Burton Unions: Difference between revisions

From Brewery History Society Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:


<gallery>
<gallery>
File:DSCF0010.JPG|<small>At Marstons the fermentation is pitched at 14oC in an enclosed square situated at the side of the Union Room (to the top right). Once the fermentation reaches top heat of around 19oC after some 36 hours, the fermenting wort is transferred into the Burton set. </small>
File:DSCF0010.JPG|<small>At Marstons the fermentation is pitched at 14<sup>o</sup>C in an enclosed square situated at the side of the Union Room (to the top right). Once the fermentation reaches top heat of around 19oC after some 36 hours, the fermenting wort is transferred into the Burton set.
File:DSCF0011a.JPG|A true cathedral of beer, there is nothing else like it in the world.
File:DSCF0011a.JPG|A true cathedral of beer, there is nothing else like it in the world.
File:DSCF0012.JPG|A set comprises banks of 7hL unlined wooden casks, a unit of 26 casks (13 in two rows) would total a 100 barrel batch. There is a tap in the belly of the cask and opposite, a hole which takes a swans neck. This tube directs the fermentation froth from the cask into a trough which runs the length of the set at high level between the casks.  
File:DSCF0012.JPG|A set comprises banks of 7hL unlined wooden casks, a unit of 26 casks (13 in two rows) would total a 100 barrel batch. There is a tap in the belly of the cask and opposite, a hole which takes a swans neck. This tube directs the fermentation froth from the cask into a trough which runs the length of the set at high level between the casks.  
Line 27: Line 27:
File:DSCF0069d|The trough (below left) and feeder trough
File:DSCF0069d|The trough (below left) and feeder trough
File:DSCF0069e.JPG|Note the safety features of the Marstons sets.
File:DSCF0069e.JPG|Note the safety features of the Marstons sets.
File:DSCF0070a.JPG|The circulation of fob is driven by a 1oC temperature differential by applying cooling to panels in the top trough. This set under repair shows the cooling surface on the bottom of the trough  
File:DSCF0070a.JPG|The circulation of fob is driven by a 1<sup>o</sup>C temperature differential by applying cooling to panels in the top trough. This set under repair shows the cooling surface on the bottom of the trough  
File:DSCF0071.JPG|There are water cooled coils in each cask to lower the temperature before racking. Head Brewer Paul Bayley demonstrates.
File:DSCF0071.JPG|There are water cooled coils in each cask to lower the temperature before racking. Head Brewer Paul Bayley demonstrates.
File:DSCF0072a.JPG|When racking gravity is reached there is a crop of yeast in the trough and the cask has a yeast count in the order of one million cells. Remaining beer in the top trough is run to an empty cask in the set and the yeast is manually removed to a waiting trolley before transfer to cold storage.
File:DSCF0072a.JPG|When racking gravity is reached there is a crop of yeast in the trough and the cask has a yeast count in the order of one million cells. Remaining beer in the top trough is run to an empty cask in the set and the yeast is manually removed to a waiting trolley before transfer to cold storage.
Line 46: Line 46:
File:wardwick unions.jpg|From Alfred Barnard in the late 1880s - a single sided set at the Wardwick Brewery in Derby
File:wardwick unions.jpg|From Alfred Barnard in the late 1880s - a single sided set at the Wardwick Brewery in Derby
File:youngers unions.jpg|From Alfred Barnard in the late 1880s - Youngers in Edinburgh also used Burton Unions.
File:youngers unions.jpg|From Alfred Barnard in the late 1880s - Youngers in Edinburgh also used Burton Unions.
</small>
</gallery>
</gallery>


[[category:Brewer & Distiller International Gallery]]
[[category:Brewer & Distiller International Gallery]]

Revision as of 19:13, 8 June 2016

Introduction

The Burton Union method of fermentation is essentially a ‘cleansing’ system. It is a means of removing yeast from beer as the fermentation finishes as well as collecting it for use in subsequent brews. It particularly suits the rather powdery strains traditional in Burton on Trent as the sedimentation distance is a matter of inches and not metres. Only Pedigree and Owd Rodger strong ale go through the union sets at Burton. About 40% of the Pedigree destined for cask sale is fermented to completion in squares and is blended with union beer before packaging.