AU676180B2 - Non-alcoholic beer - Google Patents

Non-alcoholic beer Download PDF

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Publication number
AU676180B2
AU676180B2 AU46145/93A AU4614593A AU676180B2 AU 676180 B2 AU676180 B2 AU 676180B2 AU 46145/93 A AU46145/93 A AU 46145/93A AU 4614593 A AU4614593 A AU 4614593A AU 676180 B2 AU676180 B2 AU 676180B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
wort
brew
yeast
fermented
beer
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
AU46145/93A
Other versions
AU4614593A (en
Inventor
James J. Fitzpatrick
Robert M. Graham
Robert Mccaig
Egbert A. Pfisterer
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Molson Canada 2005
Original Assignee
Molson Breweries of Canada Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Molson Breweries of Canada Ltd filed Critical Molson Breweries of Canada Ltd
Publication of AU4614593A publication Critical patent/AU4614593A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU676180B2 publication Critical patent/AU676180B2/en
Assigned to MOLSON CANADA reassignment MOLSON CANADA Request to Amend Deed and Register Assignors: MOLSON BREWERIES
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12GWINE; PREPARATION THEREOF; ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES; PREPARATION OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES NOT PROVIDED FOR IN SUBCLASSES C12C OR C12H
    • C12G3/00Preparation of other alcoholic beverages
    • C12G3/02Preparation of other alcoholic beverages by fermentation
    • C12G3/021Preparation of other alcoholic beverages by fermentation of botanical family Poaceae, e.g. wheat, millet, sorghum, barley, rye, or corn
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12CBEER; PREPARATION OF BEER BY FERMENTATION; PREPARATION OF MALT FOR MAKING BEER; PREPARATION OF HOPS FOR MAKING BEER
    • C12C12/00Processes specially adapted for making special kinds of beer
    • C12C12/04Beer with low alcohol content
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12GWINE; PREPARATION THEREOF; ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES; PREPARATION OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES NOT PROVIDED FOR IN SUBCLASSES C12C OR C12H
    • C12G3/00Preparation of other alcoholic beverages
    • C12G3/02Preparation of other alcoholic beverages by fermentation
    • C12G3/025Low-alcohol beverages

Description

I I- 11%W11i Jtcsubtion 3 2
AUSTRALIA
Patentsktc 1990 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION FOR A STANDARD PATENT 0 0 0*090 .00 foe..
ORIGINAL
*5*5
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5.5.
S. 0* *5 Name of Applicant: Actual Inventor: Address for service in Australia: Invention Title., MOLSON BRE WERIES, A Partnership Egbert A. Pfisterer, Robert McCaig, James 3. Fitzpatrick and Robert M. Grahlam CARTE R SMITH BEADLE 2 Railway Parade Camberwell Victoria 3124 v Australia NON-ALCOHOLIC BEER The following statement is a full description of this invention, including thc best method of performing it known to us The present invention relates to the field of brewing.
More particularly, the present invention relates to a method for brewing a non-alcoholic beer. As used herein, and as generally accepted in the brewing industry, the term nonrj alcoholic beer refers to a brewed malt based beverage containing O.SP, or lower ethyl alcohol by volune.
The market niche occupied by non-alcoholic beers has traditionally been quite small, since throughout history and to the present, the presence of alcohol has been a natural and desirable characteristic of beer. The alcohol in beer is 06% produced by fermenting wort with yeast. Wort is a solution goo: produced by mashing ground barley malt, with or without additional fern entable foodstuffs such as corn or rice (known generally as adjun-,ts), in a large quantity of hot water, to 015i extract sugars and other soluble substances such as low molecular proteins and polysacharides from the malt and :096* adjuncts. Hops are added to the wort as it is boiled to provide the bitterness that is a characteristic of beers in
O*S
general.
Traditionally, after a wort has been prepared, it is pitched with yeast and permitted to ferment, until the yeast has consumed all or substantially all of the fermentable extract in the wort. The major portion of fermentable carbohydrates will have been converted by the yeast into ethyl alcohol and carbon dioxide, and the flavour of the resultant beverage (after filtration and finishing) will be easily recognized as beer. This flavour is essentially a combination of three factors: the bitterness contributed by the hops, the distinct flavour of the unfermentable constituents from the barley malt which are not digested by the yeast, and aroma substances, generally considered fermentation by-products contributed by the yeast.
It will be understood, then, from the foregoing brief discussion, that two of the three things that go into the flavour of beer malt and adjunct residues, and hop bitterness are introduced during the wort making process, before any fermentation or ethyl alcohol production has occurred.
Techniques have been developed, therefore, to bring the flavour components contributed by the yeast into beer without having the yeast consume the fermentable sugar in the wort and thereby produce alcohol. Such techniques are generally known as cold contact brewing, and are utilized in various forms for the brewing of non-alcoholic beer.
It will be understood, then, that the present invention relates, in general terms, to a cold contact brewing method.
:2 p. In the present invention, to enhance the flavour of the beer, unwanted hydrogen sulphide is eliminated during brewing.
This is one of the most common detractions from the taste of beer, and is a common sulphur based compound produced as an undesirable by-product of yeast metabolism during primary fermentation of beer. Hydrogen sulphide is usually present in finishP3 beers at leve~ls of 2 to 15 gig/1. However, levels above 5 pgg/l detract from the aroma and palette of the beer.
Hydrogen sulphide levels follow the yeast budding index and thus rise and fall several times during fermentation; this makes control of this undesirable flavour compound difficult, particulary when fermentations have to be. prematurely stopped in order to limit alcohol production. Therefore, a method has been incorporated for removing hydrogen sulphide from nonalcoholic beer production in the present invention and thereby improving the flavour of the finished beer.
Schur, in U.S. Patent No. 4,661,355 describes a PROCESS SFOR THE PREPARATION OF ALCOHOL-FREE DRINKS WITH A YEAST AROMA, which comprises contacting a prepared wort with a thick, *I alcohol-free yeast slurry harvested from a fermentation process, at a temperature below 3 0 C, preferably below 0 0 C. At these low temperatures, the yeast will not ferment the sugars in the wort, but after a time of 24 to 48 hours, a sufficient quantity of yeast aroma substances will have been released from the yeast to override wort taste. A drawback of the technique ~Q described by Schur is that it is difficult to maintain a near freezing temperature in the wort during the entire yeast contact period., As well, at such low temperatures the metabolic activity of yeast occurs at such a low rate that the amount of aroma substances released into the beer is not sufficient to overcome the worty taste. Also, at temperatures so nearly approaching freezing, ice formation is a significant problem.
A PROCESS FOR PREPARING A NON-ALCOHOLIC MALT BEVERAGE is disclosed by Hluige at al it, u.s. Patent No. 4,970,082. In that patent, a combination of four essential process steps is described for brewing a non-alcoholic beverage. The steps described by Huige et al include: producing a wort having a high (14-205%-) cxtract concentration that -includes fermentable sugars; (ii) obtaining a yeast slurry from a previous ordinary beer fermentation, the slurry containing from 10 20% yeast solids and the remainder beer; (iii) pitching wort with yeast slurry; and (iv) fermenting the pitched wort for 30 minutes to hours at about 30C to about 7*C. The thereby obtained .beverage has an alcoholic concentration of about 15,' to 2%0, but *it is subsequently brought down to less than 0.5% by dilution with carbonated water. In the Huige et al process, great emphasis is placed on having little or no oxygen in the fermenter, to reduce aldehyde formation.
While the product of the Huige et al process is considered an acceptable non-alcoholic beverage, its flavour characteristics strongly reflect the make-up of its original a~ :ingredients. In particular, the Jluige et al process states 14% as an essential minimum extract content in the wort which it .~.utilizes. Moreover, of this 14%, a minimum of 409% is composed of corn syrup. Therefore, it will be understood that the yeast fermentation of Huige et al converts only a minimal percentage of fermentable extract to ethanol and Co. at the low temperature at which it is carried out. Accordingly, the resultant brew will have a fairly high sugar content, relative to fully fermented beer that exhibits little or no sugar (monomer or dimer) content.
In view of the foregoing, a preferred object of the present invention is to provide a method of producing a non-alcoholic beverage having a true beer flavour.
A further preferred object of the present invention is to produce such a nonalcoholic beverage with less sweetness and worty taste than known non-alcoholic beers by adopting a novel cold fermentation scheme.
In one broad aspect, therefore, the present invention relates to a method of brewing a malt beverage having a low alcohol content, including the steps of: (a) preparing a malt and cereal infusion having an extract content below about 14%; (b) 10 boiling said infusion to obtain a wort; adding a predetermined quantity of hops to said wort; aerating said wort to an oxygen content of 15 35 mg per litre; (e) pitching said wort with a yeast slurry to provide a cell count of about 80 to about F180 million yeast cells per ml; fermenting the pitched wort at a temperature of about 3"C to about 10°C for 1 to 40 hours; removing the yeast from the 15 fermented wort; filtering the resulting brew; electrolyzing the resultant brew 5555* o with a copper electrode to remove H 2 S; and adjusting the alcohol concentration of the brew with carbonated water to a preselected level, and then aging the resultant brew for at least 24 hours.
*o 5- DAB:RR:N14082.RS2 2 nury 1997 The present invention utilizes as a base a malt and cereal infusion, boiled to prepare a wort. In contradistinction to the Huige et al process, however, the wort of the present invention is prepared utilizing a significantly greater.
proportion of malt than of adjunct cereals. Typically a ratio of two-thirds malt, one-third corn syrup, by weight, is used to produce a wort containing a higher proportion of flavour constituents derived from malt. Moreover, in the process of the present invention, it is important that the total percentage, by weight, of the malt and cereal extract in the prepared wort to be kept below 14%. The applicant has determined that the extract concentration in excess of this level will result in a finished product, after fermentation, that will have a taste substantially contributed to by the
S.
presence of unfermented extract from the wort. At wort concentrations below 14% the amount of unfermented extract in the beer will be lower and thus contribute less of a worty taste to the final product.
000 **go: e O After preparation and hopping (according to known hopping methods) of the wort, it is aerated with compressed air or oxygen to an oxygen content of approximately 25mg per litre.
This is a significant departure from the prior art, which specifies that the wort be deoxygenated, or purged with carbon dioxide to ensure a dissolved oxygen free environment for the following fermentation. The reason given by Huige at al for deoxygenation of the wort is to provide a reducing environment conducive to allowing yeast to reduce aldehydes. However, the P 6 C_0 7Chr applicant has observed that it is more effective to focus oh the elimination of H 2 S during beer processing than providing a non-aerated wort at pitching. Accordingly, in the present invention, the wort is oxygenated to a level selected to secure yeast growth.
The aerated wort is then pitched with a yeast slurry harvested from a completed fermentation. The wort is pitched with a large quantity of yeast possessing a viability of at least 90% and a cell count of 80 to 180 million yeast ceils per ml. The wort is then fermented at from 30 to 10°C for 1 to hours. The applicant has determined that a 6 hour fermentation 4*00 at 6°C is usually suffi'cient to provide in the brew an acceptable level of yeast flavour components, and to ferment a sufficient quantity of the fermentable sugars in the wort to reduce the sweetness of the brew to within acceptable levels.
After fermentation for the desired period of time, the yeast is quickly removed. It is essential that yeast removal be accomplished as efficaciously as possible, to prevent S0 continued fermentation and to maintain product uniformity.
Accordingly, it is preferred that the yeast be centrifuged from the partially fermented brew by a centrifuge that has been adapted to handle a high solids load in a short period of time.
The beer is then chilled to 0°C, which precipitates out many colloidal substances such as proteins, and treated with a silica gel that functions as a flocculant to clarify the beer.
The clarified beer is then acidified to a pH of below 4.3 using a food grade acid such as phosphoric acid, the selection of which will be a matter of choice for the skilled brewer. By bringing the pH of the partially.fermented brew down from its naturally occurring pH of about 5.2, which is in the neutral range, to about 4.3, which is very mildly acidic, a more acceptable beer taste is obtained, closer to that of fully fermented beer.
At this point in the process of the present invention, the alcohol concentration will be significantly above the target level of Therefore, carbonated, deaerated water is then S. added to the brew, to bring the alcohol concentration to a level just above the target level. The brew is then aged at 0°C for 24 hours minimum, and is filtered through a layer of 00 course and fine grade kieselguhr to further clarify it and remove any haze particles after which carbonated deaerated water is added to adjust the alcohol content to the precise concentration desired.
The bitterness of the beer is then adjusted to produce a beverage that is well balanced in its flavour congeners. At this stage, any minor colour changes desired may be made ising, for instance, cararel.
As a final step in clarifying the beer and eliminating any unwanted taste components, the beer is electrolysed by a copper electrolysing unit. This unit cradually dissolves minute amounts of copper ions into the beer, to rid the beer of any hydrogen sulphide that may be present. This process is carried out in an electrolytic cell by passing beer between two electrolytically purified copper plate electrodes. The electrodes are housed in an insulated pipe such as, although not limited to, a polychlorylvinyl pipe with an inner teflon coating to prevent leakage of the applied current through the housing during use. The beer is passed through this pipe on its way to the filter. The cell also contains a power supply capable of applying 24 D C with a continuous and repetitive reversing of polarity. r'.d reversing polarity is controlled by a solid state repeat cycle timer. This continuous switching of polarity prevents the electrodes from excessive surface damage or coating while acting as a cathode, and allows for an *t equal disillusion of the electrode while acting as the anode.
During this process, the sulphur of the hydrogen sulphide is precipitated out as copper -ulphide, and the associated sulphur flavour is thereby eliminated.
The applicants have discovered that by electrolytically ridding the beer of HS, a substantial advantage is gained, and to a large extent, the cold fermentation process is made more practical than was previously the case. That is, a large quantity of viable yeast is required to be added to the wort for fermentation, and a natural by product of yeast growth is HS. Due to the presence of such a large quantity of yeast, HS will tend to build up quite quickly in the fermenting brew, and will remain dissolved therein, because of the low temperature at which the fermenting brew is maintained.
The beer Is then riltnred one more time to remove any precipitant. The filtered beer is then carbonated to the desired level, bottled or canned and pasteurized.
It is to be understood that the examples described above not meant to limit the s~cope of the present invention. It is expected that numerous variants will be obvious to the person skilled in the brewing art, vothout any departure from the spirit of the present invention. The appended claims, properly construed, form the only limitation upon the scope, of the present invention.
The claims form part of the disclosure of this 0 specification.

Claims (5)

1. A method of brewing a malt beverage having a low alcohol content, including the steps of: preparing a malt and cereal infusion having an extract content below about 14%; boiling said infusion to obtain a wort; adding a predetermined quantity of hops to said wort; aerating said wort to an oxygen content of 15 per litre; pitching said wort with a yeast slurry to provide a cell count of about 80 to about 180 million yeast cells per ml; fermenting the pitc hed wort at a temperature of about 3°C to about 10°C for 1 to 40 hours; removing the yeast from the fermented wort; filtering the resulting brew; electrolyzing the resultant brew with a copper electrode to remove HS; and adjusting the alcohol concentration of the brew with j carbonated water to a preselected level, and then aging the resultant brew for at least 24 hours.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1, including the further step of adjusting the pH of the fermented, filtered brew from about
5.2 to below about 4.3 by addition of a food grade acid such as phosphoric acid. 11 S**A. *0 9** S.9
06. *99*e 9* 9 9 99 3. A method as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2, wherein said fermentation is carried out at about 6*C for about 6 hours. 4. A method as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein said fermented brew, after yeast removal, is chilled to about 0*C and treated with silica gel before filtering, to precipitate out colloidal substances in the beer. A method as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 4 wherein said fermented, filtered brew is electrolyzed by passing same through a pipe equipped with a pair of copper electrodes connected to a source of electric current. 6. A method as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein the final alcohol level of said brew is DATED: 2 January 1997 CARTER SMITH BEADLE Patent Attorneys for the Applicant: MOLSON BREWERIES, A Partnership r -o~so0 r ~k ~c;4" 12 DAD:RR:14082.RS2 2 anuy 1997 ABS TRACj'T A miethod of brewing a malt boverage having a low alcohol content is disclosed., A malt and cereal infusion having an extract content below about 14; is; prepared, and ;oiled to obtain a wort. A predetermined quanti ly of hops are then added to said wort, which is than aerated to an oxygen content of 15 35 ILg per litre. The wort is pitched with a yeast slurry to provide a cell count of about 80 to about. 180 mililon yeast ca13s per ml and fermented at a temperature of about 3C to about 10"C for 1 o to 40 hours. The yeast is then removed from the fermented wort, and the resulting brew is filtered, and electrolyzed with a .,copper electrode to remove 11,S. The alcohol concentration of the is then adjusted with carbonated water to a preselected anssl ~evel, and then the resultant brew is aged for at least 24 hours. SA se*. S
09.0
AU46145/93A 1992-09-04 1993-09-06 Non-alcoholic beer Ceased AU676180B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA002077584A CA2077584C (en) 1992-09-04 1992-09-04 Non-alcoholic beer
CA2077584 1992-09-04

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU4614593A AU4614593A (en) 1994-03-10
AU676180B2 true AU676180B2 (en) 1997-03-06

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AU46145/93A Ceased AU676180B2 (en) 1992-09-04 1993-09-06 Non-alcoholic beer

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CA (1) CA2077584C (en)
GB (1) GB2270525B (en)

Families Citing this family (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
IE960360A1 (en) * 1996-05-23 1997-12-31 Valdosa Limited A brewing process
ES2136020B1 (en) * 1997-06-23 2000-04-16 Navarro Ceballos Mariano NEW PROCEDURE FOR OBTAINING ALCOHOL-FREE BEER.
EP1675937A4 (en) * 2003-10-08 2010-12-08 Belair Biotechnology Pty Ltd Beer additive and method
DK2382303T3 (en) 2009-01-23 2018-07-30 Univ Berlin Tech Process for making a beverage
EP4013843A1 (en) * 2019-08-16 2022-06-22 Heineken Supply Chain B.V. Production of an alcohol-free beverage

Family Cites Families (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1188291A (en) * 1966-08-10 1970-04-15 Jorgensen A Gearingsfysio Improvement of Beer Flavour
ATE36870T1 (en) * 1985-08-27 1988-09-15 Henninger Brau Ag PROCESS FOR MANUFACTURE OF NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES.

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2270525B (en) 1996-07-17
CA2077584A1 (en) 1994-03-05
CA2077584C (en) 1995-11-21
AU4614593A (en) 1994-03-10
GB9318263D0 (en) 1993-10-20
GB2270525A (en) 1994-03-16

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