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Production and Use of Dried Beer Yeast

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Presentation on theme: "Production and Use of Dried Beer Yeast"— Presentation transcript:

1 Production and Use of Dried Beer Yeast

2 Lallemand’s core activity
Development, production and marketing of… Yeast Bacteria …and their derivatives

3 Yeast and Bacteria Applications
Bread & Baked Goods Beer Animal Nutrition & Health Wine Human Nutrition & Health Distilled Spirits & Fuel Ethanol Plant Care Savoury & Bio Nutrients

4 Brewer’s ADY Available in different package sizes 500g vacuum pack
11g vacuum sachets

5 Yeast Culture Collection
Short term storage Agar slants Long term storage Liquid nitrogen -196°C Freezer -80°C The integrity and characteristics of the yeast remain intact

6 Dried Beer Yeast Production
Molasses, Water, Salt, Acids, Trace Elements, Vitamins Molasses, Water, Salt, Acids, Trace Elements, Vitamins Culture Media Molasse, Water Nutrients Washing Water -1ºC – 7ºC Lab Cultures 3 Steps Pre Culture 2 Steps Seed Yeast Fermentation Separation Seed Yeast Receiver Commercial Fermentation Washing Water -1 ºC – 7 ºC Commercial Yeast Receiver Separation

7 Yeast Propagation Batch propagation Fed Batch
All nutrients are in fermenter up front Alcohol and little yeast is produced Fed Batch Carbohydrates and nitrogen are added at a certain flow rates Aerobic propagation => Alcohol decreases, yeast production

8 Main Goals of Propagation
Biomass Production Aerobic growth feeding & aeration Yeast conditioning for drying Protein content feeding rate Matured cells feeding rate Trehalose enrichment stress Unsaturated fatty acids aeration Sterols (Ergosterol) aeration

9 Dried Beer Yeast Production
Dryer RVF Extruder -1 ºC – 7 ºC Extrusion Drying Screening Vacuum Packaging Emulsifier QC NaCl Shipping Filtration (RVF) Commercial Yeast Receiver

10 Quality Control Viability (Methylene blue, YPD)
Vitality (Clinitest, Ankom-System) Wild Yeast (Lysine, LWYM, LCSM) Bacteria (PCA, MRS, UBA, SDA) Petite mutants (TTC) Beer fermentation DNA fingerprinting

11 Typical Analysis Dry weight: 93-95% Viability:  5 x 109 / gram
Wild yeast: <1 per 1 million yeast cells Bacteria: <1 per 1 million yeast cells Recommended pitching rate: 100g – 200g per hl

12 Rehydration Step 1 (Ale Yeast)
Sprinkle the yeast on the surface of ten (10) times its weight clean, sterilized (boiled) tap water at 30 – 35 C DO NOT STIR !!! Leave for 15 Min. undisturbed at 30 – 35 C Foam or no foam is no indication of vitality

13 Rehydration Step 2 (Ale Yeast)
After 15 Min. stir gently until all yeast is suspended Leave undisturbed for another 5 Min. Attemperate in steps (5 min) of 10 Celsius degree to the temperature of the wort by mixing aliquots of wort

14 Rehydration Step 3 (Ale Yeast)
After attemperation inoculate without delay Pitching rate: 1 g/L Aeration of wort is not necessary

15 Bottle conditioning

16 Why Bottle Conditioned?
Longer shelf-life Complexity of flavors Crafty aspect Fresh flavor

17 How to Bottle Condition?
Add fermentable sugars to green beer Bottle beer Production of CO2 under pressure Parameters to consider: Yeast dosage Priming sugar Temperature

18 Yeast Sources Yeast carried over from primary fermentation
Fermenting wort (Krausen) Cropped yeast slurry added post filtration Revitalize cropped yeast Propagated yeast added post filtration Dry yeast added post filtration or without filtration

19 Bottle conditioning The ideal yeast Alcohol tolerant Stress resistant
CO2 production Firm sediment Adequate flavour profile Reproducibility Easy dosage Active Strain Dry Yeast Advantage!

20 Advantages of Using Dry Yeast
Flexibility – always available Easy shipping and storage Consistent cell count for easy dosage Cells rich in sterols and unsaturated fatty acid – ready to divide Selected strains

21 How to Use Dry Yeast for Bottle Conditioning?
Weight the right amount (cell number per g known) Rehydration In water In beer In priming solution Pitching Mixing Bottling

22 Priming Sugars Glucose/dextrose Sucrose Wort

23 This Study Yeast (1g per L ≈ 5 x 106/ml) Beer Bottle conditioning
Nottingham ale yeast, neutral flocculent Windsor ale yeast, fruity medium flocculent BRY-97 ale yeast, neutral flocculent CBC-1 selected yeast, neutral flocculent Munich wheat beer yeast low flocculent Beer Wheat beer 5% ABV Bock beer 9% ABV Priming Glucose (10g per L) Wort 12°P (100mL per L) Bottle conditioning 1 week at 19 ºC 3 weeks at 11 ºC

24 Tasting Results Wheat Beer

25 Tasting Results Bock Beer

26 Bottle conditioning – Wheat Beer residual sugar analysis
10 g/L Glucose 100 ml wort/L

27 Bottle conditioning – Bock Beer residual sugar analysis
10 g/L Glucose 100 ml wort/L

28 Bottle conditioning flavour analysis

29 Bottle conditioning flavour analysis

30 Wheat Beer and Glucose Addition Post Conditioning
Gr. beer Munich Windsor Nottingham BRY-97 CBC1 Apparent attenuation [%] 83 87 86 Real attenuation [%] 68 71 70 Alcohol [Vol. %] 5.42 6.24 6.18 6.20 6.04 6.11 CiS [Mio/ml] 5.6 1.9 0.03 0.06 0.1 Total cells [Mio/ml] - 30.4 42.8 9.4 12.3 31.7 Viable cells [%] 81.4 75.7 81.3 74.5 71.9 x3

31 Wheat Beer and Wort Addition Post Conditioning
Gr. beer Munich Windsor Nottingham BRY-97 CBC1 Apparent attenuation [%] 83 84 Real attenuation [%] 68 Alcohol [Vol. %] 5.42 5.58 5.61 5.27 5.6 CiS [Mio/ml] 0.5 Total cells [Mio/ml] - 10.9 17.7 9.2 11.1 14.2 Viable cells [%] 87 81.4 82.1 80.4 84.3

32 Bock Beer and Glucose Addition Post Conditioning
Gr. beer Munich Windsor Nottingham BRY-97 CBC1 Apparent attenuation [%] 88 89 Real attenuation [%] 72 73 Alcohol [Vol. %] 8.93 9.51 9.57 9.60 9.55 CiS [Mio/ml] 19 4.7 0.6 2.8 17 Total cells [Mio/ml] - 65 70 68 49 75 Viable cells [%] 39.0 12.5 10.3 24.7 21.6 9.9 x3

33 Bock Beer and Wort Addition Post Conditioning
Gr. beer Munich Windsor Nottingham BRY-97 CBC1 Apparent attenuation [%] 88 87 Real attenuation [%] 72 71 Alcohol [Vol. %] 8.93 8.61 8.62 8.58 8.67 8.78 CiS [Mio/ml] 19 0.5 0.9 1.5 7.7 1.3 Total cells [Mio/ml] - 75 59 58 52 56 Viable cells [%] 39.0 10.8 14.4 31.5 30.9 14.9 x2

34 Summary Bottle conditioned beers scored higher
Using wort for priming is more stressful for the yeast – less cell division and no production of alcohol Bottle conditioning of high alcohol beers is more stressful for the yeast – less cell division, lower viability and less settling High alcohol beers scored higher with glucose as a priming agent More residual sugars in high alcohol beers and even more when wort is used

35 How to Pick the Right Yeast?
Consider the type of beer to bottle condition Consider the type of priming to be used BRY-97 displayed signs of stress under all conditions Tasting scores for Nottingham were worse after conditioning The use of Munich, Windsor and CBC-1 resulted in the highest tasting scores

36 TUM Munchen – Weihenstephan
Acknowledgments TUM Munchen – Weihenstephan Andreas Marshall Hubertus Schneiderbanger Josef Englmann Sylvie Van Zandycke


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