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Brewing Of Beer
Almost all beer contains only four ingredients:
barley, water, hops, and yeast.
Different styles of beer are created by variations in the brewing process,
which consists of four stages.
The
first ingredient to come into play is barley, which is grain (or in other
words, a seed). The seeds are soaked and allowed to begin their development
into plants. Enzymes are released that will break down the proteins and
starches in each grain into simple sugars meant to nourish the baby plant.
However, once this process has begun, the barley is cooked in a kiln,
arresting the growth process while the enzymes are at their peak of production.
This is called malting.
In the mashing stage, the grain is actually transformed into sugar. The
grains are crushed and then soaked in water. Proteins are broken down;
these will eventually give the beer its body. Starches are broken down
into simple sugars that will nourish the yeast. Complex sugars remain
to give the beer its malty taste. The mash is heated and strained to yield
a substance called wort.
Next, the wort is brought to a boil and the flowers of the female hop
plant are added. Bitter resins and aromatic hop oils are released.
The variety of hop, the amount added, and the point or
points in the boil at which they are added all contribute to the flavour
of the beer. They add bitterness when added early to the boil, flavor
if added in the middle, and aroma when added at the end. Then the beer
is cooled and yeast is added and allowed to consume most or all of the
sugars in the wort. This is the fermentation process, in which alcohol
is produced. The beer is separated from the yeast (racked) and then aged
and carbonated by conducting a second fermentation in a closed container,
or by adding carbon dioxide artificially.
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Gorse Cottage, Craig
Lane, Upper Cwmbran, Cwmbran, Torfaen, South Wales, NP44 5AS
Tel: +44(0)1633 485233, Mobile: +44(0)7788 100943, Fax: +44(0)1633 485233
email the brewery: Cwmbran
Brewery
Webmasters:
Rowena Kitson & Mark
Jayne
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