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<h2> CHAP. XIII. <i>Of fermenting and working of Beers and Ales, and the pernicious Practice of Beating in the Yeast detected</i>. </h2>
<p>This Subject in my Opinion has, long wanted a Satyrical Pen to shew the
ill Effects of this unwholsome Method, which I suppose has been much
discouraged and hindered hitherto, from the general use it has been under
many Years, especially by the <i>Northern</i> Brewers, who tho' much famed
for their Knowledge in this Art, and have induced many others by their
Example in the <i>Southern</i> and other Parts to pursue their Method; yet
I shall endeavour to prove them culpable of Male-practice, that beat in
the Yeast, as some of them have done a Week together; and that Custom
ought not to Authorize an ill Practice. <i>First</i>, I shall observe that
Yeast is a very strong acid, that abounds with subtil spirituous
Qualities, whose Particles being wrapped up in those that are viscid, are
by a mixture with them in the Wort, brought into an intestine Motion,
occasion'd by Particles of different Gravities; for as the spirituous
Parts of the Wort will be continually striving to get up to the Surface,
the glutinous adhesive ones of the Yeast will be as constant in retarding
their assent, and so prevent their Escape; by which the spirituous
Particles are set loose and free from their viscid Confinements, as may
appear by the Froth on the Top, and to this end a moderate warmth hastens
the Operation, as it assists in opening the viscidities in which some
spirituous Parts may be entangled, and unbends the Spring of the included
Air: The viscid Parts which are raised to the Top, not only on account of
their own lightness, but by the continual efforts and occursions of the
Spirits to get uppermost, shew when the ferment is at the highest, and
prevent the finer Spirits making their escape; but if this intestine
Operation is permitted to continue too long, a great deal will get away,
and the remaining grow flat and vapid, as Dr. <i>Quincy</i> well observes.
Now tho' a small quantity of Yeast is necessary to break the Band of
Corruption in the Wort, yet it is in itself of a poisonous Nature, as many
other Acids are; for if a Plaister of thick Yeast be applied to the Wrist
as some have done for an Ague, it will there raise little Pustules or
Blisters in some degree like that Venomous! (As I have just reason in a
particular Sense to call it) Ingredient <i>Cantharide</i>, which is one of
the Shop Poisons. Here then I shall observe, that I have known several
beat the Yeast into the Wort for a Week or more together to improve it, or
in plainer terms to load the Wort with its weighty and strong spirituous
Particles; and that for two Reasons, <i>First</i>, Because it will make
the Liquor so heady, that five Bushels of Malt may be equal in strength to
six, and that by the stupifying Narcotick Qualities of the Yeast; which
mercenary subtilty and imposition has so prevailed to my Knowledge with
the Vulgar and Ignorant, that it has caused many of them to return the
next Day to the same Alehouse, as believing they had stronger and better
Drink than others: But alas, how are such deceived that know no other than
that it is the pure Product of the Malt, when at the same time they are
driving Nails into their Coffins, by impregnating their Blood with the
corrupt Qualities of this poisonous acid, as many of its Drinkers have
proved, by suffering violent Head-achs, loss of Appetite, and other
Inconveniencies the Day following, and sometimes longer, after a Debauch
of such Liquor; who would not perhaps for a great reward swallow a
Spoonful of thick Yeast by itself, and yet without any concern may receive
for ought they know several, dissolved in the Vehicle of Ale, and then the
corrosive Corpuscles of the Yeast being mix'd with the Ale, cannot fail
(when forsaken in the Canals of the Body of their Vehicle) to do the same
mischief as they would if taken by themselves undiluted, only with this
difference, that they may in this Form be carried sometimes further in the
animal Frame, and so discover their malignity in some of the inmost
recesses thereof, which also is the very Case of malignant Waters, as a
most learned Doctor observes.</p>
<p><i>Secondly</i>, They alledge for beating the Yeast into Wort, that it
gives it a fine tang or relish, or as they call it at <i>London</i>, it
makes the Ale bite of the Yeast; but this flourish indeed is for no other
reason than to further its Sale, and tho' it may be agreeable to some
Bigots, to me it proves a discovery of the infection by its nauseous
taste; however my surprize is lessen'd, when I remember the <i>Plymouth</i>
People, who are quite the reverse of them at <i>Dover</i> and <i>Chatham</i>;
for the first are so attach'd to their white thick Ale, that many have
undone themselves by drinking it; nor is their humour much different as to
the common Brewers brown Ale, who when the Customer wants a Hogshead, they
immediately put in a Handful of Salt and another of Flower, and so bring
it up, this is no sooner on the Stilling but often Tapp'd, that it may
carry a Froth on the Top of the Pot, otherwise they despise it: The Salt
commonly answered its End of causing the Tiplers to become dryer by the
great Quantities they drank, that it farther excited by the biting
pleasant stimulating quality the Salt strikes the Palate with. The Flower
also had its seducing share by pleasing the Eye and Mouth with its
mantling Froth, so that the Sailors that are often here in great Numbers
used to consume many Hogsheads of this common Ale with much delight, as
thinking it was intirely the pure Product of the Malt.</p>
<p>Their white Ale is a clear Wort made from pale Malt, and fermented with
what they call ripening, which is a Composition, they say, of the Flower
of Malt, Yeast and Whites of Eggs, a <i>Nostrum</i> made and sold only by
two or three in those Parts, but the Wort is brewed and the Ale vended by
many of the Publicans; which is drank while it is fermenting in Earthen
Steens, in such a thick manner as resembles butter'd Ale, and sold for
Twopence Halfpenny the full Quart. It is often prescribed by Physicians to
be drank by wet Nurses for the encrease of their Milk, and also as a
prevalent Medicine for the Colick and Gravel. But the <i>Dover</i> and <i>Chatham</i>
People won't drink their Butt-Beer, unless it is Aged, fine and strong.</p>
<p><i>Of working and fermenting</i> London <i>Stout Beer and Ale</i>.</p>
<p>In my Brewhouse at <i>London</i>, the Yeast at once was put into the Tun
to work the Stout Beer and Ale with, as not having the Conveniency of
doing otherwise, by reason the After-worts of small Beer comes into the
same Backs or Coolers where the strong Worts had just been, by this means,
and the shortness of time we have to ferment our strong Drinks, we cannot
make Reserves of cold Worts to mix with and check the too forward working
of those Liquors, for there we brewed three times a Week throughout the
Year, as most of the great ones do in <i>London</i>, and some others five
times. The strong Beer brewed for keeping is suffered to be Blood-warm in
the Winter when the Yeast is put into it, that it may gradually work two
Nights and a Day at least, for this won't admit of such a hasty Operation
as the common brown Ale will, because if it is work'd too warm and hasty,
such Beer won't keep near so long as that fermented cooler. The brown Ale
has indeed its Yeast put into it in the Evening very warm, because they
carry it away the very next Morning early to their Customers, who commonly
draw it out in less than a Week's time. The Pale or Amber Ales are often
kept near it, not quite a Week under a fermentation, for the better
incorporating the Yeast with Wort, by beating it in several times for the
foregoing Reasons.</p>
<p><i>Of working or fermenting Drinks brewed by Private Families</i>.</p>
<p>I mean such who Brew only for their own use, whether it be a private
Family or a Victualler. In this Case be it for Stout Beers, or for any of
the Ales; the way that is used in <i>Northamptonshire</i>, and by good
Brewers elsewhere; is, to put some Yeast into a small quantity of warm
Wort in a Hand-bowl, which for a little while swims on the Top, where it
works out and leisurely mixes with the Wort, that is first quite cold in
Summer, and almost so in Winter; for the cooler it is work'd the longer it
will keep, too much Heat agitating the spirituous Particles into too quick
a motion, whereby they spend themselves too fast, or fly away too soon,
and then the Drink will certainly work into a blister'd Head that is never
natural; but when it ferments by moderate degrees into a fine white curl'd
Head, its Operation is then truly genuine, and plainly shews the right
management of the Brewer. To one Hogshead of Beer, that is to be kept nine
Months, I put a Quart of thick Yeast, and ferment it as cool as it will
admit of, two Days together, in <i>October</i> or <i>March</i>, and if I
find it works too fast, I check it at leisure by stirring in some raw Wort
with a Hand-bowl: So likewise in our Country Ales we take the very same
method, because of having them keep some time, and this is so nicely
observed by several, that I have seen them do the very same by their small
Beer Wort; now by these several Additions of raw Wort, there are as often
new Commotions raised in the Beer or Ale, which cannot but contribute to
the rarefaction and comminution of the whole; but whether it is by these
joining Principles of the Wort and Yeast, that the Drink is rendered
smoother, or that the spirituous Parts are more entangled and kept from
making their Escape, I can't determine; yet sure it is, that such small
Liquors generally sparkle and knit out of the Barrel as others out of a
Bottle, and is as pleasant Ale as ever I drank.</p>
<p>Others again for Butt or Stout Beer will, when they find it works up
towards a thick Yeast, mix it once and beat it in again with the Hand-bowl
or Jett; and when it has work'd up a second time in such a manner, they
put it into the Vessel with the Yeast on the Top and the Sediments at
Bottom, taking particular Care to have some more in a Tub near the Cask to
fill it up as it works over, and when it has done working, leave it with a
thick Head of Yeast on to preserve it.</p>
<p>But for Ale that is not to be kept very long, they Hop it accordingly, and
beat the Yeast in every four or five Hours for two Days successively in
the warm weather, and four in the Winter till the Yeast begins to work
heavy and sticks to the hollow part of the Bowl, if turned down on the
same, then they take all the Yeast off at Top and leave all the Dregs
behind, putting only up the clear Drink, and when it is a little work'd in
the Barrel, it will be fine in a few Days and ready for drinking. But
this, last way of beating in the Yeast too long, I think I have
sufficiently detected, and hope, as it is how declining, it will never
revive again, and for which reason I have in my second Book encouraged all
light fermentations, as the most natural for the Malt Liquor and the human
Body.</p>
<p><i>Of forwarding and retarding the fermentation of malt Liquors</i>.</p>
<p>In case Beer or Ale is backward in working, it is often practised to cast
some Flower out of the Dusting Box, or with the Hand over the Top of the
Drink, which will become a sort of Crust or Cover to help to keep the Cold
out: Others will put in one or two Ounces of powder'd Ginger, which will
so heat the Wort as to bring it forward: Others will take a Gallon Stone
Bottle and fill it with boiling water, which being well Cork'd, is put
into the working Tub, where it will communicate a gradual Heat for some
time and forward the fermentation: Others will reserve some raw Wort,
which they heat and mix with the rest, but then due Care must be taken
that the Pot in which it is heated has no manner of Grease about it lest
it impedes, instead of promoting the working, and for this reason some
nice Brewers will not suffer a Candle too near the Wort, lest it drop into
it. But for retarding and keeping back any Drink that is too much heated
in working, the cold raw Wort, as I have said before, is the most proper
of any thing to check it with, tho' I have known some to put one or more
Pewter Dishes into it for that purpose, or it may be broke into several
other Tubs, where by its shallow lying it will be taken off its Fury.
Others again, to make Drink work that is backward, will take the whites of
two Eggs and beat them up with half a Quartern of good Brandy, and put it
either into the working Vat, or into the Cask, and it will quickly bring
it forward if a warm Cloth is put over the Bung. Others will tye up Bran
in a coarse thin Cloth and put it into the Vat, where by its spungy and
flowery Nature and close Bulk it will absorp a quantity of the Drink, and
breed a heat to forward its working. I know an Inn-keeper of a great Town
in <i>Bucks</i> that is so curious as to take off all the top Yeast first,
and then by a Peg near the bottom of his working Tub, he draws off the
Beer or Ale, so that the Dreggs are by this means left behind. This I must
own is very right in Ales that are to be drank soon, but in Beers that are
to lye nine or twelve Months in a Butt or other Cask, there certainly will
be wanted some Feces or Sediment for the Beer to feed on, else it must
consequently grow hungry, sharp and eager; and therefore if its own top
and bottom are not put into a Cask with the Beer, some other Artificial
Composition or Lee should supply its Place, that is wholsomer, and will
better feed with such Drink than its own natural Settlement, and therefore
I have here inserted several curious Receipts for answering this great
End.</p>
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