Brown ale

Discover Pinterest’s best ideas and inspiration for Brown ale. Get inspired and try out new things.
249 people searched this
·
Last updated 1mo
Brewery: Fourpure, Bermondsey, England Name: American Brown ABV: 6% Style: Brown Ale Nut and caramel are brown! Expect their aromas and tastes in here to remind you of them. But there’s also fruity, herbal and piney hops and bitterness. It’s not really an American brown because the hop rate would be far high and the malt bill bolder, filling out the flavour in all directions and adding depth, something this sadly lacks. [5]

Brewery: Fourpure, Bermondsey, England Name: American Brown ABV: 6% Style: Brown Ale Nut and caramel are brown! Expect their aromas and tastes in here to remind you of them. But there’s also fruity, herbal and piney hops and bitterness. It’s not really an American brown because the hop rate would be far high and the malt bill bolder, filling out the flavour in all directions and adding depth, something this sadly lacks. [5]

7
a yellow and red sign that says fullers old harry extra brown ale

A stronger, 5% ABV Mild. Loaded with lots of lovely sugar. Yum! From before WW I messed up Mild forever. The recipe is slightly more complicated than it appears, as the pale malt was an eclectic mix of 50% English, 25% Californian and 25 % Australian. Using grain from all over the world – though it was always malted in the UK – was typical of English beers before WW I. The sugar is about a 50-50 split between No. 3 invert and something called – think, the handwriting is hard to read –…

3
a poster with different types of beer and its ingredients on the side, including hops

Hey there hop head! Let's chat about Brown IPAs - the best of both malty and hoppy worlds. As the name suggests, Brown IPAs blend attributes of American Brown Ales and IPAs. You get caramel, chocolate, and nutty malt flavors paired with citrusy, piney American hops. They pour a beautiful copper-brown color. Flavorwise, expect notes of brown sugar, toasted nuts, orange, grapefruit, and pine. There's usually a nice dry, bitter finish. ABV ranges from around 5.5-7%.

26
there is a glass of dark beer on the table

With beer as our national drink, it’s only right that the beer we choose is the one that would choose us if it could. For different types of food, the changing seasons, and even more changeable British weather... There's a beer for that.

1

Related interests

Brown ale and more

Explore related boards