Want to place an ad email luke@realbeer.co.nz
$50+GST / month
This is worth a quick read
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-13067547
Basically talks about the initial ph value of your beer and how that changes the shelf life of beer, and also to keep your beer cool to increase it's life as well, wonder how much it cost them to figure that one out!
Tags:
Or you can just keep it cold...
On the dropping of pH tho... how would one achieve this and what sort of pH might they be talking. I have easy access to food grade acids such as citric and ascorbic... but these will add fruity flavours to the beer if in there at much of a concentration. Could easily add some acetic acid... but that is probably a flavour that most people are trying to avoid in their brewing process!!
Actually yeah, I would like to take a look if it is no trouble. Brace yourself for a friend invite so I can pm you my addy :)
Thanks for the article James. To summarise
They adjust the pH of the beer by adding Lactic acid to the beer after fermentation but before aging.
For the storage experiments performed with pH-adjusted beer samples, brewing trials were carried out in a 20 hL pilot plant at Bitburger brewery. A standard 2-mash decoction procedure was used to produce Pilsner-type beers from 300 kg of barley malt and 325 g of hop. Wort was boiled for 70 min at 100 _C and, then, fermented at
10.5 _C. Filled storage containers were 50 L barrels. The final beer samples were adjusted to pH 4.4, 4.3, and 4.2, respectively, by adding lactic acid and, then, stored 0, 30, 90, and 300 d at 20 _C in the dark.
The study showed distinct differences after aging for 90 days at 20 deg and even bigger differences after aging for a year at 20 deg C
So, if I have a pH meter on hand, I could adjust my beer down to a pH of 4.2 and get a beer that would keep longer. I am not sure what effect the lactic acid would have on the taste of the brew unless you were specifically trying for a “sour” beer. I wonder how much lactic acid you can add before you start to be able to taste it??
I guess you could also use the acidified malt and get a lower pH beer that would keep longer as well…
Interesting stuff.
Yeah very interesting, and I am sure raises a whole lot of questions in itself.
Like will it be beneficial for big beers that take a considerable amount of time to mature properly?
I guess only time and experimentation will tell
So I wonder what the effect of an acidic environment on oxidation is? And what is getting oxidised to produce the off flavours? Is it the complex carbohydrates or is it the proteins / peptides?. Or, for that matter, is it things like melanoidins and glycoproteins / glycated proteins? Shit I'm just starting to come to terms with the complexity of the biochemical soup.
I think I'd rather describe beer with a haiku than with biochemistry.
Aged four months
Alcohol whelms
Hallertau where are you?
© 2024 Created by nzbrewer. Powered by