Farmhouse brewing supply is another good source for British hops like bramling cross. You can buy 4oz increments of most varieties
Just regular Burton water. Those recipes are quite flexible and from the 1890s onwards can include a few oz of inverts #2 & #3 or crystal malt for colour. Some invert #2 would probably work well with the yeast. Don't get me wrong, it's good yeast for a British bitter but definitively more for something like St Austell's Tribute - pale, light, hoppy, than a Brains Bitter - light, caramelly, amber.
Farmhouse brewing supply is another good source for British hops like bramling cross. You can buy 4oz increments of most varieties
You should research Worthington's White Shield. It's much more popular than Bass and the recipe has not suffered as much over time. I'm sure you find info on British Forums (plus it should use similar yeast).
Michael Jackson on White Shield:
http://beerhunter.com/documents/19133-000194.html
Yeah, it's in the supermarket. I should buy a couple of bottles.
To be fair, they must have relaunched Bass recently as I've seen it in bottles. Bass used to be the only ale of a crappy alternative music venue I used to go to. The whole place stank of piss as the toilets upstairs leaked and the average age was probably 17. I've only one other time seen a venue serving it and it was a village pub in the West Country.
Gosh, drinking the fourth pint of Exe Valley's dark mild. You're not a good brewer till you crack a good dark mild. Plus I've had free samples of six Celt brewery ales. All ok, cool and experimental, but so hop centric they don't stand to a beautifully crafted 3.9% dark mild. A good evening, though. Puddlethumper, you have to try mild.
That sounds great. Problem is they are about as scarce as chicken teeth over on this side of the pond. Can't say I've even seen a mild for sale in even the best bottle houses. I have seen a number of recipes for mild ales but really have no idea if what I end up with will taste like it should. Its kind of like a life-long blind man trying to understand what the color yellow looks like.
I guess I'll just have to start saving up for a plane ticket, eh?
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Puddlethumper, you should try a dark mild as it was/is brewed! You have some recipes from SUABP here: