This handbook provides indispensable guidance to students of brewing technology as well as industry professionals, offering a comprehensive overview of beer production, including modern equipment and process engineering, raw materials, quality management, product stability, sensory analysis, microbiology, specialty beers and the health-related aspects of beer consumption.
The principles of biochemistry and their relationship to brewing technology are explored and illustrated in clear, understandable text, tables and figures. Each chapter examines a specific topic of beer production in-depth, tracing it through malting, brewing and various other processes to the final product, with the ultimate goal of improving the quality of the finished beer. A discussion of commonly encountered problems and their origins along with valuable troubleshooting tips and insightful solutions make this book an essential and practical resource for anyone in the brewing industry.
Every chapter in this volume also includes relevant findings from current research in brewing science. Standard reference values for important substances in wort and beer as well as aroma compounds and higher alcohols can be found in the appendices.
Brewing Techniques in Practice
MALT
Introduction
The Quality Attributes of Barley Malt and Wheat Malt
Quality attributes of barley malt
Cytolysis
Proteolysis
Amylolysis
Additional malt specifications
DMS precursor
TBI (thiobarbituric acid index)
Malt color and boiled wort color
pH
Quality criteria for wheat malt
Cytolysis
Proteolysis
Amylolysis
Food Safety
Summary
Overview
References
HOPS
Introduction
Valuable compounds in hops
Bitter acids
Aroma compounds
Polyphenols
Analytical characterization of commonly encountered hop varieties
Hop products
Analysis methods
Special Aspects of Hops in Brewing Applications
Hop addition
Beer produced with a low hopping rate
Beer produced with a high hop rate
Beer with a pronounced hop aroma
Beer enriched with xanthohumol
Adding hops on the cold side of production
Lightstruck flavor
Hop utilization
Foam
Microbiology
Addition of downstream hop products
Storing hops
Summary
Overview
References
MASHING
Introduction
The Technology of Mashing
Mash parameters
Selected mash programs
Spring mash program
Separating the mash to achieve ß-Glucan degradation
The maltase mashing method
Dark beer styles
Summary
Overview
References
WORT BOILING AND WORT BOILING SYSTEMS
Introduction
The Technological Basis for Wort Boiling
Maintaining the heated wort at a constant temperature
Evaporation
Evaporative efficiency [3]
Pre-cooling the wort
Downstream evaporation
Interplay between key analytical metrics for wort boiling
Modern wort boiling systems
Internal wort boiling systems
External wort boiling systems
High-temperature wort boiling
Dynamic wort boiling slightly above atmospheric pressure
Gentle boiling with SchoKo
Wort stripping
Vacuum evaporation
Flash evaporation with Varioboil
The Merlin® thin film evaporator
The Jetstar internal calandria
The Stromboli internal calandria
Break material
Hot break material
Cold break material
Vapor condensate
Sumary
Overview
References
ACIDIFICATION WITH NATURAL LACTIC ACID
Introduction
Techniques Used in the Production of Sauergut
Lactic acid cultures
The advantages of using natural lactic acid in the form of Sauergut
Cultivation and propagation of lactic acid bacteria
Production of Sauergut in the brewery
Calculating the required volume of lactic acid
Summary
Overview
References
YEAST TECHNOLOGY AND FERMENTATION
Introduction
Yeast Management and Fermentation
Yeast viability and vitality
Yeast viability
Yeast vitality
Yeast cultivation and assimilation techniques
General information regarding yeast assimilation
Procedures for yeast assimilation
Designing a yeast assimilation system
Yeast pitching technology and SO2 formation
Fermentation
Proper handling of cropped yeast
Maturation and lagering
Summary
Overview
References
FILTERABILITY – ISSUES WITH TURBIDITY
Introduction
Attributes Influencing Beer Filterability
The impact of malt quality on beer filterability
The impact of brewhouse operations on filterability
The impact of fermentation and storage on the filterability of beer
Monitoring the filterability of wort and beer as part of a stepwise quality
control program
The influence of filtration on turbidity in beer
Summary
Overview
References
BEER FOAM
Introduction
Aspects of Beer Foam
The physics of foam
Biochemical and technological aspects of beer foam
Compounds in beer with a positive impact on foam
Compounds in beer with a negative impact on foam
Influence of brewing techniques on beer foam
Methods for determining foam stability
Summary
Overview
References
SENSORY ANALYSIS
Introduction
Sensory Analysis in the Brewing Industry
Sensory evaluation of beer
Discriminative tests
Descriptive tests
Evaluation tests
Tasting scheme for determining aging according to Eichhorn
Tasting scheme according to Kaltner
EBC Descriptive Analysis
Tasting scheme for wheat beers
Modified “trueness-of-type” scheme
Designing rooms for preparing and performing sensory analysis tests
Selecting and training a tasting panel
Selecting candidates to serve as members of the tasting panel
Training to identify the basic tastes
Training with reference substances
Consumer taste tests – expert taste tests
Consumers as tasters in sensory tests
Experts as tasters in sensory tests
Statistics in sensory analysis
Univariate evaluation methods
Multivariate evaluation methods
Summary
Overview
References
FLAVOR STABILITY
Introduction
Aspects of Flavor Stability
The fundamentals
The aging process
Reaction pathways of compounds relevant for aging
Effects of antioxidants
Influencing flavor stability in the brewing process
Barley and malting
Milling and mashing in
Mashing
Wort production and wort handling
Fermentation
Lagering and filtration
Filling
Analytical evaluation of flavor stability
Sensory analysis
Detection of aging indicators using gas chromatography
Analytical evaluation of the antioxidative capacity
Determining the reductive capacity
Stability test
Helpful tips for sample collection and storage for stability tests
Thiobarbituric acid index (TBI) and aniline number (AN)
Absorption integral (AI)
Summary
Overview
References
SOUTHERN GERMAN WHEAT BEER
Introduction
Brewing Techniques in Wheat Beer Production
The basics
Wheat as a raw material and in the grain bill
Mashing
Wort boiling procedures
Fermentation
Maturation
The aging process in wheat beer
Unique aspects of wheat beer production
Haze stability in wheat beer
Summary
Overview
References
NON-ALCOHOLIC BEER
Introduction
Production Methods for Non-alcoholic Beers
Physical removal of alcohol
Thermal removal of alcohol
Extraction with CO2
Membrane separation method
Reverse osmosis
Dialysis
Biological method
Interrupted fermentation
Bioreactors
Combined technologies
Economic aspects
Summary
Overview
References
BEER RECOVERY
Introduction
Utilizing Beer Recovered from the Production Process
The significance of beer loss
Recovering beer from surplus yeast
Expansion tank
Yeast sieve or filter
Yeast chiller
Yeast storage tank (surplus yeast)
Beer recovery systems
Flash pasteurization
Storage tanks for recovered beer
Surplus yeast tank
Qualitative aspects of recovered beer
Economic aspects of beer recovery
Beer losses during filtration
Required equipment
Pre-run and post-run collection tank
Adding recovered beer during production
Other recovered beer streams
Avoiding beer loss and subsequent beer recovery
Summary
Overview
References
BEER AND HEALTH
Introduction
The Effects of Beer on Human Health
Nutritionally relevant substances in beer
Polyphenols
Vitamins
Alcohol
Carbon dioxide
Water
Minerals
Maillard products
Dietary fiber
Bitter acids in hops and hop oils
Beer – a valuable contribution to the human diet
Enriching or excluding particular substances in beer
Increasing xanthohumol content
Increasing folic acid content
Avoiding gluten
Overview
References
MICROBIOLOGY
Introduction
Microorganisms
Pure brewing yeast strains
Foreign yeast strains
Beer-spoiling bacteria
Detection of beer spoilers
Detection of beer-spoiling bacteria
Swab samples from biofilms
Rapid methods based on molecular biology
Detection and identification of yeast strains
Summary
Overview
References
BREWING WITH MALTED AND UNMALTED
CEREALS AND PSEUDOCEREALS
Introduction
Carbohydrate-rich Grains
Cereals
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.)
Oats (Avena sativa L.)
Minor millets
Pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum [L.] R. Br.)
Foxtail millet (Setaria italica [L.] P. Beauv.)
Fonio (Digitaria exilis)
Teff (Eragrostis tef [Zucc.] Trotter)
Finger millet (Eleusine coracana [L.] Gaertn.)
Proso millet (Panicum miliaceum L.)
Maize or corn (Zea mays L.)
Rice (Oryza sativa L.)
Rye (Secale cereale L.)
Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.)
Wheat species (Triticum L.)
Spelt (Triticum aestivum ssp. spelta Thell. = Triticum spelta L.)
Einkorn (Triticum monococcum L.)
Emmer (Triticum dicoccum Schübl.)
Tetraploid free-threshing (naked) wheat (e.g. durum wheat
Triticum durum L., rivet wheat T. turgidum L. and kamut,
either T. t. ssp. polonicum [L.] Thell. or ssp.
turanicum [Jakubz.]
A. Löve and D. Löve)
Triticale (× Triticosecale Wittmack)
Tritordeum (hexaploid)
Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)
Pseudocereals
Amaranth grain (primarily: Amaranthus cruentus, A. Hypochondriacus
and A. Caudatus)
Buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum Moench)
Quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa Willd.)
Summary
Overview
References
SPECIALTY BEER
German Brewing on the World Stage
German Beer Styles
Bottom-fermented Beers
Top-fermented Beers
International Specialty Beers
International Beer styles
APPENDIX
Compounds found in Wort
Compounds Found in Beer
Aroma Compounds and Higher Alcohols Found in Beer
Indicator Compounds for Aging
Conversion of Units
List of Abbreviations
Index
Publish Date: 2019
Format: 6.75" x 9.75" hardcover
Pages: 393
Publication Weight: 3 lbs
By W. Back, M. Gastl, M. Krottenthaler, L. Narziß, and M. Zarnkow
Brewing Techniques in Practice