Practical Enzymatic Brewing An intermediate exploration of Brewing - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Practical Enzymatic Brewing An intermediate exploration of Brewing - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Practical Enzymatic Brewing An intermediate exploration of Brewing Enzymes Presentation Summary This seminar is a companion to a previous presentation, Basic Enzymology for Brewing. This presentation is focused on: A review of the sources


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Practical Enzymatic Brewing

An intermediate exploration of Brewing Enzymes

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Presentation Summary

This seminar is a companion to a previous presentation, Basic Enzymology for

  • Brewing. This presentation is focused on:
  • A review of the sources and historic/typical roles of endogenous enzymes
  • An overview of exogenous enzymes available
  • How to most effectively use both types of enzymes in the brewing process
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Alan B. Windhausen

Head Brewer || Quality Trainer

Holidaily Brewing || Brewers Association

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Learning Objectives

  • Know the origins of both endogenous and exogenous enzymes
  • Be able to push endogenous enzymes and increase their effect
  • Have a greater understanding of sources and varieties of exogenous enzymes
  • Have an appreciation of the limitations of exogenous enzymes, and their

potential downsides

  • Gain a sense of new products made possible by smart enzyme usage
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Outline

Endogenous Enzymes in Beer (Review)

  • Origins, Malting

Exogenous Enzymes

  • Origins
  • Available Enzymes

Process Optimization and Other Enzyme Uses

  • Mash and Lauter
  • Adjuncts
  • Kettle
  • Fermentation
  • Filtration
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Endogenous Enzymes in Beer

Review with focus on optimization – for full examination of process, please watch Basic Enzymology for Brewing

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Malting

Consists of:

  • Steeping
  • Hydrating the grain, starts the

process of growth.

  • Germination
  • Endogenous enzymes break

down stored nutrients

  • And kilning
  • Halts modification, creates

flavor.

Modification of barley, two paths

Michael Lewis and Tom Young, Brewing (2nd edition), 2002)

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Germination

1 – The hydrated embryo eats sugars in its immediate vicinity. 2 – Gibberellins (hormones that start modification) are released from the Scutellum and 3 – Specific enzymes get released or produced to break down the endosperm.

Enzyme production during malting

Hans Sejr Olsen. Enzymes in brewing. Biokemisk Forening. 2008

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Break down proteins, the grain uses throughout the process for various purposes. Creates Free Amino Nitrogen, critical for yeast health.

The types of enzymes produced are: Proteases: Cellulose digesting enzymes: And Starch digesting enzymes:

Germination (cont’d)

Break down the walls that enclose the starch granules. Principal enzymes are β- glucanases (for β-glucans), and pentosanases (such as xylanases). (α- and β-amylase) – break down starches into sugars. Brewers need these enzymes to be created but to not break down the starches yet. Limit-dextrinase and other de- branching enzymes are also created. Check out the CBC 2020 presentation on Malt COA’s!

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Germination (cont’d)

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Germination (cont’d)

Solubilization:

  • Xylanase
  • Acetyl xylan esterase
  • Feruloyl esterase
  • Arabinofuranosidase
  • Carboxypeptidase

Hydrolysis (breakdown)

  • Endo- and Exoglucanases
  • Glucosidases
  • Xylosidase
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Germination (cont’d)

Protein matrix breakdown: (Proteases)

  • Endopeptidases
  • Exopeptidases
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Germination (cont’d)

Cell Wall breakdown during modification

Courtesy of Canadian Malting Barley Technical Centre

Barley modification by day

Gianinetti, Theory in Biosciences, 2008

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Germination (cont’d)

Limit Dextrinase:

  • Present and active in mash for only

short time:

  • An inhibitor is rapidly solubilized

into the mash. Adjuncts may increase the amount of limit dextrins (different starch ratios). Exogenously, pullulanases will serve this same function without inhibition.

Competitive inhibitor

Kevin Ahern & Indira Rajagopal, Biochemistry Free & Easy, 2019

Non-Competitive inhibitor

Kevin Ahern & Indira Rajagopal, Biochemistry Free & Easy, 2019

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Kilning

Goal is to suspend modification, leaving starches and amylases intact. Caramel and crystal malts are mini- mashes inside the kernel.

  • Sugars form, then are caramelized

Exogenous enzymes that break down sugars may impact fermentability of malts / adjuncts!

Munich 20L Malt vs Caramel 20L

David Richter, Briess Malt and Ingredients – blogpost, Jan. 2018

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Exogenous Enzymes

Overview of origins and available enzymes

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Exogenous Enzymes

Enzymes added to the brewing process. Sources:

  • Bacteria or fungi.
  • Yeast is common source.
  • Could be endogenous enzymes.
  • Could also be GMO (tailor-made

enzymes).

  • Heat-resistant fungi are popular.
  • Certain strains of E. coli are

commonly used as well. Historically:

  • α-amylase originally produced from

cattle and pigs.

  • Barley and malt are still used (β-

amylase, e.g.)

  • Fruit still provides commercial

proteases.

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Exogenous Enzymes (cont’d)

Partial list of enzymes available

From Biokemi, BioZoom, issue 522

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Exogenous Enzymes (cont’d) “There is a pervasive resistance of the brewers in North America to use enzymes. It is not the norm [unless] there is a special target not achievable by any other means.” “Enzymes are a sensible way to improve beer and to equalize differences from batch to batch. [However], when enzyme companies are saying, ‘Hey you can do things in a totally different way, you can use for example raw barley.’ Well you won’t get the same beer.”

  • Dr. Charlie Bamforth
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Exogenous Enzymes

Principal use of exogenous enzymes is in addressing fluctuations in ingredients.

  • Batch of malt has low FAN.
  • Variability in filtration times due to

malt variation.

  • Diacetyl rests and concentrations

vary with yeast However, if used on known brands, triangle test! Alternate use (and more common in US craft) is novel product design.

  • Brut IPA is prime example
  • Low-cal, low carb products
  • Extremely high / 100% adjunct

mashes

  • Faster production times
  • Unusual mash regimes
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Process Optimization and Other Enzyme Uses

Mash, Adjuncts, and Lauter

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Mashing

Goals of Mashing:

  • Solubilize the 15-25% of malt matter that is readily soluble.
  • Gelatinize starches and convert into sugars usable by yeast in desired ratio

for style and gravity.

  • Release and solubilize other desirable malt components (proteins, amino

acids, yeast nutrients, etc.)

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Mashing (cont’d)

Enzyme Temperature Range Denatures pH Range Function α-amylase

150-160 oF (66-71 oC) ~170 oF (77 oC) 5.3-5.7 (Ca2+ stabilized) Cuts larger starches randomly

β-amylase

130-150 oF (54-66 oC) ~160 oF (71 oC) 5.0-5.5 Breaks down starch chains, linearly, into maltose

Proteases (peptidase)

122-138 oF (50-59 oC) 113-128 oF (45-53 oC) ~155 oF (68 oC) ~145 oF (63 oC) 4.6-5.3 Break down proteins (increase FAN)

β-glucanase

  • et. al.

95-131 oF (35-55 oC) ~140 oF (60 oC) 4.5-5.5 Breaks down cell-wall materials

Limit-dextrinase

95-140 oF (35-60 oC) ~150 oF (65 oC) 5.0-5.8 Breaks down sugars left behind by amylases, can be inhibited

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Mashing (cont’d)

From Biokemi, BioZoom, issue 522

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Mashing (cont’d)

Rough enzyme ranges in Mash

John Palmer – How to Brew

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Mash - Attenuation Control

Starch-reducing enzymes

courtesy of Dupont, annotated by author

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Mash - Attenuation Control (cont’d)

Enzyme activity on starches

Kunze

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Mash - Attenuation Control (cont’d)

Brewer’s Window

Jake McWhirter – Missionary Brewer Blog

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Mash - Attenuation Control (cont’d)

Amylase optimizations / uses:

  • Exogenous α-amylase to mash at β-amylase optimum (~142oF, 62oC)
  • Adding α-amylase and fungal α-amylase to low DP malt / increase

fermentability

  • Adjunct additions to mash (~20% endo, up to 100% exo)
  • Reduce cost of running a cereal cooker / make kettle available as such

(malt liquor, anyone?)

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Mash - Attenuation Control (cont’d)

Brew Process

Courtesy of Yuengling & Son, Inc

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Mash – Attenuation (cont’d)

Amyloglucosidase (glucoamylase):

  • Creates glucose, not maltose.
  • Increases fermentability in standard

mash & Real Degree of Fermentation

  • Can create lower-cal / lower-carb

products Concern:

  • Stalled Fermentation
  • ‘Glucose suppression/repression’

Starch-reducing enzymes

courtesy of Dupont, annotated by author

“Giving yeast glucose before maltose is like giving a kid French fries – how on earth will you get it to eat the Brussel sprouts?” – Professor Michael Lewis

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Mash – Attenuation (cont’d)

Pullulanse (limit-dextrinase):

  • Cuts at branch points, reduces

unfermentable dextrins

  • Increases fermentablility (RDF above

88% w/ other exo.) If used without other exo. enzymes:

  • Increase in RDF, fermentable ratios

stay roughly the same!

  • No glucose suppression/repression!

Starch-reducing enzymes

courtesy of Dupont, annotated by author

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Mash Filtration – Cellulases

Enzyme Temperature Range Denatures pH Range Function Proteases (peptidase)

122-138 oF (50-59 oC) 113-128 oF (45-53 oC) ~155 oF (68 oC) ~145 oF (63 oC) 4.6-5.3 Break down proteins (increase FAN)

β-glucanase

  • et. al.

95-131 oF (35-55 oC) ~140 oF (60 oC) 4.5-5.5 Breaks down cell-wall materials

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Mash Filtration – Cellulases (cont’d)

Commercial enzymes might be marketed as:

  • β-glucanase (should be pure β-glucanase)
  • Xylanase (should be pure xylanase)
  • Pentosanases (often pure xylanase)
  • Cellulases (β-glucanase + xylanase, most likely)
  • Combination products (cellulases + protein/starch enzymes)
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Cellulases (cont’d)

Cell wall materials clog mashes and filters (downstream). Small variations in modification have

  • utsized impact!

β-glucanase:

  • Reduces variation (on larger scale,
  • ffsets own cost)
  • Aids in lauter and filtration, and

increase fermentability of adjuncts Xylanase:

  • Works in conjunction with β-

glucanase, has similar impact.

  • Can be used on own to aid

downstream filtration

  • Caution: can lead to 4-vinyl-guiacol.
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Mash Filtration – Cellulases (cont’d)

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Mash – Protein Optimization

Triple mash process

AEE Institute for Sustainable Technologies, technology wiki

Enzymes can break down the remaining cellular matrix to achieve:

  • Higher efficiency
  • Lower mash / wort viscosity
  • Reduce protein haze in the beer
  • Increase FAN

Proteases (peptidase)

122-138 oF (50-59 oC) 113-128 oF (45-53 oC) ~155 oF (68 oC) ~145 oF (63 oC)

β-glucanase

95-131 oF (35-55 oC) ~140 oF (60 oC)

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Mash – Protein Optimization

β-glucan Reducing Mash (poorly modified malt): 1: Thin Mash // 2: Thick mash (3/4) 3: Solubilase Rest // 4: Cold Water Addition

Kunze

Alternate β-glucan Reducing Mash

Biokemist

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Mash - Proteases and Glucanases Optimizations and Uses

Endogenous optimization (decoction, step, protein / glucancase rests) really not needed for typical North American Malt.

  • Can help when using adjuncts (allows use of raw barley, e.g.)
  • Lower temp cereal cooking (lower gelatinization temp)
  • Shorter / unstuck lauters (wheat / rye beers, oats)
  • Even-out down stream filter times
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Sparge / Boil

Typical sparge / final mash temps denature endogenous enzymes. Boil definitely denatures them all. No-boil brews: some enzymes could carry through to fermenter!

Enzyme Denatures α-amylase

~170 oF (77 oC)

β-amylase

~160 oF (71 oC)

Proteases (peptidase)

~155 oF (68 oC) ~145 oF (63 oC)

β-glucanase

  • et. al.

~140 oF (60 oC)

Limit-dextrinase

~150 oF (65 oC)

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Fermentation

Diacetyl (VDK’s):

  • Yeast creates VDK precursors during

amino acids production.

  • These autoconvert to diacetyl (2,3-

butanedione) and 2,3-pentanedione

  • utside the cell
  • Commercial α-acetolactate

decarboxylase prevents diacetyl and pentadione from forming.

  • Added during pitching, can effect

later yeast generations.

Diacetyl’s life cycle in yeast

Michael Lewis and Tom Young, Brewing (2nd edition), 2002)

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Fermentation (cont’d)

Hops contain a small amount of both amylases, as well as traces of limit- dextrinase and amyloglucosidase. High rates of dry-hopping in unfiltered beer provides yeast new sugars to re- ferment. Results: increased ABV, carb levels, and potentially more diacetyl. Check out the CBC 2020 presentation, and look for the new technical brief!

Excerpt from “The Brewer’s Guardian”

March 28, 1893, page 93

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Fermentation Flavor Uses

Hydrolysis of glycosidic bonds from hops

Lallemand, Best Practices: Biotransformation, 2017

Winemakers use a commercial α and β- glycosidase, “to breakdown glycosylated aroma precursors.” Known to impact hop creep (endo.) Yeast makers market β-glycosidase activity. More research needed, but likely the cause of ‘juicy’ mid-ferm hop flavors (biotransformation)!

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Fermentation (cont’d)

Chill-haze reduction (proteases / peptidases): Papain & Bromelain, early exo. enzymes

  • Foam degradation issue, requires

pasteurization. Proline-specific endo-peptidases cut specific regions.

  • ‘Targeted,’ reduced impact of head

retention.

Seibert model for haze formation

Lewis and Bamforth, Essays in Brewing Science, 2006

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Fermentation (cont’d)

“Gluten-reduced beer” using endopeptidases:

  • Beer claiming ‘gluten-reduced’ or ‘gluten-removed’ needs TTB

warning: “Product fermented from grains containing gluten and [processed or treated or crafted] to remove gluten. The gluten content of this product cannot be verified, and this product may contain gluten.”

  • Gluten is not being removed.
  • ‘Gluten’ over different 300 proteins, not all are effected.
  • Gluten reactions tend to worsen over time for people.
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Fermentation (cont’d)

“Gluten-reduced beer” using endopeptidases (cont’d):

  • ‘Gluten-reduced’ beers under review by the FDA and TTB.
  • Dr. Michelle Colgrave: passes R5-ELISA assay, but still dangerous for
  • patients. BA Seminar - Against the Traditional Grain-Gluten-Free-Beer
  • R5 ELISA assay (accepted test by TTB) does not work on finished beer.
  • The TTB does not allow for beer to be tested
  • You cannot test beer
  • Best practice – be fully upfront with customers about the beer, use for

clarifying purposes (not GR)

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Parting Possibilities

All – reduce variability in ingredients, use in combinations for adjuncts Starch degradation enzymes: Brut IPAs:

  • Use in mash, or in fermenter (post

consumption of maltose).

  • Known process, transferrable to other

styles? Similarly, starch reduction creates lower-carb and calorie beers. Cellulases:

  • Reduce filtration issues and time, in

mash and downstream

  • Aid in adjunct breakdown

Proteases:

  • Clearer beer!

Other enzyme possibilities:

  • β-glycosidase with cooler whirlpool

addition? In fermenter pre-dry hop? Look to the macro brewers and wineries for new ideas!

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Questions? (ask below to be included in the recording)

“Think broadly and widely when problem solving. Throw the entire breadth of knowledge up on the board, all of Brewing.”

  • Professor Michael Lewis

Email: awindhausen@holidailybrewing.com