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Standard Brewing
Malting and malt preparation
Mashing and wort separation
Wort boiling
Wort clarification, cooling and aeration
Fermentation and maturation
Beer filtration, stabilisation and packaging
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Wheat / Rye / Oats / TriticaleWheat is a well known adjunct in Belgian- and German-style white beers. It is also used in minor proportions to improve foam stability in lager beer. Rye and oats are not as commonly used in the brewing industry – but they do represent valuable fermentable extract sources for the grain distilling industry. Triticale was the first human manufactured cereal from an amphidiploid between wheat and rye. What all of these cereals have in common is the presence of high molecular weight proteins, glycoproteins and viscosity increasing non-starch components such as arabinoxylans and β-glucans. Therefore the incorporation of these cereals can generate major difficulties for the brewer such as increases in mash and wort viscosity, poor extraction yields, poor wort clarity and lower wort fermentability.
Typical problems | Our Solutions | Poor extract levels | Promalt range | Poor mash or beer filtration | Bioglucanase range (TX,GB, HS) | High mash viscosities and starch positive wort | Hitempase and Bioamylase BAA | Poor wort fermentability | Bioferm | Poor wort clarity | Whirlfloc, Bioprotease |
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