The document summarizes the key steps in the beer production process: (1) malting of barley to develop enzymes, (2) mashing to convert starches to sugars, (3) boiling wort with hops for flavor and sterilization, (4) cooling and aerating wort before (5) fermentation with yeast, (6) aging and clarification before (7) packaging and distribution. The essential ingredients of beer are water, malt, hops and yeast.
The document summarizes the key steps in the beer production process: (1) malting of barley to develop enzymes, (2) mashing to convert starches to sugars, (3) boiling wort with hops for flavor and sterilization, (4) cooling and aerating wort before (5) fermentation with yeast, (6) aging and clarification before (7) packaging and distribution. The essential ingredients of beer are water, malt, hops and yeast.
The document summarizes the key steps in the beer production process: (1) malting of barley to develop enzymes, (2) mashing to convert starches to sugars, (3) boiling wort with hops for flavor and sterilization, (4) cooling and aerating wort before (5) fermentation with yeast, (6) aging and clarification before (7) packaging and distribution. The essential ingredients of beer are water, malt, hops and yeast.
The document summarizes the key steps in the beer production process: (1) malting of barley to develop enzymes, (2) mashing to convert starches to sugars, (3) boiling wort with hops for flavor and sterilization, (4) cooling and aerating wort before (5) fermentation with yeast, (6) aging and clarification before (7) packaging and distribution. The essential ingredients of beer are water, malt, hops and yeast.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 27
At a glance
Powered by AI
The key takeaways are that beer is produced from water, malt, hops and yeast through a process involving malting, brewing, fermentation and packaging. The document outlines the brewing process and ingredients in detail.
The main ingredients used in beer production are water, malt, hops and yeast. Water makes up over 90% of beer. Malt provides sugars and enzymes. Hops give bitterness and aroma. Yeast carries out fermentation.
The process of malting involves soaking barley grains in water, allowing them to germinate under controlled conditions and then drying them with hot air. This develops enzymes and modifies the grains. Malting converts the raw barley into a product suitable for brewing.
Experiment #3
Beer Production By; Shewarega Habtamu INTRODUCTION
• Beverage - Flavored solutions of ethanol derived from numerous
substrates. • Grains- as in beer • Grapes and other fruits- as in wine • Any other carbohydrate source: as in distilled sprits – brandy, whiskey, rum, gin, and vodka… • Fermentation is carried out by species of • syccharomyces • naturally, as in grapes in wine making. 1. Essential ingredients of beer
• Most beer is made from four essential ingredients.
a) Water (around 95%) b) Malt c) Hops d) Yeast e) Some uses syrup, starch adjuncts (corn, rice…) • Not only the ingredients differ, but they can also used in numerous combinations. a. Water • More than 90% of beer is water. • Composition of the water used in beer production have a significant influence on the quality of the finished product. – Content of dissolved solids has effect on beer properties, including flavor. – The balance of minerals. • The various water uses in brewery may require different compositions/treatments appropriate to the requisite functions. b. Malt • the second most important ingredient for beer. • Malts are made from selected cereal grain, usually barley (Hordeum vulgare), • It is then germinated under controlled conditions. • soaking in water and is then halted from germinating further by drying with hot air. • develops the enzymes (α-amylase, β-amylase, proteases) During Germination
• The grain is hydrated, or `steeped', by immersion in water.
– During steeping the water will be changed at least once • the starchy endosperm, is partly degraded, or modified, and its physical strength is reduced. • When germination is sufficiently advanced it is stopped by kilning. C. Hops • Hop (Humulus lupulus L.) gives beer its typical bitterness and hop aroma. • Three groups of substances are especially interesting from the brewing Technological point of view: hop resins, flavoring agents, and polyphenols. • Hop resins Constitute about 10–20% of the hop dry weight. • it gives their beer its special and predictable character. D. Yeast • Most beer is made from one of two different yeast types: – lager yeast (Saccharomyces uvarum)..(2-13 oC) • Bottom fermenting – ale yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae)...(16-24 oC) • Top fermenting • There are hundreds of strains of these two types of yeast. • particular strain of yeast will behave somewhat predictably, producing distinctive characters in beer. OUTLINE OF THE BREWING STEPS 1. Malting • converts the raw barley by controlled steeping, germination, and kilning into a product that is much more friable, with increased enzyme levels and with altered chemical and physical properties. • The grain embryo produces and releases a plant hormone, gibberellin, which activates the • aleurone layer of the grain to produce various enzymes. • These enzymes, together with those already present in the grain, start to break down the food reserves of the grain. To stop Germination • This is achieved by heating (kilning) the grain with hot dry air. As well as drying the malt to preserve it, kilning also develops color and flavor.
• The roots are removed mechanically and the malted
Barley/corns are then stored ready for use. 2. Milling and Adjunct Use • Barley malt can be supplemented with other cereals, either malted or raw, for specific purposes. – (barley, oats, maize, rice rye, sorghum, and wheat) Adjunct for one or a number of the following reasons:
• To produce a more stable beer, as they contain
less protein. • To produce different flavor. • To produce a better beer foam due to lower fat (lipid) levels and different proteins • To improve the ease of processing in the brew house. • To produce beer at lower cost 3. Mashing
• Simply the mixing of warm water with ground malt with a
suitable standing period • At this time dry malt adjuncts may be added. – Can decide the type of beer • Enzymes break down the starch in the grain and convert it to simple sugars. • to yield the soluble malt extract, which is called wort. • Using mash mixer/mash tun 4. Wort Separation • Once mash conversion is completed and the starch has been broken down to sugars, the aqueous extract solution has to be separated from the insoluble malt solids to produce clear sweet wort. • The principal objectives are to produce bright wort and to collect the maximum amount of sugars (extract) from the residual solid materials. • Spent grains are removed and sold as cattle feed. 5. Wort Boiling
• Wort boiling is the process unique to beer production. Wort
for boiling is collected after the separation process. – Concentrates the liquid – Sterilizes it – Inactivate enzymes – Extracts the hops soluble precipitates protein and caramalizes sugar. – Coagulation of excess proteins and tannins to form solid particles (trub) that can be removed later. This is important for beer stability and foam – Color and flavor formation 6. Hop addition
• Hops can be added all at once or can be divided over up to
four additions. For the production of beer with low bitterness and a more subtle hop aroma, hops are usually added all at once at kettle fill up, or up to 20 min after the start of boiling. • Contributes –flavor, aroma and bitterness • Hops can be added in different forms (i) whole hops (ii) hop pellets or powders (iii) hop extract. 7. Trub removal
• The coagulated material formed during the boil does need
to be removed . • Hot break is the name for the particles present in the hot boiled wort, and they are quite large, 20 to 80 µm. • A much finer particle (cold break, 2 µm) appears when wort is cooled below 60°C. – coating of the yeast to inhibit efficient fermentation. 8. Wort Cooling/Aeration • To the temperature desirable for fermentation • This process will be either two-stage or single-stage. • The temperature for fermentation is typically 8 to 13°C for lager and 14 to 17°C for ale. • Aeration- for the yeast to complete fermentation consistently. • The air/oxygen will dissolve to varying degrees depending particularly on the method of injection/dispersion into the wort. More finely dispersed bubbles dissolve more efficiently. 9. Yeast Handling
• The inoculum has to satisfy the following conditions to be
used for fermentation. it should be active and healthy in order to minimize the lag phase . should be available in large volume should have suitable formology should be free from contamination should retain its product forming capacity. 10. Yeast Pitching • Contamination of pitching yeast with either bacteria or wild yeast must be minimized, as these contaminants will cause undesirable flavors in the beer. • Consistent fermentations require consistent pitching rates. – An alternative is to mix wort and yeast in a starting tank prior to transfer to the fermentor. – Another advantage is that holding pitched wort in a starting tank for up to 24 h before transfer to the fermentor allows some undesirable solids to be removed by settling or floatation. 11. Fermentation
• There are two main classifications of
fermentations, ale and lager, A) Ale fermentation: ale uses a Saccharomyces cerevisiae, top-cropping yeast at a temperature of 14°C to 17°C. The fermentation is fast and exothermic, so cooling is applied to maintain a constant temperature. • The yeast is cropped early from the vessel to prevent off-flavors from yeast autolysis and also to provide healthy, vital yeast for subsequent fermentations. B)Lager fermentation: Lager ferments at a lower temperature, typically 8°C to 13°C, and uses bottom- cropping Saccharomyces uvarum yeast.
• The traditional lagering process involved a primary
fermentation using flocculent yeast, which was followed by a secondary fermentation using nonflocculent yeast at a lower temperature, say 8°C (warm storage), followed by cold storage at less than 0°C to stabilize the beer. • excess CO2 from the fermentation is vented off from the vessel, either to the atmosphere or collected for use later in the packaging process. A level of CO2 remains in the beer to give it bubble in a beer. • Toward the end of fermentation, as the sugars are depleted, the yeast begins to flocculate. A good separation of the yeast by flocculation is important in obtaining a clean, good-tasting beer 12. Yeast Removal
• More powdery strains are best removed by
centrifugation or filtration, while highly flocculent strains are more efficiently separated by sedimentation • Part of left over yeast can be recycled 5- 100 times before viability and contamination becomes a problem. 13. Aging • Aging refers to flavor maturation. • During the next 2-6 weeks @a temperature close to zero the precipitation of yeast and other undesirable products. • Caramel may be added-to control colour • Isomerize hop extracts- to control bitterness. 14. Clarification • Removes any remaining yeast and suspended particles forms during cold storage or aging.
• Filtration will produce a bright, sparkling beer that
will remain clear throughout its shelf life, provided that the stabilization has been correctly applied. 15. Packaging
• The packaging of beer can be conveniently divided into
two categories: – Large pack that includes kegs, casks, and demountable bulk tanks – Small pack that covers cans and bottles. • 16. Warehousing and Distribution