Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Brewing and Fermenting
- Ingredients in Beer
- Hops
- Female flower cone (Humulus lupulus)
- More than 80 varities
- Resin
- adds the bitterness
- iso-a-acids
- essential to balance sweetness of malt
- Essential oils
- Have aroma characteristics
- provide, fruity, floral, spicy etc
- Malt
- refers to malted barely
- malting is the
controlled
germination of
cereals to
activate enzymes
used in the
mashing process
- There are a spectrum of malt types
- Base malts
- lager (pilsner), ale
- Provide enzyme activity for the mash
- Toasted malts
- Vienna, amber
- Darker malts
- Brown, chocoloate
- Speciality
- crystal, caramel
- Provides body, and sweetness
- Fermentable sugars, e.g alcohol
- Variety of flavours, e.g grainy,
toasted etc
- Other sources of fermentable sugars
- Cereal Adjuncts
- Rice e.g Budweiser, & Japanese largers
- Corn e.g Stella
- Cane sugar (sucrose)
- Honey, maple syrup, molasses
- Why use this? - Cost is cheaper, and to modify beer properties
- Yeast
- Single cell organisms
- Eukaryotic cells in fungi kingdom
- Ale (top fermenting) e.g Saccharomyces cerevisiae
- Lager strains (bottom fermenting) e.g S. pastorianus
- Modern Classification and species
differentiation achieved by DNA
fingerprinting
- Different yeast strains important for yeast styles and flavour properties
- Hop & aroma flavours
- Malt charactertics
- Yeast derived flavour e.g fruity esters, tartness (organic acids), spicy, peppery phenolics
- Water
- Alkalinity, pH, hardness, mineral ion all
determine beer character and beer style
- different mineral ions affect beer flavour
accentuating either malt or bitterness
- Affects conditions for biochemical reactions
during brewing
- Important for yeast nutrition and optimal
fermentation performance, hence flavour quality
- Barley
- 2-rowed variety
- Only central floret is
fertile, hence 1 seed
at each node
- 6-rowed variety
- All florets are
fertile, hence 3
seeds at each node
- Structure
- Husk (hull)
- protects the embryo
- Important in wort seperation
- Aleurone
- Source of enzymes, produced in
response to hormones from the
growing embryo
- Endosperm
- the starch granules here in
the form of fermentable
sugars and amino acids
- Composed of large + small starch
granules
- Cell walls within matrix holding the
starch granules are composed of
beta-glucans, some pentosans, and
protein
- Acrospire
- The plant shoot
- Microphyle
- The Process
- Malting
- 1st) Steeping
- activation of enzymes by steeping with water
- increases moisture from11-12% to 42-44%
- Grains swell
- 1st Immersion
- 6-16 hours to raise water content to 3-37%
- 2nd) Immersion
- 10-20 hours
- Air Rest
- 12-24 hours
- Expose embryos to oxygen
- Remove CO2
- Chemical Process
- Water enters through
the grain, through the
microphyle and
distributes through the
endosperm
- The water activates the
embryo which produces
hormones that migrate to
the aleurone
- This stimulates production of enzymes
- 2nd) Germinating
- Barley spread in a germination box, this:
- Dissipates CO2
- Keeps temperature constant
- Prevents roots from matting
- The acrospire grows alongside of the kernel
- Pre-existing enzymes are released and new
enzymes are created in the aleurone layer. This
modifies the endosperm for the acrospire's use
- The enzymes break down the endosprems's
protein/carb matrix into smaller carbs, aa's and
lipids, also open up the starch reserves
- Modification refers to the degree to which enzymes break down the starch granules
- Length of the acrospire will be around 75-100%
- A Maltster judges the degree of modification by the length of acrospire
- 3rd) Klining
- Drying reduces moisture content from 45% to 5%
- Kills any microbes
- Performed at low temperatures to minimise degradation of enzymes
- Stops germination and kills embryo
- Inhibits any ongoing enzyme activity
- Diastatic Power: the amount of enzymatic
starch conversion potential that a malt has
- The acrospire and rootlets are knocked off by tumbling
- Malts klined at different times/temp to develop different colours + flavours
- Initial Steps
- Barely cleaned, sized,
viability measured, and N
content determined
- Biochemsitry of malting
- Starch
- Composed of Amylose and Amylopectin
- Enzymes involved are: a-glucosidase, a-amylase, b-amylase
- a-amylase is main degrading enzyme
- Attacks at random in the middle of amylose and amylopectin
- This releases maltose and maltotriose, and dextrins
- Maltose is the main sugar found during mash
- More thermostable than b-amylase
- Gelatinisation
- To achieve gelatinisation mashing includes a conversion stage at 65C for 1 h
- Small granules gelatinase at a higher temp than large granules