July 12, 2010

Mild Ale


A mere hour into Saint Paul's Summer Beer Fest & I'm lost among pale ales of Extra, Imperial & lesser grades. The Midwest's ale scene in 2010 continues to pour copper colours of beer infused with green knowledge. Get out of the sun & into a shady Lyndale Ave. pub for a pitcher of bitter elixir, every drinker is on your side!

Right?


Leave it to my tongue; stricken with the need for bread before veg., refined ester before super bitter. I'm coming into tastes for subtle before wars over the sweet part of the palate...

And now that it's finally warm, a sky brimming with burning rays, let the understated goodness of mild permeate our fascination!

I did, literally, walk into our Beer Fest with the intention of only drinking English Ales. I knew I would be limiting myself, perhaps for the benefit of the lack of a lingering taxicab fare stretching the handful of blocks that lined my route from Midway Stadium, back home. I desired the bready, the balanced bitter, the malt before the syrup of the hop. To my normal surprise, most mass examples under sun-drenched tents left me pining for the minor malt from my cellar tap...

What is Mild Ale? Why do I covet? How could I pass double, imperial, and umpteen more variations on Pale Ale?

Examining history leaves one with fleeting footnotes to the opulence of what little malt flavor three decades of small malt flavor pours over foamy glasses called Mild Ale. Few styles run the gambit between red & brown hues, but Mild traverses both. A refreshing brown? It can be true! Like NB's kit, Mild often imitates a Scottish take on Rocky Mountain browns, or a drier glimpse at Northern English browns. In my best taste-visions, Mild takes a thinly malty glimpse at dark beer for a subtly layered ride! Complex bready or roasty malt profiles are the stars of the many British examples of award-winning Milds that proliferate the continental circuit.

Banks! Brain's! Cain's! Rudgate's Ruby! Tetley's & Tim Taylor's!

Sound familiar?

It's safe to say that without the expansion of British homebrewing in the 1960's & Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) throughout the late 20th century, we may very well be brewing examples of Mild Ales written from dead style notes, rather than oft-sustaining examples.

I don't intend to be mean, history just seems to orphan the Mild Ale between populations of ale drinkers. At its pale point, Mild is just within red. Light examples brim with biscuity, slightly roasty tones inside a seemingly watery red beer. Most Milds would rather straddle the line of dark red towards straight brown; laden with subtle chocolate malt sweetness & dark bready roast tinges.

Not unlike Light Scottish Ales, the English Mild plays on a small field. If one draws up a recipe that's too malty, then you're pushing brown. Go too hoppy & you've made a Common Bitter or a Southern English Brown. If it seems complicated... Well... Um... It's not?

Mild was originally the term applied to any 'small' runnings of a larger batch of colloquial British beer. 'Stale' would be the term applied to the first, and perhaps second runnings; the Mild's parent drippings coming third, perhaps fourth - depending on OG. Mild found its place as the drink above table beer and below the standard Bitter. As economical as it would seem to make do with all possible runnings, though, Mild was more severely taxed than strong beers in 1800's Britain, leading to its subversion as a 'popular' style. Layer on decades of war, followed by corporate fizzyness through the last 50 years & we've found our beloved CAMRA movement, along with the ingenuity of micro & homebrewers, to be the enduring faces of Mild.

Quite simply put then, as it would likely be today: pale drinkers wanted something hoppier, Brown Ale drinkers wanted something maltier. So why would you, dear drinker desire a Mild?

For example, my fiance will call upon a Big Sky Moose Drool at any time of the year. I, rather, desire some light malt refreshment within my deep quaffability; thus, where mild enters. Light examples find crisp, snappy bread tastes from Biscuit, Amber, or Brown malts. They finish just a bit sweet. But the standard brown versions have that finely roasty edge permeating a yeoman's nutty malt profile. It's the kind of setting a dry British malt & dark crystal accent can best produce.

Let's talk recipes...

  • Base malt should exceed 86% of the bill. Extract friends: Munton's malt extract is where it's at.
  • Stick to no more than 10% of British Dark Crystal malt in the grist.
  • Now, here's the trick for style preference: Fill out the remaining 6% with biscuit or brown malt for a red take on Mild; 3% biscuit & 3%roasted barley for brown to downright black versions.
  • Stay slight & noble with the hops. Kent Goldings & Fuggle are favorites. You might even boil as briefly as 30 minutes with certain calculations.
  •  Stay with more neutral London Ale yeasts. Wyeast 1318 is gospel.
  •  Don't stretch your yeast budget, either! One smack pack or a 350 mL starter are plenty if you utilize yeast nutrients. Give it two weeks to ferment & taste the results.
 My efficiency called for more malt, Special Roast still wins my heart in London styles...

It's Summer in these parts! Drink a beer that calls for another!

Toasty first runnings

A rather thin grain bed in the mash tun

The delicious final result. I call it Mildred

OG 1.038
Batch: 6.5 gallons
SRM: 10
IBU: 15
  • 7# Maris Otter
  • 8 oz. British Amber malt
  • 6 oz. Simpson's Dark Crystal
  • 0.8 oz. Kent Goldings @ 60"
  • Wyeast 1318 London III
Ferment for two weeks, bottle/keg & enjoy

2 comments:

  1. The thing I think US brewers, home brewers included, miss on this style is that the vast majority of these beers aren't all malt. More poignantly, a vast percentage of the character of these beers comes from these non-malt adjuncts. I really think it comes from a fright of non-malt adjuncts as some how things that aren't malt don't produce superior products.

    The arguably 4 best Milds made in the world are not all malt. Moorhouse Black cat uses about 10% flaked maize and 10% dark invert. Batemans dark uses 4% wheat and invert. Brain's dark uses a lot of dark invert and glucose. Over 20% of Elgoods Black dog grist comes from non-malt which include Flaked maize, torrifed, wheat, roast barley and invert sugar. These beers have a combined 20 wins at the GBBF with Brains taking Supreme champion 3 different times, Black cat twice and Bateman's once.

    Non-malt adjuncts are very good things...

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  2. I am planning on brewing my English Mild soon, just placed my order a few minutes ago. I am reasearching recipies to help finalize my recipe, this was helpful.

    I am utilizing some brown and amber malt along with light crystal. I have a tendancy to over do the non base malts but my recipe is very similar to this one so I think I will be fine.

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