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Brewing Science: A Multidisciplinary Approach Michael Mosher

Brewing Science: A Multidisciplinary Approach By Michael Mosher

Brewing Science: A Multidisciplinary Approach by Michael Mosher


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Summary

This updated text collects all the introductory aspects of beer brewing science into one place for undergraduate brewing science courses.

As a truly comprehensive introduction to brewing science, Brewing Science: A Multidisciplinary Approach, Second Edition walks students through the entire spectrum of the brewing process.

Brewing Science: A Multidisciplinary Approach Summary

Brewing Science: A Multidisciplinary Approach by Michael Mosher

This updated text collects all the introductory aspects of beer brewing science into one place for undergraduate brewing science courses. This expansive and detailed work is written in conversational style, walking students through all the brewing basics from the origin and history of beer to the brewing process to post-brew packaging and quality control and assurance. As an introductory text, this book assumes the reader has no prior knowledge of brewing science and only limited experience with chemistry, biology and physics. The text provides students with all the necessary details of brewing science using a multidisciplinary approach, with a thorough and well-defined program of in-chapter and end-of-chapter problems. As students solve these problems, they will learn how scientists think about beer and brewing and develop a critical thinking approach to addressing concerns in brewing science.

As a truly comprehensive introduction to brewing science, Brewing Science: A Multidisciplinary Approach, Second Edition walks students through the entire spectrum of the brewing process. The different styles of beer, the molecular makeup and physical parameters, and how those are modified to provide different flavors are listed. All aspects of the brewery process, from the different setup styles to sterility to the presentation of the final product, are outlined in full. All the important brewing steps and techniques are covered in meticulous detail, including malting, mashing, boiling, fermenting and conditioning. Bringing the brewing process full circle, this text covers packaging aspects for the final product as well, focusing on everything from packaging technology to quality control. Students are also pointed to the future, with coverage of emerging flavor profiles, styles and brewing methods.

Each chapter in this textbook includes a sample of related laboratory exercises designed to develop a student's capability to critically think about brewing science. These exercises assume that the student has limited or no previous experience in the laboratory. The tasks outlined explore key topics in each chapter based on typical analyses that may be performed in the brewery. Such exposure to the laboratory portion of a course of study will significantly aid those students interested in a career in brewing science.

About Michael Mosher

Michael Mosher, Ph.D., is Chair of the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at the University of Northern Colorado located in Greeley, CO.

Kenneth Trantham, Ph.D., is Chair of the Department of Physics and Physical Science at the University of Nebraska at Kearney located in Kearney, NE.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 - Introduction to Brewing Science

1.1 Science and the Brewer

1.1.1 The Scientific Method

1.2 What is Beer?

1.3 Some Common Conventions

1.3.1 Volume

1.3.2 Temperature

1.3.3 Weight

1.4 Yes Virginia, Beer contains Alcohol

1.5 A Short History of Beer in the World

1.5.1 The Very Early Years (pre-historic to Romans)

1.5.2 Beer in Europe before 1500

1.5.3 Colonization and the New World

1.5.4 Beer in Post-1700 Europe

1.5.5 Beer in the Far East

1.6 Beer in the United States

1.6.1 Beer unites the nation

1.6.2 Expansion across the west

1.6.3 Temperance and Prohibition

1.6.4 Prohibition in the US

1.6.5 Post-prohibition

1.6.6 Returning to the home

1.7 The Current Market for Beer

Laboratory Exercises

Familiarization with laboratory measurements

Exploring the Internet


Chapter 2 - Beer Styles

2.1 Judging Beer

2.1.1 Beer Styles

2.1.2 Conforming to a Style

2.2 Parameters that Classify a Beer Style

2.2.1 Physical Parameters

2.3 Common Beer Styles

2.3.1 Lagers

2.3.1.1 European Lagers

2.3.1.2 English Lagers

2.3.1.3 American Lagers

2.3.1.4 Other Lagers

2.3.2 Ales

2.3.2.1 European Ales

2.3.2.2 English, Scottish and Irish Ales

2.3.2.3 American Ales

2.3.3 Hybrids (talk about Calif. Common, etc...)

2.4 Historical Beer Styles

2.5 How to Sample and Taste Beer

2.5.1 Beer Glasses

2.5.2 Serving Temperature

2.5.3 Sampling and Tasting

Laboratory Exercises

Density measurements

SRM Determination

Chapter 3 - Molecules and Other Matters

3.1 The Atom

3.1.1 Compounds

3.2 Laws that Govern Atoms, Molecules, and Ionic Compounds

3.3 The World of Carbon-Containing Molecules

3.3.1 Basic Functional Groups in Brewing

3.3.2 Amino acid polymers

3.3.3 Drawing Organic Molecules

3.3.4 Naming Organic Molecules

3.4 Reactions of Organic Molecules

3.4.1 Oxidation and Reduction

3.4.2 Condensation Reactions

3.4.3 Isomerization Reactions

3.4.4 Radical Reactions

3.4.5 Maillard Reactions

Laboratory Exercises

Building models in 3-D

Chapter 4 - Overview of the Brewing Process

4.1 Overview of the Process

4.1.1 Agriculture

4.1.2 Malting

4.1.3 Milling

4.1.4 Mashing

4.1.5 Lautering and Sparging

4.1.6 Boiling

4.1.7 Fermentation

4.1.8 Maturation

4.1.9 Filtration

4.1.10 Packaging

4.2 Cleaning and Sterilizing

4.3 Inputs and Outputs

4.3.1 Water

4.3.2 Grains and Malts

4.3.3 Hops

4.3.4 Yeast

4.3.5 Finished product

Laboratory Exercises

Sketch the overview

Research on Barley

Chapter 5 - Malting and Water

5.1 Biology of Barley

5.1.1 The Barley Corn

5.1.2 Barley and the Farmer

5.1.3 Barley Diseases and Pests

5.1.4 Sorting and Grading

5.2 Malting Barley

5.2.1 Germination of Barley

5.2.2 Equipment used in Malting

5.2.3 Problems Arising from Malting

5.3 Maillard Reactions

5.4 Water - the most important ingredient

5.4.1 Types of water

5.4.1.1 Aquifers

5.4.1.2 Brewery Water

5.4.2 What's in the water?

5.4.2.1 Cations in water

5.4.2.2 Anions in water

5.4.2.3 Reactions in water

5.4.3 pH

5.4.3.1 Residual Alkalinity

Laboratory Exercises

Germination of barley

Chapter 6 - Milling and Mashing

6.1 Milling

6.1.1 Purpose of milling

6.1.2 Equipment used in milling

6.2 Purpose of mashing

6.3 Equipment used in Mashing

6.3.1 Cereal Cookers

6.3.2 Mash Mixer and Mash Kettles

6.3.3 Mash Tun

6.3.4 Processes in Mashing

6.4 Enzymes and what they are

6.5 Chemistry while Resting

6.5.1 Starch

6.5.1 Phytase

6.5.2 Glucanase

6.5.3 Proteases and peptidases

6.5.4 Alpha-amylase

6.5.5 Beta-amylase

6.5.6 Mashout

6.6 Efficiency of Extraction

6.6.1 Efficiency Calculations

6.6.2 Mash pH

6.6.3 Mash Thickness

Laboratory Exercises

The Effect of Temperature and pH on Mashing Efficiency

Chapter 7 - Lautering and Sparging

7.1 Introduction

7.2 Fluid physics: Static case

7.2.1 Pressure

7.2.2 Pascal's Law

7.3 Fluid Physics: Dynamic case

7.3.1 Conservation of mass: the continuity equation

7.3.2: Bernoulli's principle and laminar flow

7.3.3 Pressure and Hydraulic Head

7.3.4 Head and Pump Dynamics.

7.3.5 Darcy's Law and laminar flow in porous media

7.4 Equipment used in Sparging and Lautering

7.4.1 Batch Sparging

7.4.2 Fly Sparging

7.4.3 Mash Filter

7.5 When do we stop sparging?

Laboratory Exercises

Exploring Darcy's law

Chapter 8 - Boiling

8.1 Why Boil the Wort?

8.2 The Equipment of the Boil

8.2.1 Metals and Heating

8.2.2 Corrosion

8.2.3 Methods for Heating

8.2.4 Direct Fire Vessels

8.2.5 Calandria

8.2.6 Other Heating Systems

8.3 Heat and Temperature

8.3.1 Types of Energy

8.4 Heat Capacity and Heat Transfer

8.4.1 Phase Transition - Boiling

8.4.2 Power

8.5 Hops in the Boil

8.5.1 The hop flower revisited

8.5.2 Hop Oil Constituents

8.5.3 Modified Hop Oils

Laboratory Exercises

Hop Tea and Identifying Flavors

Determination of Percent Hop Acids in Hops.

Determination of Wort Viscosity during Boil.

Chapter 9 - Cooling and Fermenting

9.0 Setting the Stage

9.1 Wort Chilling

9.1.1 Heat Exchangers

9.1.2 Multiple stage heat exchangers

9.2 Equipment used in Fermentation

9.2.1 Refrigeration

9.2.1.1 Introductory Thermodynamics. State variables and processes.

9.2.1.2 Internal energy and the first law of thermodynamics

9.2.1.3 Thermodynamic Processes

9.2.1.4 Reversible and irreversible processes in thermodynamics

9.2.1.5 The most efficient cycle: The Carnot cycle.

9.2.1.6 Type of refrigerants.

9.2.1.7 Mechanical implementation of refrigeration. Glycol circulation.

9.2.2 Fermenters, CCV, round squares.

9.2.2.1 Aeration and pressure effects

9.3 Yeast

9.3.1 Yeast Morphology

9.3.2 Yeast Metabolism

9.3.2.1 Aerobic Conditions

9.3.2.2 Anaerobic Conditions

9.3.2.3 Effects on metabolism

9.3.3 Products of Yeast

Laboratory Exercises

The Effect of Sugars on Fermentation

Chapter 10 - Maturation and Carbonation

10.1 The purpose of maturation

10.1.1 Secondary fermentation

10.1.2 Warm maturation

10.1.3 Cold maturation

10.1.4 Other adjustments

10.2 Equipment Used in Maturation

10.2.1 Horizontal versus Vertical

10.2.2 Cask Conditioning

10.3 Carbonation

10.3.1 The principles of carbonation

10.3.2 Equipment used to Carbonate

10.3.2.1 Inline methods

10.3.2.2 Online methods

10.3.3 Issues with Carbonation

Laboratory Exercises

Diacetyl Determination in Beer

Adjusting the Color

Chapter 11 - Clarification and Filtration

11.1 Introduction

11.2 Colloids and Colloidal Stability

11.2.1 What is a colloid?

11.2.2 Formation in beer

11.2.3 Turbidity Measurements

11.2.4 Shelf-life

11.3 Clarification

11.3.1 During Boiling

11.3.2 During Fermentation

11.3.3 During Maturation

11.4 Filtration

11.4.1 Principles of filtration

11.4.2 Filtration equipment

11.4.2.1 The Sheet Filter

11.4.2.2 The Lenticular Filter

11.4.2.3 Powder Filters (Candle, Leaf, and Plate&Frame Filters)

11.4.2.4 Crossflow Filters

11.4.3 Issues with Filtration

11.4.3.1 Product Safety Hazards

11.4.3.2 Product Quality Hazards

11.4.3.3 Operator Safety Hazards

Chapter 12 - Packaging

12.1 Introduction

12.2 Carbonation and Other Gases

12.2.1 Pressure Loss in Transferring Liquids

12.2.2 Temperature Increases during production

12.2.3 Other Gases used in carbonation

12.3 Packaging

12.3.1 Small Pack

12.3.1.1 Bottles

12.3.1.2 Cans

12.3.1.3 Plastic

12.3.2 Large Pack

12.4 Pasteurization

12.4.1 Tunnel Pasteurization

12.4.2 Flash Pasteurization

12.4.3 Other methods of Pasteurization

Laboratory Exercises

Thermal Expansion of Water

Chapter 13 - Quality Assurance and Quality Control

13.1 What is Quality?

13.1.1 Quality for the Consumer

13.1.2 Quality for the Brewery

13.1.3 What Quality is not

13.2 Quality Control

13.2.1 Methods in Quality Control

13.3 Quality Assurance

13.3.1 Good Brewery Practice

13.3.2 Addressing production using PDCA

13.4 Addressing Product Safety

13.4.1 FSMA

13.4.2 HACCP

13.5 Sensory Analyses

13.5.1 Types of sensory evaluations

13.6 Safety in the Brewery

Laboratory Exercises

Turbidity in Beer

Appendix A - Math for the Brewer

A.0 Introduction

A.1 Designing your brew

A.1.1 Volume.

A.1.2 Designing the Grain Bill

A.1.3 Hops

A.1.4 Percent alcohol by volume (ABV)

A.1.5 Color and SRM

A.2 Misc - Strike water temperature

Appendix B - R134a Refrigerant Data

B.0 Introduction

B.1 Saturated, organized by Temperature

B.2 Saturated, organized by pressure

B.3 Superheated Vapor

Appendix C - Sensory Statistical Data

C.0 Introduction

C.1 Difference Testing Statistics


Additional information

NPB9783030734213
9783030734213
3030734218
Brewing Science: A Multidisciplinary Approach by Michael Mosher
New
Paperback
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
2022-07-30
455
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

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