I havent been able to find one anywhere on the best coast.
http://northernbrewer.blogspot.ca/2010/07/mild-ale.html?m=1
A good read to start.
Best part about miles is that they are easy to experiment with if you push them. 1.03-04 doesn't take long to ferment out and they are traditionally drank young. Easy on the cheque-book too!
Pick and brew a recipe, ready to drink in 10 days if you keg.
Don't like it? Pass it off on friends and family and tweak as desired.
If you ever make it down to L.A., be sure to hit MacLeod's. Amazing cask conditioned ales, specializing in old British brews. My favorite local bar! (Even though it's technically just a "tasting room") They sell bottles of some, but I'm not sure where... I think most is brewed and consumed on premises.
http://www.macleodale.com
You must have seen this list of grists. Some are more reliable than others but gives you an idea of how much caramel is needed to bring them to an opaque pint (all I've had, bar one, are around 25-35 SRM).
http://www.jimsbeerkit.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=56335
PS: just noticed BJCP lists them being 12-25SRM, which I think is very low. Brains Dark is the same colour as Fullers London Porter.
I don't know if I'd go 25-35. The ones I've had have been in that 20-25 range, solidly brown to dark brown but short of black. Same general range as Porters though, yes.
Here is a picture of what I'm used to in commercial milds. Just short of black but definitively darker than brown:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/monoport/7957846188
Like I said, don't remember the last time I had Brain's, but yeah, that's certainly darker than a 25. The ones I've had usually aren't quite that dark (that I can recall at least). Of course you have more access to them than we do.
You have a good recipe JK? After seeing those darker versions I'm thinking of next time upping the pale chocolate, maybe lowering the crystal a bit.
As they say, more dark better good.
I just checked the other dark milds I have access to, and they are pretty dark:
Thwaites Nutty Black (this one has national distribution)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/oubykh/8016023787/
Rhymney Dark (local)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/35633558@N06/3365343328/
Cains Dark Mild (national distribution)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/oubykh/4446417620/
Brains Dark (local but with national distribution, I think)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/35633558@N06/3473688933/
I have to say that the palest dark mild I ever have had is Pig on the Wall by Black Country Ales. I had it on Tuesday and it surprised me I could see through the pint (it was a very dark brown). Picture here:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/27045884@N05/14311115751/
There's my photographic evidence suggesting BJCP might have their SRM a bit on the low side :fro:
I even have a theory behind it: most US brewers will have copied the grists of the dark milds but ignored the sugar and caramel additions, which probably account for around 10SRM.
Rather than upping the pale chocolate, use some dark invert syrup, like you would in a Belgian.
Yeah, dark invert sugar syrup but in a small amount (2-8oz). Look at what Thwaites do: pale malt, crystal, patent or chocolate malt, invert sugar syrup and then brewers' caramel for colour. That's fairly much the way to go. They range from dry to slightly sweet but they shouldn't come out sickly / malty.
Taking one for the team and came home for lunch to have a mild with my pasta. Too bad it's not bangers eh.
Here is a picture of Bathams dark mild (not my picture)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/27045.../photolist-kp1gCg-629QWn-8pRGUY-pU8QPs-dURgT5
As you can see it's one of the lighter ones - it's essentially their bitter, but liquored back and dark sugar used rather than light. It's the best example of a black country mild you can get. No roasted malts or grains used in that beer
When I go down to wales to visit family, I usually have to change train in Wolverhampton and tend to dive into The Great Western which is close to the station where they usually have at least the bathams bitter on. Which is where that picture of their mild was taken from incidentally
I've never made a pale mild and I think I might have had that TT one before, although I can't remember