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Interior. Brewhouse, 1st floor, Copper house. View of two of the three copper vessels. The coppers were made in Prestonpans in 1998.
DP 395035
Description Interior. Brewhouse, 1st floor, Copper house. View of two of the three copper vessels. The coppers were made in Prestonpans in 1998.
Date 18/1/2023
Collection Historic Environment Scotland
Catalogue Number DP 395035
Category On-line Digital Images
Scope and Content Brewing beer involves the heating of water and milled, malted barley together to form what is known as Mash, This is then sent to copper vessels for further heating (along with hops and perhaps other ingredients) to produce a liquid known as Wort which is then chilled and fermented (using yeast) and matured to produce beer. Edinburgh became a centre of brewing in Scotland in the 18th and 19th centuries due to the availability of naturally occurring springs, an urban population in need of a safe beverage (clean drinking water was not universal at this time) and good communications in the form of (at first) roads, the early 19th century Union Canal and the railway boom of the 1860s. The Canongate in the Old Town was the first area of Edinburgh where there was a concentration of small breweries. These would have served the local urban market. The development of the railways and the use of hops as a preservative enabled larger breweries such as the Caledonian to be built as Edinburgh expanded in the 19th century. This beer could be exported far beyond its local market. The Caledonian Brewery was the last commercial brewery operating in Edinburgh when it ceased production in July 2022.
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/collection/2480474
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