavourâ and the frequent description of AK in Victorian advertisements of âfor family useâ suggests a not-too-bitter, not-too-strong beer.
Why a K was used in the name of these pale, lower-hopped beers is a mystery yet to be properly solved. It may be simply to contrast with the X normally used for milds and darker ales. It may go all the way back to a popular medieval Dutch and Flemish beer called koyt, or coyt, which came in two strengths, single and double. In Old Flemish, the word for âsingleâ was ankel (enkel in modern Dutch), making âsingle koytâ ankel koyt, which could easily have been shortened to AK. Many Dutch and Flemish brewers immigrated to England in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, bringing with them a preference for brewing with hops and a large number of brewing terms, from gyle to kilderkin. Perhaps they brought âAnkel Koytâ with them too. What AK does not have anything to do with, despite mythology to the contrary, is a brewer called Arthur King. Nor is it short f...