Style: English Barleywine
All StylesStyle Profile based on 425 recipes
BU:GU
0.50
Hops
6.0 g/L
Mash pH
5.52
Description
A showcase of malty richness and complex, intense flavors. Chewy and rich in body, with warming alcohol and a pleasant fruity or hoppy interest. When aged, it can take on port-like flavors. A wintertime sipper. History: Strong ales of various formulations have long been brewed in England, and were known by several names. The modern barleywine traces back to Bass No. 1, which was first called a barleywine in 1872. Barleywines were darker beers until Tennant (now Whitbread) first produced Gold Label, a gold-colored barleywine in 1951. Usually the strongest ale offered by a brewery, and in recent years many commercial examples are now vintage-dated and offered as a limited-release winter seasonal specialty. The original barleywine style that inspired derivative variations in Belgium, the United States, and elsewhere in the world. Style Comparison: Although often a hoppy beer, the English Barleywine places less emphasis on hop character than the American Barleywine and features English hops. English versions can be darker, maltier, fruitier, and feature richer specialty malt flavors than American Barleywines. Has some overlap British Old Ale on the lower end, but generally does not have the vinous qualities of age; rather, it tends to display the mature, elegant signs of age.
Examples: Adnams Tally-Ho, Burton Bridge Thomas Sykes Old Ale, Coniston No. 9 Barley Wine, Fuller’s Golden Pride, J.W. Lee’s Vintage Harvest Ale, Robinson’s Old Tom
- 93% Pale (87%)
- 79% Crystal (7%)
- 45% Toast (12%)
- 21% Roast (1%)
% of English Barleywine recipes using each malt category (addition % in brackets)
g/L · median with IQR range
- 46% East Kent Goldings
- 19% Fuggles
- 17% Magnum (GR)
- 8% Target
- 7% Chinook
- 7% Willamette
- 6% Cascade
- 5% Challenger
- 5% Centennial
- 4% Columbus
% of English Barleywine recipes using each hop
g/L · median with IQR range
dated English Barleywine recipes with at least one dry-hop addition
- 21% Pale Malt, Maris Otter
- 13% United Kingdom - Maris Otter Pale
- 11% Caramel/Crystal Malt - 60L
- 8% Special B Malt
- 7% Caramel/Crystal Malt -120L
- 6% Chocolate Malt
- 5% Pale Malt (2 Row) US
- 5% Biscuit Malt
- 4% Caramel/Crystal Malt - 40L
- 4% Munich Malt
Colour = malt category · bar = % of recipes
- 10% LalBrew Nottingham Lallemand
- 10% Safale American (US-05) Fermentis
- 9% SafAle English Ale (S-04) Fermentis
- 7% Dry English Ale Yeast (WLP007) White Labs
- 7% London Ale Yeast (1028) Wyeast Labs
- 3% Super High Gravity Ale Yeast (WLP099) White Labs
- 3% London Ale III (1318) Wyeast Labs
- 2% Scottish Ale (1728) Wyeast Labs
- 2% English Ale Yeast (WLP002) White Labs
- 2% London ESB Ale (1968) Wyeast Labs
% of English Barleywine recipes using each strain
- 77% Single Infusion
- 17% Step Mash
- 6% Decoction
48 recipes with mash data
- 80 ppm Ca²⁺
- 10 ppm Mg²⁺
- 23 ppm Na⁺
- 67 ppm Cl⁻
- 80 ppm SO₄²⁻
- 143 ppm HCO₃⁻
median across recipes with a declared water profile
Similar Styles
Ranked by similarity across OG, IBU, ABV, hop rate, and grist composition.