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 malt is
typically the malt used to create Brown Ales and brown malt can be
made by simply baking pale malt at low temperatures until it reaches
the desired color. (This process also works to create amber malt for
Amber Ales.)
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 Ales are typically divided into
three main categories: Mild, Southern English and Northern English
Brown Ales.
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.
History:
May have evolved as one of the elements of
early 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. Somewhat rare in England, good
versions may still be found in the Midlands around Birmingham.
Examples: Moorhouse Black
Cat, Highgate Mild, Brain's Dark, Banks's Mild, Coach House Gunpowder
Strong Mild, Gale's Festival Mild, Woodforde's Norfolk Nog, Goose Island
PMD Mild
Southern English Brown Ale
A luscious, malt-oriented
brown ale, with a caramel, dark fruit complexity of malt flavor. May
seem somewhat like a smaller version of a sweet stout or a sweet version
of a dark mild.
History:
English brown ales are generally split into
sub-styles along geographic lines. Southern English (or "London-style")
brown ales are darker, sweeter, and lower gravity than their Northern
cousins.
Examples: Mann's Brown Ale
(bottled, but not available in the US), Tolly Cobbold Cobnut Nut Brown
Ale
Northern English Brown Ale
Drier
and more hop-oriented that southern English brown ale, with a nutty
character rather than caramel.
Examples: Newcastle Brown Ale, Samuel Smith's Nut Brown Ale, Tolly
Cobbold Cobnut Special Nut Brown Ale, Goose Island Hex Nut Brown Ale