BLBS102-c33 BLBS102-Simpson March 21, 2012 14:5 Trim: 276mm X 219mm Printer Name: Yet to Come
33 Biochemistry of Beer Fermentation 629Table 33.1.Overview of the Brewing Processing Steps: From Barley to BeerProcess Action Objectives Time Temperature (◦C)Malting
Steeping
Germination
KilningMoistening and aeration of
barley
Barley germination
Kilning of the green maltPreparation for the germination
process
Enzyme production, chemical
structure modification
Ending of germination and
modification, production of
flavoring and coloring
substances48 h
3–5 d
24–48 h12–22
22
22–110Milling Grain crushing without
disintegrating the husksEnzyme release and increase of
surface area1–2 h 22Mashing+wort
separationAddition of warm/hot water Stimulation of enzyme action,
extraction and dissolution of
compounds, wort filtration,
to obtain the desired
fermentable extract as quick
as possible1–2 h 30–72Wort boiling Boiling of wort and hops Extraction and isomerization of
hop components, hot break
formation, wort sterilization,
enzyme inactivation,
formation of reducing,
aromatic and coloring
compounds, removal of
undesired volatile aroma
compounds, wort
acidification, evaporation
of water0.5–1.5 h > 98Wort clarification Sedimentation or
centrifugationRemoval of spent hops,
clarification (whirlpool,
centrifuge, settling tank)<1 h 100–80Wort cooling and
aerationUse of heat exchanger,
injection of air bubblesPreparing the wort for yeast
growth<1 h 12–18Fermentation Adding yeast, controlling the
specific gravity, removal of
yeastProduction of green beer, to
obtain yeast for subsequent
fermentations, carbon
dioxide recovery2—7 d 12–22 (ale)
4–15 (lager)Maturation and
conditioningBeer storage in oxygen free
tank, beer cooling, adding
processing aidsBeer maturation, adjustment of
the taste, adjustment of CO 2
content, sedimentation of
yeast and cold trub, beer
stabilization7–21 h −1–0Beer clarification Centrifugation, filtration Removal of yeast and cold trub 1–2 h −1–0
Biological
stabilizationPasteurization of sterile
filtrationKilling or removing of
microorganisms1–2 h 62–72 (past.)
−1–0 (filtr.)
Packaging Filling of bottles, cans, casks,
and kegs; pasteurization of
small volumes in packingsProduction of packaged beer
according to specifications0.5–1.5 h −1–room
temperaturedextrin material (Table 33.2). The fermentable sugars typically
make up 70–80% of the total carbohydrate (MacWilliam 1968).
The three major fermentable sugars are glucose,α-glucosides
maltose, and maltotriose. Maltose is by far the most abundant
of these sugars, typically accounting for 50–70% of the totalfermentable sugars in an all-malt wort. Sucrose and fructose are
present in a low concentration. The unfermentable dextrins play
little part in brewing. Wort fermentability may be reduced or
increased by using solid (e.g., corn grits, flakes, or rice) or liquid
adjuncts (e.g., sugar syrups).