I should have been more specific: the sections of the history of Stout are total bollocks. There is some good technical stuff in the book. Follow the link and read my review.
Your interpretation of history is just as much bollocks as his is, if it is.
The topic of this thread is: "Difference Between Porter and Stout". Not:
What was the historical interpretation of the words "stout" and "porter"?
If you don't want to use Guiness as the base model for a stout like
I do, then don't. But if you do, you come up with at least two distinct
styles of beer, one labeled "porter", which has late hop additions and
a modest amount of dark grains (as a percentage of the grist), while
stout has a large amount of dark grain (as a percentage of the grist)
and no late hop additions. What some modern breweries call their
beers is irrelevant. A name is required for this beer:
6.6 lb lme
4 oz crystal 80
2 oz choc malt
2 oz black malt
1/4 ounce Magnum 60 min
1/2 ounce Northern Brewer 10 min
1/2 ounce English Fuggles dry hop
and a name is required for this beer:
3.3 lbs lme
4 lbs ale malt
1/2 pound flaked barley
6 oz roasted barley (or black malt)
1 oz Bramling Cross 60 min.
If you would prefer to call the first one "Fred" and the second one
"Wilma", that's fine, as long as you provide *some* name so that
I can know what you are talking about.
A much better question would be "What is the difference between
brown ale and porter", because there the styles blend into each other.
But "Porter" and "stout" are two quite distinct things.
Ray