Gas Chromatography to "fingerprint" Beer - C&EN Global Enterprise

Nov 6, 2010 - Gas Chromatography to "fingerprint" Beer. Chem. Eng. News , 1959, 37 ... During fermentation, low levels of isoamyl alcohol show ... Vie...
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and distilled to concentrate volatiles to a measurable level. The sample is theii chromatographed. First tests are made on wort (or m a s h ) . This is the liquor resulting from heating a malt and water mixture. Wort goes through several heating stages, and a sample is taken at each. Chromatographic spectra of these wort samples show two peaks. Both represent volatile browning reaction components. The smaller pe.ik is acetone, the larger peak (although unidentified) is probably a mixture of several classes of compounds. Current experiments are aimed at identifying these and other volatiles which contribute to flavor and aroma. Height of the browning peak varies from batch to batch, even during the different stages in wort cooking. When the wort is boiled toward the end of the operation, the peak rises rapidly. T h e rise is probably from aldehydes and other volatiles liberated during melanoidin and caramelization reactions. During fermentation, low levels of isoamyl alcohol show up dtiring the first day (compared to detection only after five days by other t e c h n i q u e s ) . On the second day, ethyl acetate and D-amyl alcohol show up, while isoamyl alcohol increases. Amyl acetate starts to appear on the third day. By the fifth day, all components are at their maximum. Throughout the fermentation, ethyl alcohol obscures the browning reaction peak so evident during wort heating. And the acetone peak is hidden by an unidentified transient peak in earlier stages of fermentation. Xo two brands of beer check out exactly alike. For example, 29 beer samples show that ethyl acetate ranges from 14.5 to 27.4 p.p.m.; total amyl alcohol from 57 to 94 p . p . m . But for a given set of brewery fermentation conditions, each volatile appears at a definite time, increases to a maximum at a characteristic rate. The increases continue into storage*. After about two weeks, the higher alcohols (but not esters) reach their limit. Then the increase in higher alcohols reverses itself. But at this stage, notes the Paul-Lewis chemist, results are erratic because brews are blended prior to packaging. Finally, bottled beer after several months shows still lower levels of esters a n d amyl alcohols. Acetone, t h o u g h , remains the same. n