IES69367B2 - A brewing process - Google Patents

A brewing process

Info

Publication number
IES69367B2
IES69367B2 IES960361A IES69367B2 IE S69367 B2 IES69367 B2 IE S69367B2 IE S960361 A IES960361 A IE S960361A IE S69367 B2 IES69367 B2 IE S69367B2
Authority
IE
Ireland
Prior art keywords
stout
bright
wort
plate filter
buffer tank
Prior art date
Application number
Inventor
Johns Colin
Original Assignee
Valdosa Limited
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 Valdosa Limited filed Critical Valdosa Limited
Priority to IES960361 priority Critical patent/IES69367B2/en
Publication of IES960361A2 publication Critical patent/IES960361A2/en
Publication of IES69367B2 publication Critical patent/IES69367B2/en

Links

Abstract

Malt and roasted barley are mixed with hot water in a mash tun. The brew is tranferred to a lauter tun to separate the sweet wort which is boiled and hops are added. The sweet wort is cooled and then fermented with yeast to form stout. A plate filter 1 is used to substantially clarify the stout. The flow of beer from a storage vessel 2 is monitored by a flowmeter 3 and the oxygen content from a balance tank 5 to the filter 1 and bright diluted beer from the filter 1 is collected in a buffer vessel 7. A control valve 10 with a feedback control loop is used to control the flow of bright stout from the vessel 7 .

Description

The invention relates to a stout brewing process.
There are considerable technical difficulties in producing high quality stout having desired properties. A complex series of variables are involved in the production process and it is difficult to reproduce the production process from one production site to another.
One particular area of difficulty is in removing unwanted particulates from the stout. It is known to use centrifuges for this purpose. However, the capacity of such centrifuges is limited and it is often difficult to optimise the operation of the centrifuges.
The invention is therefore directed towards providing an improved process for producing stout which will overcome at least some of these difficulties.
According to the invention, there is provided a stout brewing process comprising the steps ofspreparing malt by cleaning, weighing, and milling malt; preparing roasted barley by cleaning, weighing and 20 milling roasted barley; mixing the prepared malt, the prepared roasted barley and hot water in a mash tun to prepare a brew; preparing sweet wort by agitating the brew and allowing starch in the brew to convert to sugar by enzymatic activity; SOIO si - 2 separating spent grains of malt and roasted barley from the sweet wort; & boiling the sweet wort; adding hops to the boiling sweet wort to prepare 5 hopped wort; removing hop residues from the hopped wort; cooling the hopped wort; adding yeast and sterile air to the hopped wort and allowing the mixture thus formed to ferment to produce stout; blending and storing the stout; monitoring the oxygen content of the stout; applying a precoat material to a plate filter; passing the stout through the precoated plate filter 15 to substantially clarify the stout by removing particulates from the stout and forming bright diluted stout; controlling the carbon dioxide content of the stout; controlling the nitrogen content of the stout; and tb storing the stout.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the inventiont the process includes the step of adding bodyfeed material to the stout in-line upstream of the precoated plate filter.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the process includes the steps of:delivering the bright filtered stout into a bright stout buffer tank prior to delivery to a main bright stout storage tank; and controlling the level of bright stout in the buffer tank to maintain a substantially constant pressure drop across the plate filter.
In this case j. preferably the level of bright stout in the buffer tank is controlled by reducing the rate of flow of bright stout from the buffer tank if the level of bright stout drops below a preset level.
Preferablyf the storage stout is delivered into an unfiltered stout buffer tank upstream of the plate filter. In this caseP preferably the process includes the step of controlling the level of unfiltered stout in the buffer tank to maintain a substantially constant pressure drop across the filter.
In a preferred arrangement, the amount of oxygen in the stout is monitored both upstream and downstream of the plate filter.
Preferably, the process includes the step of monitoring the alcohol content of the filtered bright stout and injecting dilution water into the bright stout as required to achieve a desired alcohol content.
The invention will be more clearly understood from the following description thereof,, given by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:Fig, 1 is a schematic block diagram of the process of the invention; and Fig. 2 is a schematic flow diagram illustrating filtration and associated steps in the process of the invention.
Referring to the drawings, and initially to Fig. 1,, there is illustrated a brewing process for stout according to the invention. In the brewing process, malt and roasted barley are separately stored, in silos and are then cleaned and subsequently weighed prior to milling. The malt and roasted barley are then mixed with hot water in a mash tun. The brew is transferred to a lauter tun to separate the sweet wort. Spent grains of malt and roasted barley are then removed. The sweet wort is then pumped to a wort copper where it is boiled and hops are added. The hopped wort is then pumped to a whirlpool where hop residues are drained away. At this stage, the sweet wort is still hot and it is then pumped to a heat exchanger where it is cooled. The cooled sweet wort is then pumped to a fermentation vessel where yeast and sterile air are added and it is allowed to ferment to form stout. The stout is then blended and stored in a storage tank to allow it to mature.
In the process of the invention, the stout is clarified as will be described in more detail below. The carbon dioxide and nitrogen levels in the stout are controlled and the stout is then stored, ready for delivery into barrels, as required.
In the process of the invention^ Murphy's Irish Stout Yeast having the following characteristics is added to the cooled sweet wort in the fermentation vessel.
Microbiological plate characteristics - No growth on Wort Agar @ 37°C,. SDA+t, Lvs and Cu. No Melibiase activity. No killer yeast activity. No Phenolic flavour production. Fermentation - Has some characteristics of characteristics both top and bottom fermenting yeasts. After two days fermentation it floats on the liquid surface and at the end of the fermentation it settles rapidly. Highly hydrophobic and fiocculent ( ABS/min 0.8 - 1.0). Dextrin degradation - No activity. Aroma profile - Low SO2 production. Slightly low ester production. *** Slightly high production of higher alcohols. No 4 - VG or styrene production.
Giant colony morphology 95% dark green malt colony type with pseudohyphale. % small white edged/green centre colony type.
Referring to Fig. 2, in the process of the invention a plate filter 1 is used to substantially clarify the stout t by removing particulates from the stout and forming bright diluted stout.
Stout to be clarified is stored in a storage beer vessel 2. The flow of beer from the vessel 2 is monitored by a flowmeter 3 and the oxygen content of the beer is monitored by an oxygen analyser 4. The beer is delivered into a balance tank 5 which is held at a pressure of approximately 0.7 bar. The level of unfiltered stout in the balance tank 5 is controlled to maintain a substantially constant pressure drop across the filter 1.
Bright diluted beer from the plate filter 1 is collected in a buffer vessel 7, held at approximately 0.5 bar pressure. The oxygen content of the bright beer delivered into the buffer vessel 7 is monitored by a second oxygen analyser 8. The level of bright stout in the buffer tank is controlled to maintain a substantially constant pressure drop across the plate filter 1 and hence optimise the operation of the filter 1. The level of bright stout in the buffer tank is controlled by reducing the rate of flow of bright stout from the buffer vessel 7 if the level of bright stout drops below a preset level. A control valve 10 with a feedback control loop to a level detector is used to control the flow of bright stout from the buffer vessel 7.
The rate of flow of bright stout from the buffer vessel 7 is monitored by a flowmeter 11. The alcohol content of the stout is also monitored by an alcohol analyser 12. If the amount of alcohol present in the bright stout is above a predetermined value, a control valve 13 on a dilution water flow line 14 is activated. The flow of dilution water is monitored by a further flow meter 15.
In this way, the amount of dilution water added is closely controlled to achieve the desired alcohol content in the bright stout. The bright stout having, if necessary, been diluted with water to achieve a uniform desired alcohol content is delivered into a storage vessel 18 for further processing.
The filter plates of the plate filter 1 are first coated by applying a precoat material to the filter plates from a make-up vessel 20 through a precoat delivery line 21.
Bodyfeed material is added to the stout in-line upstream of the precoated plate filter 1 through a body feed delivery line 22.
EXAMPLE The stout was filtered using a Z.HF/Z kieselguhr horizontal plate filter available from Schenk Fiterbaum GmbH of Germany. The filter had the following features:filter elements: approx. 46mz spacing between elements: 35 mm sludge volumes 1,500 litres precoat materials approx 45.4 Kg of Celite 5C available from Celite Corporation Bodyfeed added to stout approx. 45.4 Kg of Celite Standard SUPERCSL mixed with approx. 22.7 Kg of Celite 577, both available from Celite Corporation.
Dilution Targets 9. 4°P TSume (Mliiffis) Pirefiiteir Piressiare (Bar) Post FMtes· Row ll&ftte OxygCSS • Costeiat of DBnatSom Ws (]3pfe) AlleoSuoll LeveS iter (% veil) Yo&a'I Filtered! (feeiaSfesres) PressEiF® (Bar) ftroisgi Sea Ssil/taf 0 3.0 0.9 430.6 21 4.0 - 3 2.9 0.7 438.2 22 4.1 88.0 12 3.2 0.9 360.0 23 4.0 173.4 21 3.1 0.7 362.1 23 4.1 - 26 3.2 0.8 358.5 25 4.0 240.5 Chase Water Recirculation Time: 34 minutes Total Filtration Times 29 minutes Run Out Times 45 minutes Final Water Volumes 57.3 HL's Final Stout Volumes 276.3 HL's Total Volume to Bright Stout Tanks 333.6 HL's The bright stout thus produced had excellent properties of uniform alcohol content, colour, pH, dissolved C0Zi? visual clarity, yeast content, taste and aroma.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments hereinbefore described which may be varied in detail.

Claims (5)

1. A stout brewing process comprising the steps ofspreparing malt by cleaning, weighing, and milling malt; preparing roasted barley by cleaning, weighing and milling roasted barley; mixing the prepared malt, the prepared roasted barley and hot water in a mash tun to prepare a brew; preparing sweet wort by agitating the brew and allowing starch in the brew to convert to sugar by enzymatic activity; separating spent grains of malt and roasted barley from the sweet wort; boiling the sweet wort; adding hops to the boiling sweet wort to prepare hopped wort; removing hop residues from the hopped wort; cooling the hopped wort; adding yeast and sterile air to the hopped wort and allowing the mixture thus formed to ferment to produce stout; blending and storing the stout; monitoring the oxygen content of the stout; ; applying a precoat material to a plate filter; t passing the stout through the precoated plate filter to substantially clarify the stout by removing particulates from the stout and forming bright diluted stout; controlling the carbon dioxide content of the stout; controlling the nitrogen content of the stout; and storing the stout.
2. A process as claimed in claim 1 including the step of adding bodyfeed material to the stout in-line upstream of the precoated plate filter.
3. A process as claimed in claim 1 or 2 including the steps of.delivering the bright filtered stout into a bright stout buffer tank prior to delivery to a main bright stout storage tank; and controlling the level of bright stout in the buffer tank to maintain a substantially constant pressure drop across the plate filter, preferably the level of bright stout in the buffer tank is controlled by reducing the rate of flow of bright stout from the buffer tank if the level of bright stout drops below a preset level, preferably the storage stout is delivered into an unfiltered stout buffer tank upstream of the plate filter, preferably the process includes the step of controlling the level of unfiltered stout in the buffer tank to maintain 5 a substantially constant pressure drop across the filter.
4. A process as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the amount of oxygen in the stout is monitored both upstream and downstream of the plate filter, 10 preferably the process includes the step of monitoring the alcohol content of the filtered bright stout and injecting dilution water into the bright stout as required to achieve a desired alcohol content, preferably the yeast added to the hopped 15 wort has the characteristics set out in Table 1 herein.
5. Stout whenever produced by a process as claimed in any preceding claim.
IES960361 1996-05-23 1996-05-23 A brewing process IES69367B2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IES960361 IES69367B2 (en) 1996-05-23 1996-05-23 A brewing process

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IES960361 IES69367B2 (en) 1996-05-23 1996-05-23 A brewing process

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
IES960361A2 IES960361A2 (en) 1996-09-04
IES69367B2 true IES69367B2 (en) 1996-09-04

Family

ID=11041168

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
IES960361 IES69367B2 (en) 1996-05-23 1996-05-23 A brewing process

Country Status (1)

Country Link
IE (1) IES69367B2 (en)

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
IES960361A2 (en) 1996-09-04

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
RU2162484C1 (en) Method of kvass production
CA2119901C (en) Production of fermented malt beverages
CN113755261A (en) Passion fruit flavored ale beer brewing method
MX2008014715A (en) A method of producing a mash extract and an apparatus for carrying out such method.
US4915959A (en) Method for the continuous maturation of fermented beer
CN110885727A (en) Pineapple whisky and preparation method thereof
US3425839A (en) Continuous beer making process wherein the wort and yeast are separated by a porous partition
EP0914413B1 (en) A brewing process
CA2221921A1 (en) Alcoholic aqueous beverage and a method for its production
Munroe Fermentation
IES69367B2 (en) A brewing process
GB2420349A (en) Production of high strength beer with winey beery character
CN101454436B (en) Method of fermenting wort
JPH0584060A (en) Production of alcoholic drink
WO2018021921A1 (en) Method of producing beer from vetch
WO2020165929A1 (en) Method to produce a low alcohol content drink and corresponding apparatus
US20060210667A1 (en) High strength beer having winey beery character
NZ286665A (en) Stout brewing process
WO2008083718A1 (en) Beverage kit and method for producing a non-fermented malt beverage
AU2012201464B2 (en) A Process for the Preparation of Beer Having High Alcohol Strength with Winey Beery Character
RU2305702C1 (en) Beer-based alcoholic beverage
JPH1057044A (en) Production of sparkling beer
Taylor Aging, Dilution, and Filtration
GB2391553A (en) A stout brewing process
RU2173700C2 (en) Dark beer production process

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
MK9A Patent expired