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How Do You Make Beer?
Author  alexander-beer

How Do You Make Beer?

 

Brewing beer is a natural process, and indeed its basic ingredients haven’t changed for thousands of years. The process itself developed over the years from the aspects of the equipment, raw material quality, and accuracy of the recipes.
You make quality beer from only four ingredients: water, malt, hops, and yeast.
From each of the ingredients (including water) there is a wide variety of types. What determines the beer’s style, taste, and smell are the type of each of the ingredients, their quantity, and the different process used.

The Four Ingredients

Water

Water is the base. There are many kinds of water. They differ by the type of minerals and their concentration. Over the years, people all over the world developed different types of beer, according to the type of local water. For example, the Pilsner was born and developed in the Czech Republic based on very soft water and almost lacking in minerals. In comparison, the British Pale Ale developed in the Burton upon Trent in Britain, where the water is abundant in minerals and rich in sulfur.
The type of minerals and their concentration in water influences the beer’s final taste.

Hops

Hops are the female flowerclusters (commonly called cones), of a vine. That grows in the cold areas of Europe and North America. Hops are used in brewing for many years balancing the sweetness of the malt with bitterness, contributing a variety of desirable flavors and aromas, and having anantibiotic effect that favors the activity ofbrewer’s yeast over less desirable microorganisms
The hops variety, stage in which they’re added, and quantity – influence the beer’s bitterness, taste, and aroma.

Malt

Malt for beer is like grapes for wine. Malt is the source of the sugar that ferments and turns into alcohol. Malt is actually different cereal seeds (mainly barley and wheat) that went through partial germination (seeds that were wetted, sprouted, and dried midway through the drying process). The partial sprouting creates natural enzymes that break the starch into sugars that is ready to ferment. Most of the world’s malt is barley, but there are beers that use other cereals like wheat. There are other sources of sugar in the world like rice and corn.
The type of malt and level of roasting influences both the taste and color of the beer.

Yeast

Yeast is a single-cell micro-organism whose existence was discovered only 150 years ago by Louis Pasteur. The yeast converts fermentable sugars into alcohol, carbon dioxide, and a series of flavors and aromas. There are many types of yeast. Man has been using yeast for thousands of years for baking and brewing. In beer we use brewing yeast. The two important yeast families are the Ale and the Lager. The Ale family ferments at a warmer temperature, and produce beer with more flavors and aromas. The Lager family ferments at a colder temperature and make more subtle types of beer.
Different types of yeast produce completely different types of beer from the same raw materials.

The Production Process

1. Mashing

Mashing is the process of combining a mix of milled grain (typically malted barley or wheat), known as the “grain bill”, and water, known as “liquor”, and heating this mixture. Mashing allows the enzymes in the malt to break down the starch in the grain into sugars in a natural process to create a malty liquid called wort. By controlling the process – temperature, timing, and PH, you can control the type of sugars created, the alcohol level, residual sweetness level, and how much body the beer will have.

2. Lautering

We Transfer the sweet mixture called wort into a tank called a Lauter Tun. This is actually a giant sieve in which the separation of the extracted wort occurs. In most breweries, the malt mixture goes through a process of spraying with hot water to bring out as much of the sugars and flavors as possible. The outputs from this process are the clear Wort, and spent grains that are removed for use by cattle farms as food.

3. Boiling

The Wort is transferred into a boiling tank called the Kettle. You add the hops to the liquid in this stage. The boiling removes impurities, conceals unnecessary tastes, and brings out the hops. The boiling length and timing of adding the hops greatly influence the outcome. After boiling, you again separate the solids from the liquids (now, they are mainly hops) and quickly cool the liquid to the fermenting temperature.

4. Fermentation

After boiling, you place the chilled Wort with the yeast into the fermenting tanks. Here, the yeast starts its work and performs its wonders – transforming the sugars into alcohol, carbon dioxide, and a host of flavours and aromas. The process differs in its length and temperature in which it occurs, according to the type of yeast you use. Ale yeast prefers temperatures of 16-25 degrees Celsius. Lager yeast prefers temperatures of 8-14 degrees Celsius.

5. Maturing, Lagering

After primary fermentation, the beer goes through a maturation period at a low temperature. At this stage, the beer stabilizes, balances, and becomes rounded. The maturation takes place in chilled tanks. It lasts several weeks, according to the type of beer you’re making.

6. Bottling

The final step in preparing beer is the packaging. You need to package the beer in such a way that gets it to the consumer fresh and tasty – the same way it leaves the maturation tank. This is a big challenge, and one of the differences between quality beer and mass-produced beer. You can package in bottles, cans, and barrels. For all types of packages, it’s important to make sure the container is absolutely clean, and without oxygen that can damage the beer.

7. Preserving and Carbonation Process

Mass-produced beers are intended for a long shelf life, and at changing temperatures. Therefore, most go through preserving and stabilization processes. The preservation is divided between pasteurization and special filtering. Also, most go through a carbonization process to protect the bottle’s carbonization.

 

More Articles of Beer
Beer and Health
Beer and HealthBeer has been studied a lot in recent years. All the findings show that if you drink in moderation, beer is a healthy product that only contributes to our health and certainly doesn’t do damage. Beer in ModerationFirst, it’s important to note that to profit from beer’s health advantages, and not to damage the body, you need to drink in moderation. What’s “in moderation”? According to studies published recently, as long as you don’t exceed two bottles per day, and as long as you exercise in parallel, the body only profits from drinking beer.Beer and Gaining WeightThere is no fat in beer. The amount of carbohydrates is small: only 2.6 grams per 100 ml of beverage.Studies prove that this is a myth – beer doesn’t cause you to gain weight.A French study published in May 2005, checked the connection between the level of being overweight, the relationship between measurement of the hips (the potbelly), and drinking different types of alcoholic beverages. The study checked 1,481 women and 1,210 men between the ages of 35-60. The results showed no connection between these factors and beer drinking.Another study published in 2004, checked over eight years, the connection between drinking alcohol and weight gain in women. The study observed 50,000 women between the ages of 27-44. It found that moderate drinking did not at all cause weight gain.Additional studies confirm that moderate beer consumption does not influence weight or body circumference gain.Beer and the HeartA major study published in the American Heart Association journal – “Circulation”, checked the general influence of drinking beer in relation to the risk of heart and blood vessel diseases. The study surveyed 15 studies containing more than 200,000 participants. From these studies’ summaries, it was found that the risk of heart and blood vessel diseases decreased by 75% among beer drinkers, in comparison with non-drinkers. The summary of these studies’ results indicates clearly, that drinking beer in moderation reduces the risk of heart and blood vessel diseases.Beer and Good CholesterolA reasonable amount of alcohol raises the level of HDL. This “good” cholesterol prevents fat to accumulate on the blood vessels’ walls.Beer and DiabetesIt also turns out that in an especially wide study published in the Diabetologia scientific journal that observed 106,690 young women over a ten-year period. It determined that drinking beer in moderation protects from diabetes as it reduces the sensitivity to insulin. The researchers determined that daily consumption of 30 grams of alcohol has the highest influence in protecting against diabetes.Beer and the Immune SystemAnother study that was recently published in the scientific journal for nutrition and metabolism – “Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism” is the first clinical study of its kind. It checked the influence of drinking regular beer in moderation on the body’s immune system in a population of 57 healthy men and women. The researchers’ conclusion was that regularly drinking beer in moderation helps strengthen immune system, especially in women. It can also explain beer’s influence in its fight against the body’s different diseases and its prevention of them.Beer and VitaminsBeer contains many vitamins and minerals. Vitamins that come from the malt are from the 6B1, 2B, B, and H groups. These nourish the nervous system, enable high concentration levels, help to build red blood cells, improve the heart’s performance, and stimulate the digestive mechanism. In addition, beer contains phosphorus that aids digestion and magnesium that strengthens the heart’s muscles and more. 
Quality Beer
Quality BeerIn all areas of food, there are different levels of quality. This is also true with beer. Most beer we see daily is made by large manufacturers. The line that guides these manufacturers in producing beer is getting production cost as low as possible, shelf life as long as possible, and matching the tastes of the most people. As a result, most beer in the world is similar, “flat” in tastes and aromas. It goes through preservation processes such as pasteurization and filtering that lengthens its shelf life but harms its taste. This is the basic beer, whose place is important. We all grew up with it.Into this world, over the past few years, hundreds of craft breweries sprouted, who made it their goal to make beer that is tasty and enjoyable. Beer rich in flavour and aroma. In the US it’s called Craft Beer and in Europe, Real Ale. Quality beer is made with a passionfor flavour, aromas, and complexity. Therefore, there are different beers for different tastes. The beer is made using excellent ingredients, and therefore, more expensive, while doing away harmful pasteurization and filtering. Therefore, the shelf life is shorter.Alexander Beer carries out the traditions of the European and US craft breweries. We also brew beer from natural ingredients only, from the highest quality in existence – without pasteurization and without filtering. To reach the maximum freshness, we refrigerate the beer during its entire life – from the fermentation tank, through the storage rooms at the brewery, through our distribution vans, and up till your bar, restaurant, or home.
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