Enough! I've already descended to condescension, an ugly tool, so it's time to bow out.
But I've been meaning to do this writeup for a time: It's a "line in the sand" and "where I'm up to" statement (for me mainly!).
@ssparks: Before I go; hope you've gleaned something from all this? Just keep an open mind and don't try and view history through a telescope. It might seem pointless looking back 300 years as I've been doing but it explains a lot of what went on meantime (Was brown malt smoky? Was it not? Did people like it smoky? Did they not? Viewed broadly over a long time period you can answer "yes" to all those questions). Someone on this site pointed me at a very valuable document:
The Industrialization of the London Beer-Brewing Trade, 1400-1750. It is
BIG and I'll be reading it for ever more it seems (thanks
@Hazelwood Brewery!). It is mainly social/economics but explains much (if you have the stamina to get through it).
There were key moments in the development of beer in which "brown malt" played a big part. The start of the 19th century, the Industrial Revolution is underway along with the "Age of Enlightenment": Basically before that time searching for beer recipes gets a bit abstract, not much in the way of published brewing logs, you find yourself gleaning stuff from other sources like in that document linked above. Before then you have much of the Georgian period and the "creation" of Porter. Further back still The Stuarts and Civil War: About the time "Beer" was becoming more accepted and the old gruit "Ales" were declining ("Ales" did continue as hopped "Ales" of which we still have a direct descendant; "Mild" or "mild ale").
After the start of the 19th century, you have 1817. The creation of "black malt" and the means to create it (rotating cylindrical kilns, which went on to produce malts of varying shades, including "brown", crystal malts and developed into the kilns used today). These kilns started producing "brown malt" in place of the traditional kilns (sometimes as "hybrid" processes) during the dying years of Porter, but no readily identifiable dates. "Porter" was beginning to give way to the "upstart" mild ales by about 1850/1860, about the same time as "vatted Porter" ceased to be.
The information from those actually making historic "brown malt" is invaluable. I get a lot from Francois Dyment (
Brewing Beer The Hard Way | Growing, malting and brewing beer (wordpress.com) ) but you can find other enthusiasts.
@Sadfield mentions "Fuggledog" (Ben) on Jim's forum and you can still find some of his work but I don't know if he's still active (he moved down under some time in the last 10 years). Most replicate the (outside!) open fire methods of 17th century and earlier. I haven't the time (or physical stature!) for all that so I use their results to devise the (excruciatingly) complex "emulations" I mention earlier. Some will try and find a single "modern" malt that "fit's" the qualities of the homemade stuff. I don't agree with this last approach because it traps you to one estimate of what historic brown malt was like. Some advise a "halfway house" (like
Durden Park Beer Club | Original Porter (circa 1750)) using only a handful of modern malts in their "emulation".
[EDIT: I neglected to add: "Brown Malt" is a "thing" now, but 300 years ago it was a "
consequence" of what they had to hand.]
Finally: What you must not lose sight of is that you're a
brewer, not a
historian. And what you produce must be worth drinking! I've certainly enjoyed the output from my experiments: I'm not quite content with my "1804 malt emulations" just yet (too caramelly?), but my current 1804 TT emulation (a pre-black malt "Porter") is currently my favoured go-to beer at this moment!
This will be reproduced on Jim's forum should you see it there. Well, it represents quite a lot of work, I'm going to want to spread it about!