Wednesday 23 September 2009

More on bakers and brewers' barm

I still haven't figured out why bakers stopped using beer yeast from the local brewery in the early nineteenth century, though I have a few ideas. I now think my porter beer/black malt theory is a load of rubbish, and have an alternative to put forward. It could easily be just as wrong, but might be interesting.

Dan Lepard says on this thread on his forum "Wheat prices were high during 1790 - 1810". Due to the rise in malt taxes in this period it also became more expensive to brew. In addition, industrial common brewers were fast displacing the production of beer in private homes and on the premises in pubs, as you could buy it cheaper from the common brewer than you could make it yourself.

So we have a double whammy: there were far fewer people producing ale-barm and the cost of producing it had increased too. With higher prices and decreased availability of ale-barm it looks like bakers were squeezed all round, not just by wheat prices.

I assume that a typical bakery around 1800 would be a very small operation with maybe a master and apprentice and one shop. Possibly they had even counted among those who had recently given up brewing themselves and no longer had their own supply of free yeast.

I am fascinated by the relationships between brewers and bakers. I can't help but think there must be something deeper behind such a significant change in practice.

Beer historian Ron Pattinson says here:


This period saw a key change in British brewing practices. Though brewers had already been aware of the better yield of pale malt compared to brown, it was only with the introduction of the hydrometer that this could be quantified. It became apparent that, despite the lower price of brown malt, it was still cheaper to brew from pale malt. Brown malt produced only about two thirds as much fermentable material as pale.


But I can't for the life of me think what possible adverse effect moving to mostly pale malt would have on the yeast.

4 comments:

  1. You might be interested in this excerpt from the Transactions of the Royal Scottish Society of Arts, 1861, where the author says that barm provided by beer breweries was "objectionable from the quantity of hop contained in it, rendering bread so baked unpleasantly bitter".

    On the same page he talks about the establishment of barm-breweries for the provision of yeast for baking. He describes this process elsewhere in that book.

    Was there a move towards these barm-breweries around the time you see a decline in the use of brewer's barm? Was it simply a move towards what was perceived as better quality bread?

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  2. Thanks Barry. I have a number of competing hypotheses.

    Independent barm-breweries sound fascinating, I had no idea there had ever been such things. Up until now I had thought bakers moved from using brewers' yeast straight to manufacturing their own barms. This may enable me to refine my understanding somewhat.

    Yes, bakers objected to the hop bitterness in barm. It was a necessary evil, as the barm would go off quickly without the hops. Neither bitterness nor sourness were considered desired flavours in bread. Were beers being more highly hopped than previously? I don't know.

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  3. I have been baking once a week for a Saturday Market using ale-barm for just over a year. I have found two small local breweries who are happy to let me have a bucket of fresh barm.
    I have developed several different techniques and found that the hoppy bitterness of the barm does not come across into the breads, although 100% wholemeal wheat and spelt occasionally develop an unpleasant aftertaste which is a mix of sour and bitter.
    The predominant characteristic of "real" barm bread is a malty sweetness.
    I think the main difference between real barm and the "faux" barm made with gelatinised flour and bottled beer, is that it contains a certain proportion of the unfermented wort, but also has an alcohol content of around 2% ABV.

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  4. Ken, I found ale-barm did give my bread a hoppy bitterness, then again my beer is heavily hopped.

    How is business at the Saturday market?

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