Food Biochemistry and Food Processing (2 edition)

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BLBS102-c33 BLBS102-Simpson March 21, 2012 14:5 Trim: 276mm X 219mm Printer Name: Yet to Come


628 Part 5: Fruits, Vegetables, and Cereals

fermentation needs to be performed. During this fermentation,
major flavor-active compounds are produced (and some of them
are again metabolized) by the yeast cells. The metabolism of
the most important fermentation by-products during main and
secondary fermentation is discussed in detail. The latest trend
in beer fermentation technology is the process intensification
using immobilized cell technology (ICT). This new technology
is explained and some illustrative applications—on small and
large scale—are discussed.

THE BEER BREWING PROCESS


The principal raw materials used to brew beer are water, malted
barley, hops and yeast. The brewing process involves extracting
and breaking down the carbohydrate from the malted barley to
make a sugar solution (called “wort”), which also contains es-
sential nutrients for yeast growth, and using this as a source of
nutrients for “anaerobic” yeast growth. During yeast fermenta-
tion, simple sugars are consumed, releasing heat and producing
ethanol and other flavoring metabolic by-products. The major

biological changes, which occur in the brewing process, are cat-
alyzed by naturally produced enzymes from barley (during malt-
ing) and yeast. The rest of the brewing process largely involves
heat exchange, separation, and clarification, which only pro-
duces minor changes in chemical composition when compared
to the enzyme catalyzed reactions. Barley is able to produce all
the enzymes that are needed to degrade starch,β-glucan, pen-
tosans, lipids, and proteins, which are the major compounds of
interest to the brewer. An overview of the brewing process is
shown in Figure 33.1, where also the input and output flows are
indicated. Table 33.1 gives a more detailed explanation of each
step in the process.

CARBOHYDRATE
METABOLISM—ETHANOL PRODUCTION

Wort Carbohydrates Uptake and Metabolism

Carbohydrates in wort make up 90–92% of wort solids. Wort
from barley malt contains the fermentable sugars sucrose, fruc-
tose, glucose, maltose, and maltotriose together with some

Malt

Wort cooling and
aeration

Primary fermentation

Beer filtration

Maturation and
conditioning

Beer stabilization

Beer packaging

Brewing water

Unmalted cereals

Hops/hopproducts

Syrups

Yeast

Spent grains

Hot trub

Spent hops

Yeast

Cold trub

Yeast

Milling

Mashing

Wort separation

Wort boiling

Wort clarification

Figure 33.1.Schematic overview of the brewing process (input flows are indicated on the left side and output flows on the right side).
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