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Beer measurement

When drinking beer, there are many factors to be considered. Principal among them are bitterness, the variety of flavours present in the beverage and their intensity, alcohol content, and colour. Standards for those characteristics allow a more objective and uniform determination to be made on the overall qualities of any beer.

A hydrometer floating in a test jar of wort, where the specific gravity reading is approximately 1.050

Colour edit

"Degrees Lovibond" or "°L" scale is a measure of the colour of a substance, usually beer, whiskey, or sugar solutions. The determination of the degrees Lovibond takes place by comparing the colour of the substance to a series of amber to brown glass slides, usually by a colorimeter. The scale was devised by Joseph Williams Lovibond.[1] The Standard Reference Method (SRM) and European Brewery Convention (EBC) methods have largely replaced it, with the SRM giving results approximately equal to the °L.

The Standard Reference Method or SRM[2] is a system modern brewers use to measure colour intensity, roughly darkness, of a beer or wort. The method involves the use of a spectrophotometer or photometer to measure the attenuation of light of a particular wavelength, 430 nanometres (blue), as it passes through a sample contained in a cuvette of standardised dimensions located in the light path of the instrument.

The EBC also measures beer and wort colour, as well as quantifying turbidity (also known as haze) in beer.

Strength edit

The strength of beer is measured by its alcohol content by volume expressed as a percentage, that is to say, the number of millilitres of absolute alcohol (ethanol) in 100 mL of beer.

The most accurate method of determining the strength of a beer would be to take a quantity of beer and distill off a spirit that contains all of the alcohol that was in the beer. The alcohol content of the spirit can then be measured using a hydrometer and tables of density of alcohol and water mixtures.[3] A second accurate method is the ebulliometer method, which uses the difference between the boiling temperature of pure water and the boiling temperature of the beer being tested.

In practice the most common method used to estimate the strength of a beer is to measure the amount of sugars or "extract" in the wort before fermentation and then again once the fermentation is completed, and to use these two data points in an empirical formula which estimates the alcohol content or strength of the beer.

Density edit

The most common method of (indirectly) measuring the amount of extract in the wort or beer is by measuring the density of the liquid, often performed using a hydrometer, and converting the density measurement to extract, the mass fraction of sugars in the wort or beer. Hydrometers can be calibrated with a number of scales. A common scale is that of specific gravity (SG), that is to say the density of a liquid relative to the density of pure water (at a standard temperature). Specific gravity can also be measured by a pycnometer or oscillating U-tube electronic meter. Water has a SG of 1.000, absolute alcohol has a SG of 0.789. Other density scales are discussed below.

The density of the wort depends on the sugar content in the wort: the more sugar the higher the density. The fermented beer will have some residual sugar which will raise the SG, the alcohol content will lower the SG. The difference between the SG of the wort before fermentation and the SG of the beer after fermentation gives an indication of how much sugar was converted to alcohol and CO2 by the yeast. A basic formula[4] to calculate beer strength based on the difference between the original and final SG is:

 

The formula below[5] is an alternate equation which provides more accurate estimates at higher alcohol percentages (it is typically used for beers above 6 or 7%).

 

where OG is the original gravity, or the specific gravity before fermentation and FG is the final gravity or SG after fermentation.

"Original Extract" (OE) is a synonym for original gravity. The OE is often referred to as the "size" of the beer and is, in Germany, often printed on the label as Stammwürze [de] or sometimes just as a percent. In the Czech Republic, for example, people speak of "10 degree beers", "12 degree beers" and so on.

Gravity measurements are used to determine the size of the beer, its alcoholic strength, and how much of the available sugar the yeast were able to consume (a given strain can be expected, under proper conditions, to ferment a wort of a particular composition to within a range of attenuation; that is, they should be able to consume a known percentage of the extract).

Historically gravity was measured and recorded in brewer's pounds (also known as just "pounds"). If a wort was said to be "26 lbs. gravity per barrel"[6] it meant that a standard barrel of 36 imperial gallons of the wort weighed 26 pounds more than a barrel of pure water.[6] The actual measurement was by saccharometer (i.e. hydrometer) correcting for temperature by a calibration scale or else by a special brewer's slide rule.[7] An average strength first running of 1864 would be 30 pounds or 1.083 OG.[a][8]

Extract edit

Two common scales used for measuring the amount of sugars in wort and must are:

  • Brix (°Bx)
  • Plato (°P)

The oldest scale, Balling (°Balling), was developed in 1843 by Bohemian scientist Karl Joseph Napoleon Balling (1805-1868) and Simon Ack. In the 1850s, German engineer-mathematician Adolf Ferdinand Wenceslaus Brix (1798-1870) corrected some of the calculation errors in the Balling scale and introduced the Brix scale. In the early 1900s German chemist Fritz Plato (1858-1938) and his collaborators made further improvements, introducing the Plato scale. Essentially they are the same (all based on mass fraction of sucrose). The tables differ mainly in their precision and in the temperature for which the measurements are to be made.

A rough conversion between specific gravity, SG, and either degrees Brix, Plato or Balling can be made by dividing the thousandths of SG above 1 (which is often referred to as gravity points) by 4. So a specific gravity of 1.048 has 48 gravity points, and 48 divided by 4 would be approximately 12 degrees Plato, Balling or Brix. This is equivalent to approximating the relationship between specific gravity and mass fraction in °P by the linear equation:[9]

 

However, the above approximation has increasingly larger error for increasing values of specific gravity and deviates e.g. by 0.67°P when SG = 1.080. A much more accurate (mean average error less than 0.02°P) conversion can be made using the following formula:[9]

 

where the specific gravity is to be measured at a temperature of T = 20 °C. The equivalent relation giving SG at 20 °C for a given °P is:

 

Winemakers, as well as the sugar and juice industry, typically use degrees Brix. British and continental European beer brewers generally use degrees Plato. American brewers use a mixture of degrees Balling, degrees Plato and specific gravity. Home wine, mead, cider, and beer makers typically use specific gravity.

In some countries, alcohol by volume is referred to as degrees Gay-Lussac (after the French chemist Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac). France, Spain and the United Kingdom use the system to determine alcohol content. Belgium, Norway, and Sweden use a modified table to calculate taxes on alcoholic beverages.

Saltire marks edit

 
A bottle of XXX bitter ale from Belgium (originally made for the US market).

The Saint Andrew's Cross is used on some beers, and was traditionally a mark of beer strength, with more exes indicating a higher alcoholic content. Some sources suggest that the origin of the mark was in the breweries of medieval monasteries, where the cross served as a guarantee of quality for beers of increasing strength.[10]

Another explanation for the saltire marks may be rooted in the duty taxes of alcoholic beverages beginning in England in 1643. The mark on a cask of beer was originally used to indicate that the contents were stronger than legal small beer limits, and were subject to a tax of ten (Roman numeral X) shillings per barrel tax. Later, brewers added additional (superfluous numeral) X marks to signify progressively stronger beers: "the present quack-like denominations of XX [twenty, but often pronounced "double (letter) X"] and XXX [thirty, often pronounced "treble (letter) X"], which appear, unnecessarily, on the casks and in the accounts of the strong-ale brewers".[11]

In mid-19th century England, the use of letter "X" and other ones had evolved into a standardized grading system for the strength of beer.[12] Today, it is used as a trademark by a number of brewers in the United Kingdom, the Commonwealth and the United States.

Bitterness edit

Bitterness scales attempt to rate the relative bitterness of beer. The bitterness of beer is provided by compounds such as humulones, or alpha acids from hops used during brewing. During the brewing process, humulone undergoes isomerization to form both cis- and trans- isohumulone which are responsible for the bitter taste of the beer.[13] Likewise, hops contain lupulones, or beta acids.[13] These beta acids are not considered in the initial bittering of the wort as much as their alpha acid counterparts since they do not isomerize through boiling, and therefore do not dissolve in the wort.[14] However, beta acids can undergo oxidation and slowly contribute to the bitterness of the beer. This bitterness is harsher than the bitterness of the alpha acids and this flavor can be undesirable. The oxidation occurs over time through fermentation, storage, and aging. At the same time, isomerized alpha acids undergo degradation and reduce the bitterness of the beer.[15]

IBUs of some common styles[16]
Beer style IBUs
Lambic 0–10
Wheat beer 8–18
American lager 8–26
Irish red ale 15–30
Kölsch 20–30
Pilsner 24–44
Porter 18–50
Bitter 24–50
Pale ale 30–50
Stout 30–90
Barleywine 34–120
India pale ale 40–120

Since the quantities of alpha and beta acids range among hops, the variety of hop should be considered when targeting a specific amount of bitterness in the beer. To maximize bitterness, hops with large alpha acid concentrations should be used.[13] Such varieties include Chinook, Galena, Horizon, Tomahawk, and Warrior hops, and these contain alpha acid concentrations up to 16% by mass. Since the bitterness is not influenced by beta acids, beta acids are not considered when selecting the variety of hop. Also, the amount of time that the hops are boiled affects the bitterness of the beer. Since heat is needed to isomerize alpha acids, applying heat for longer amounts of time increases the conversion to the isomerized form.

The International Bitterness Units scale, or IBU, is used to approximately quantify the bitterness of beer. This scale is not measured on the perceived bitterness of the beer, but rather the amount of iso-alpha acids.[17] There are several methods to measure IBU. The most common and widely used way is through spectrophotometry.[18] In this process, hops are boiled in wort to promote isomerization. Since the iso-alpha acids are slightly hydrophobic, a reduction of the pH by adding acid increases the hydrophobicity of the iso-alpha acids. At this point, an organic solution is added and the iso-alpha acids shift to the organic layer out of the aqueous wort. This new solution is then placed in a spectrophotometer and the absorbance is read at 275 nm. At this wavelength, the iso-alpha acids have their highest absorbance which allows for the calculation of the concentration of these bittering molecules. This technique was adopted at the same time as another method based on measuring the concentration (in milligrams per litre; parts per million w/v) of isomerized α acids (IAA) in a beer, causing some confusion among small-scale brewers.[19] The American Society of Brewing Chemists, in the introduction to its methods on measuring bitterness, points out some differences between the results of the two methods:

While the results of the IAA methods are practically identical to those obtained by the [I]BU method for beer brewed with fresh hops, the IAAs of beer brewed with old or poorly stored hops, and with certain special hop extracts, can be significantly lower than the [I]BU figure.[20]

Additionally, HPLC, mass spectrometry, and fluorescence spectroscopy can be employed to measure the amount of iso-alpha acids in a beer.[21][22][23]

The European Bitterness Units scale, often abbreviated as EBU, is a bitterness scale[24] in which lower values are generally "less bitter" and higher values "more bitter". The scale and method are defined by the European Brewery Convention, and the numerical value should be the same as of the International Bittering Units scale (IBU), defined in co-operation with the American Society of Brewing Chemists.[25] However, the exact process of determining EBU and IBU values differs slightly, which may in theory result with slightly smaller values for EBU than IBU.[26]

IBU is not determined by the perceived bitterness of the taste of the beer. For example, the bittering effect of hops is less noticeable in beers with roasted malts or strong flavours, so a higher proportion of hops would be required in strong flavoured beers to achieve the same perceived bitterness in moderately flavoured beers. For example, an imperial stout may have an IBU of 50, but will taste less bitter than a pale lager with an IBU of 30, because the pale lager has a lower flavour intensity. After around 100 IBU, hop utilization is so poor that the number ceases to be meaningful in regard to taste, although continued hop additions will increase bitterness. Light lagers without much bitterness will generally have 8–20 IBU, while an India pale ale may have 60–100 IBU or more.[27]

Automated combined systems edit

For high throughput applications (as in quality control labs of large breweries for example), automated systems are available.

Simple systems work with adjustment data blocks for each kind of beer, while high-end systems are matrix-independent and give accurate results for alcohol strength, extract content, pH, colour, turbidity, CO2 and O2 without any product-specific calibration.

Latest innovations are packaged beverage analyzers, that measure directly out of the package (glass bottle, PET bottle or can) and give several parameters in one measuring cycle without any sample preparation (no degassing, no filtering, no temperature conditioning).[28]

Oxidative degradation measurement edit

Oxidative deterioration of beer can be measured by the way of chemiluminescence[29] or by electron spin resonance.[30] Automated systems exist to determine the lag time of beer related to the antioxidant capacity to resist oxidative spoilage of flavours.[31]

Software edit

Software tools are available to brewers to formulate and adapt recipes with a view to accurately measure the various values in brewing. Data can be exchanged in formats such as BeerXML to allow for accurate replication of recipes at remote sites or the adaptation of recipes to account for variations in locally available water, mash ingredients, hops etc.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ 1 imperial gallon weighs 10 lb, so 30 pound beer is 30/360 or 1.083 og

Citation edit

  1. ^ "Lovibond - BrewWiki". Brewwiki.com. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  2. ^ "Beer 10-A Spectrophotometric Color Method", ASBC Methods of Analysis
  3. ^ "Determination of Alcohol Content of Wine by Distillation followed by Density Determination by Hydrometry" (PDF). seniorchem.com. Retrieved 2022-03-07.
  4. ^ "Calculate Percent Alcohol in Beer". brewmorebeer.com. Retrieved 2015-08-23.
  5. ^ "Alcohol By Volume Calculator Updated". brewersfriend.com. 2011-06-16. Retrieved 2016-04-03.
  6. ^ a b Anon 1864, p. 116.
  7. ^ Anon 1864, p. 117.
  8. ^ Anon 1864, p. 28.
  9. ^ a b Buhl, Josh. "Physical Equations Relating Extract and Relative Density". OSF Preprints. Center for Open Science. Retrieved 12 October 2023.
  10. ^ Bamforth 2008, p. 34-.
  11. ^ Booth 1829, p. 2–.
  12. ^ "English Beer Strengths" (PDF). Europeanbeerguide.net. Retrieved 2022-03-07.
  13. ^ a b c De Keukeleire, Denis (2000). "Fundamentals of Beer and Chemistry". Química Nova. 23 (1): 108. doi:10.1590/S0100-40422000000100019.
  14. ^ Daniels, Ray. . The Hopyard. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22.
  15. ^ "Hop Anatomy and Chemistry 101". Bioweb.uwlax.edu. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  16. ^ "Beer Styles – IBU Chart Graph (Bitterness Range)". Brewer's Friend. 24 January 2009. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
  17. ^ Peacock, Val. "International Bitterness Unit". Sizes.
  18. ^ Blankemeier, Rick. "The Spectrophotometer and Beer: A Love Story". Hatch.
  19. ^ "What Is an IBU…Really?". Basic Brewing Radio. Season 4. Episode 12. 2008-03-20.
  20. ^ . Methods of Analysis: Beer – 23:1–4. 1996. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22.
  21. ^ Jaskula, Barbara; Goiris, Koen; De Rouck, Gert; Aerts, Guido; De Cooman, Luc (2007). "Enhanced Quantitative Extraction and HPLC Determination of Hop and Beer Bitter Acids". Journal of the Institute of Brewing. 113 (4): 381. doi:10.1002/j.2050-0416.2007.tb00765.x.
  22. ^ (PDF). Applied Biosystems. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-10-28.
  23. ^ Christensen, Jakob; Ladefoged, Anne; Norgaad, Lars (2005). "Rapid Detection of Bitterness in Beer Using Fluoescence Spectroscopy and Chemometrics". Journal of the Institute of Brewing. 111 (1): 3. doi:10.1002/j.2050-0416.2005.tb00642.x.
  24. ^ Lehigh Valley Homebrewers (2007). . Archived from the original on 2008-09-24. Retrieved 2009-08-05. IBUs (International Bittering Units) - The accepted worldwide standard for measuring bitterness in beer, also known as EBU, based on the estimated alpha acid percentage of the hops used and the length of time they are boiled.
  25. ^ European Brewery Convention. . Archived from the original on 2009-05-19. Retrieved 2009-08-05. The EBC Analysis Committee also works closely together with the 'American Society of Brewing Chemists' (ASBC) to establish so-called 'International methods' with world-wide recognition of applicability. A partnership declaration between EBC and ASBC has been signed. The integration of the IOB methods of analysis and EBC methods is nearing completion.
  26. ^ ajdelange (2009-06-11). "Difference between IBU and EBU". Retrieved 2009-08-05. Because the absorption decreases pretty quickly with time at the completion of extraction the EBC reported value will, in general, be a little smaller than ASBC reported value unless the beer requires centrifugation. For all practical considerations the two systems should give the same results.
  27. ^ Crouch 2006, p. 263–.
  28. ^ "Anton Paar". Anton-paar.com.
  29. ^ Kaneda et al. 1990.
  30. ^ Kaneda et al. 1988.
  31. ^ "e-scan-beer-method". Bruker-biospin.com. Retrieved 7 March 2022.

References edit

  • Anon (1864). The Brewer: A Familiar Treatise on the Art of Brewing, with directions for the selection of Malt and Hops. London: William R Loftus and Simpkin & Marshall.
  • Bamforth, Charles W. (2008). Beer: Health and Nutrition. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-4051-4797-2.
  • Booth, David (1829). The Art of Brewing. Baldwin and Cradock. p. 2.
  • Crouch, Andy (2006). The Good Beer Guide to New England. UPNE. ISBN 978-1-58465-469-8.
  • Kaneda, Hirotaka; Kano, Yukinobu; Kamimura, Minoru; Osawa, Toshihiko; Kawakishi, Shunro (1990). "Detection of Chemiluminescence Produced during Beer Oxidation". Journal of Food Science. 55 (3): 881–882. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2621.1990.tb05260.x. ISSN 0022-1147.
  • Kaneda, Hirotaka; Kano, Yukinobu; Osawa, Toshihiko; Ramarathnam, Narasimhan; Kawakishi, Shunro; Kamada, Kozo (1988). "Detection of Free Radicals in Beer Oxidation". Journal of Food Science. 53 (3): 885–888. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2621.1988.tb08978.x. ISSN 0022-1147.
  • Rabin, Dan; Forget, Carl (1998). The Dictionary of Beer and Brewing. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-57958-078-0.

External links edit

  • Explanation from Brew Your Own 2009-08-25 at the Wayback Machine
  • How To Brew: Hop Bittering Calculations

beer, measurement, when, drinking, beer, there, many, factors, considered, principal, among, them, bitterness, variety, flavours, present, beverage, their, intensity, alcohol, content, colour, standards, those, characteristics, allow, more, objective, uniform,. When drinking beer there are many factors to be considered Principal among them are bitterness the variety of flavours present in the beverage and their intensity alcohol content and colour Standards for those characteristics allow a more objective and uniform determination to be made on the overall qualities of any beer A hydrometer floating in a test jar of wort where the specific gravity reading is approximately 1 050 Contents 1 Colour 2 Strength 2 1 Density 2 2 Extract 2 3 Saltire marks 3 Bitterness 4 Automated combined systems 4 1 Oxidative degradation measurement 5 Software 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Citation 9 References 10 External linksColour edit Degrees Lovibond or L scale is a measure of the colour of a substance usually beer whiskey or sugar solutions The determination of the degrees Lovibond takes place by comparing the colour of the substance to a series of amber to brown glass slides usually by a colorimeter The scale was devised by Joseph Williams Lovibond 1 The Standard Reference Method SRM and European Brewery Convention EBC methods have largely replaced it with the SRM giving results approximately equal to the L The Standard Reference Method or SRM 2 is a system modern brewers use to measure colour intensity roughly darkness of a beer or wort The method involves the use of a spectrophotometer or photometer to measure the attenuation of light of a particular wavelength 430 nanometres blue as it passes through a sample contained in a cuvette of standardised dimensions located in the light path of the instrument The EBC also measures beer and wort colour as well as quantifying turbidity also known as haze in beer Color based on Standard Reference Method SRM SRM Lovibond Example Beer color EBC2 Pale lager Witbier Pilsener Berliner Weisse 43 Maibock Blonde Ale 64 Weissbier 86 American Pale Ale India Pale Ale 128 Weissbier Saison 1610 English Bitter ESB 2013 Biere de Garde Double IPA 2617 Dark lager Vienna lager Marzen Amber Ale 3320 Brown Ale Bock Dunkel Dunkelweizen 3924 Irish Dry Stout Doppelbock Porter 4729 Stout 5735 Foreign Stout Baltic Porter 6940 Imperial Stout 79Strength editThe strength of beer is measured by its alcohol content by volume expressed as a percentage that is to say the number of millilitres of absolute alcohol ethanol in 100 mL of beer The most accurate method of determining the strength of a beer would be to take a quantity of beer and distill off a spirit that contains all of the alcohol that was in the beer The alcohol content of the spirit can then be measured using a hydrometer and tables of density of alcohol and water mixtures 3 A second accurate method is the ebulliometer method which uses the difference between the boiling temperature of pure water and the boiling temperature of the beer being tested In practice the most common method used to estimate the strength of a beer is to measure the amount of sugars or extract in the wort before fermentation and then again once the fermentation is completed and to use these two data points in an empirical formula which estimates the alcohol content or strength of the beer Density edit The most common method of indirectly measuring the amount of extract in the wort or beer is by measuring the density of the liquid often performed using a hydrometer and converting the density measurement to extract the mass fraction of sugars in the wort or beer Hydrometers can be calibrated with a number of scales A common scale is that of specific gravity SG that is to say the density of a liquid relative to the density of pure water at a standard temperature Specific gravity can also be measured by a pycnometer or oscillating U tube electronic meter Water has a SG of 1 000 absolute alcohol has a SG of 0 789 Other density scales are discussed below The density of the wort depends on the sugar content in the wort the more sugar the higher the density The fermented beer will have some residual sugar which will raise the SG the alcohol content will lower the SG The difference between the SG of the wort before fermentation and the SG of the beer after fermentation gives an indication of how much sugar was converted to alcohol and CO2 by the yeast A basic formula 4 to calculate beer strength based on the difference between the original and final SG is A B V 131 25 O G F G displaystyle ABV 131 25 OG FG nbsp The formula below 5 is an alternate equation which provides more accurate estimates at higher alcohol percentages it is typically used for beers above 6 or 7 A B V 133 O G F G F G displaystyle ABV 133 OG FG FG nbsp where OG is the original gravity or the specific gravity before fermentation and FG is the final gravity or SG after fermentation Original Extract OE is a synonym for original gravity The OE is often referred to as the size of the beer and is in Germany often printed on the label as Stammwurze de or sometimes just as a percent In the Czech Republic for example people speak of 10 degree beers 12 degree beers and so on Gravity measurements are used to determine the size of the beer its alcoholic strength and how much of the available sugar the yeast were able to consume a given strain can be expected under proper conditions to ferment a wort of a particular composition to within a range of attenuation that is they should be able to consume a known percentage of the extract Historically gravity was measured and recorded in brewer s pounds also known as just pounds If a wort was said to be 26 lbs gravity per barrel 6 it meant that a standard barrel of 36 imperial gallons of the wort weighed 26 pounds more than a barrel of pure water 6 The actual measurement was by saccharometer i e hydrometer correcting for temperature by a calibration scale or else by a special brewer s slide rule 7 An average strength first running of 1864 would be 30 pounds or 1 083 OG a 8 Extract edit Two common scales used for measuring the amount of sugars in wort and must are Brix Bx Plato P The oldest scale Balling Balling was developed in 1843 by Bohemian scientist Karl Joseph Napoleon Balling 1805 1868 and Simon Ack In the 1850s German engineer mathematician Adolf Ferdinand Wenceslaus Brix 1798 1870 corrected some of the calculation errors in the Balling scale and introduced the Brix scale In the early 1900s German chemist Fritz Plato 1858 1938 and his collaborators made further improvements introducing the Plato scale Essentially they are the same all based on mass fraction of sucrose The tables differ mainly in their precision and in the temperature for which the measurements are to be made A rough conversion between specific gravity SG and either degrees Brix Plato or Balling can be made by dividing the thousandths of SG above 1 which is often referred to as gravity points by 4 So a specific gravity of 1 048 has 48 gravity points and 48 divided by 4 would be approximately 12 degrees Plato Balling or Brix This is equivalent to approximating the relationship between specific gravity and mass fraction in P by the linear equation 9 P 250 S G 250 displaystyle circ P 250 cdot SG 250 nbsp However the above approximation has increasingly larger error for increasing values of specific gravity and deviates e g by 0 67 P when SG 1 080 A much more accurate mean average error less than 0 02 P conversion can be made using the following formula 9 P 260 4 260 4 S G displaystyle circ P 260 4 frac 260 4 SG nbsp where the specific gravity is to be measured at a temperature of T 20 C The equivalent relation giving SG at 20 C for a given P is S G 260 4 260 4 P displaystyle SG frac 260 4 260 4 circ P nbsp Winemakers as well as the sugar and juice industry typically use degrees Brix British and continental European beer brewers generally use degrees Plato American brewers use a mixture of degrees Balling degrees Plato and specific gravity Home wine mead cider and beer makers typically use specific gravity In some countries alcohol by volume is referred to as degrees Gay Lussac after the French chemist Joseph Louis Gay Lussac France Spain and the United Kingdom use the system to determine alcohol content Belgium Norway and Sweden use a modified table to calculate taxes on alcoholic beverages Saltire marks edit nbsp A bottle of XXX bitter ale from Belgium originally made for the US market See also food grading The Saint Andrew s Cross is used on some beers and was traditionally a mark of beer strength with more exes indicating a higher alcoholic content Some sources suggest that the origin of the mark was in the breweries of medieval monasteries where the cross served as a guarantee of quality for beers of increasing strength 10 Another explanation for the saltire marks may be rooted in the duty taxes of alcoholic beverages beginning in England in 1643 The mark on a cask of beer was originally used to indicate that the contents were stronger than legal small beer limits and were subject to a tax of ten Roman numeral X shillings per barrel tax Later brewers added additional superfluous numeral X marks to signify progressively stronger beers the present quack like denominations of XX twenty but often pronounced double letter X and XXX thirty often pronounced treble letter X which appear unnecessarily on the casks and in the accounts of the strong ale brewers 11 In mid 19th century England the use of letter X and other ones had evolved into a standardized grading system for the strength of beer 12 Today it is used as a trademark by a number of brewers in the United Kingdom the Commonwealth and the United States Bitterness editSee also Hops Brewing Bitterness scales attempt to rate the relative bitterness of beer The bitterness of beer is provided by compounds such as humulones or alpha acids from hops used during brewing During the brewing process humulone undergoes isomerization to form both cis and trans isohumulone which are responsible for the bitter taste of the beer 13 Likewise hops contain lupulones or beta acids 13 These beta acids are not considered in the initial bittering of the wort as much as their alpha acid counterparts since they do not isomerize through boiling and therefore do not dissolve in the wort 14 However beta acids can undergo oxidation and slowly contribute to the bitterness of the beer This bitterness is harsher than the bitterness of the alpha acids and this flavor can be undesirable The oxidation occurs over time through fermentation storage and aging At the same time isomerized alpha acids undergo degradation and reduce the bitterness of the beer 15 IBUs of some common styles 16 Beer style IBUsLambic 0 10Wheat beer 8 18American lager 8 26Irish red ale 15 30Kolsch 20 30Pilsner 24 44Porter 18 50Bitter 24 50Pale ale 30 50Stout 30 90Barleywine 34 120India pale ale 40 120Since the quantities of alpha and beta acids range among hops the variety of hop should be considered when targeting a specific amount of bitterness in the beer To maximize bitterness hops with large alpha acid concentrations should be used 13 Such varieties include Chinook Galena Horizon Tomahawk and Warrior hops and these contain alpha acid concentrations up to 16 by mass Since the bitterness is not influenced by beta acids beta acids are not considered when selecting the variety of hop Also the amount of time that the hops are boiled affects the bitterness of the beer Since heat is needed to isomerize alpha acids applying heat for longer amounts of time increases the conversion to the isomerized form The International Bitterness Units scale or IBU is used to approximately quantify the bitterness of beer This scale is not measured on the perceived bitterness of the beer but rather the amount of iso alpha acids 17 There are several methods to measure IBU The most common and widely used way is through spectrophotometry 18 In this process hops are boiled in wort to promote isomerization Since the iso alpha acids are slightly hydrophobic a reduction of the pH by adding acid increases the hydrophobicity of the iso alpha acids At this point an organic solution is added and the iso alpha acids shift to the organic layer out of the aqueous wort This new solution is then placed in a spectrophotometer and the absorbance is read at 275 nm At this wavelength the iso alpha acids have their highest absorbance which allows for the calculation of the concentration of these bittering molecules This technique was adopted at the same time as another method based on measuring the concentration in milligrams per litre parts per million w v of isomerized a acids IAA in a beer causing some confusion among small scale brewers 19 The American Society of Brewing Chemists in the introduction to its methods on measuring bitterness points out some differences between the results of the two methods While the results of the IAA methods are practically identical to those obtained by the I BU method for beer brewed with fresh hops the IAAs of beer brewed with old or poorly stored hops and with certain special hop extracts can be significantly lower than the I BU figure 20 Additionally HPLC mass spectrometry and fluorescence spectroscopy can be employed to measure the amount of iso alpha acids in a beer 21 22 23 The European Bitterness Units scale often abbreviated as EBU is a bitterness scale 24 in which lower values are generally less bitter and higher values more bitter The scale and method are defined by the European Brewery Convention and the numerical value should be the same as of the International Bittering Units scale IBU defined in co operation with the American Society of Brewing Chemists 25 However the exact process of determining EBU and IBU values differs slightly which may in theory result with slightly smaller values for EBU than IBU 26 IBU is not determined by the perceived bitterness of the taste of the beer For example the bittering effect of hops is less noticeable in beers with roasted malts or strong flavours so a higher proportion of hops would be required in strong flavoured beers to achieve the same perceived bitterness in moderately flavoured beers For example an imperial stout may have an IBU of 50 but will taste less bitter than a pale lager with an IBU of 30 because the pale lager has a lower flavour intensity After around 100 IBU hop utilization is so poor that the number ceases to be meaningful in regard to taste although continued hop additions will increase bitterness Light lagers without much bitterness will generally have 8 20 IBU while an India pale ale may have 60 100 IBU or more 27 Automated combined systems editFor high throughput applications as in quality control labs of large breweries for example automated systems are available Simple systems work with adjustment data blocks for each kind of beer while high end systems are matrix independent and give accurate results for alcohol strength extract content pH colour turbidity CO2 and O2 without any product specific calibration Latest innovations are packaged beverage analyzers that measure directly out of the package glass bottle PET bottle or can and give several parameters in one measuring cycle without any sample preparation no degassing no filtering no temperature conditioning 28 Oxidative degradation measurement edit Oxidative deterioration of beer can be measured by the way of chemiluminescence 29 or by electron spin resonance 30 Automated systems exist to determine the lag time of beer related to the antioxidant capacity to resist oxidative spoilage of flavours 31 Software editSoftware tools are available to brewers to formulate and adapt recipes with a view to accurately measure the various values in brewing Data can be exchanged in formats such as BeerXML to allow for accurate replication of recipes at remote sites or the adaptation of recipes to account for variations in locally available water mash ingredients hops etc See also edit nbsp Beer portalBeer style information on the styles of beerNotes edit 1 imperial gallon weighs 10 lb so 30 pound beer is 30 360 or 1 083 ogCitation edit Lovibond BrewWiki Brewwiki com Retrieved 7 March 2022 Beer 10 A Spectrophotometric Color Method ASBC Methods of Analysis Determination of Alcohol Content of Wine by Distillation followed by Density Determination by Hydrometry PDF seniorchem com Retrieved 2022 03 07 Calculate Percent Alcohol in Beer brewmorebeer com Retrieved 2015 08 23 Alcohol By Volume Calculator Updated brewersfriend com 2011 06 16 Retrieved 2016 04 03 a b Anon 1864 p 116 Anon 1864 p 117 Anon 1864 p 28 a b Buhl Josh Physical Equations Relating Extract and Relative Density OSF Preprints Center for Open Science Retrieved 12 October 2023 Bamforth 2008 p 34 Booth 1829 p 2 English Beer Strengths PDF Europeanbeerguide net Retrieved 2022 03 07 a b c De Keukeleire Denis 2000 Fundamentals of Beer and Chemistry Quimica Nova 23 1 108 doi 10 1590 S0100 40422000000100019 Daniels Ray Alpha amp Beta Acids The Hopyard Archived from the original on 2015 12 22 Hop Anatomy and Chemistry 101 Bioweb uwlax edu Retrieved 7 March 2022 Beer Styles IBU Chart Graph Bitterness Range Brewer s Friend 24 January 2009 Retrieved 23 September 2017 Peacock Val International Bitterness Unit Sizes Blankemeier Rick The Spectrophotometer and Beer A Love Story Hatch What Is an IBU Really Basic Brewing Radio Season 4 Episode 12 2008 03 20 Beer Bitterness Beer 23 Methods of Analysis Beer 23 1 4 1996 Archived from the original on 2015 12 22 Jaskula Barbara Goiris Koen De Rouck Gert Aerts Guido De Cooman Luc 2007 Enhanced Quantitative Extraction and HPLC Determination of Hop and Beer Bitter Acids Journal of the Institute of Brewing 113 4 381 doi 10 1002 j 2050 0416 2007 tb00765 x HPLC MS MS Analysis of Bitter Acids in Hops and Beer PDF Applied Biosystems Archived from the original PDF on 2018 10 28 Christensen Jakob Ladefoged Anne Norgaad Lars 2005 Rapid Detection of Bitterness in Beer Using Fluoescence Spectroscopy and Chemometrics Journal of the Institute of Brewing 111 1 3 doi 10 1002 j 2050 0416 2005 tb00642 x Lehigh Valley Homebrewers 2007 Beer and Brewing Glossary Archived from the original on 2008 09 24 Retrieved 2009 08 05 IBUs International Bittering Units The accepted worldwide standard for measuring bitterness in beer also known as EBU based on the estimated alpha acid percentage of the hops used and the length of time they are boiled European Brewery Convention The Analysis Committee Archived from the original on 2009 05 19 Retrieved 2009 08 05 The EBC Analysis Committee also works closely together with the American Society of Brewing Chemists ASBC to establish so called International methods with world wide recognition of applicability A partnership declaration between EBC and ASBC has been signed The integration of the IOB methods of analysis and EBC methods is nearing completion ajdelange 2009 06 11 Difference between IBU and EBU Retrieved 2009 08 05 Because the absorption decreases pretty quickly with time at the completion of extraction the EBC reported value will in general be a little smaller than ASBC reported value unless the beer requires centrifugation For all practical considerations the two systems should give the same results Crouch 2006 p 263 Anton Paar Anton paar com Kaneda et al 1990 Kaneda et al 1988 e scan beer method Bruker biospin com Retrieved 7 March 2022 References editAnon 1864 The Brewer A Familiar Treatise on the Art of Brewing with directions for the selection of Malt and Hops London William R Loftus and Simpkin amp Marshall Bamforth Charles W 2008 Beer Health and Nutrition John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 4797 2 Booth David 1829 The Art of Brewing Baldwin and Cradock p 2 Crouch Andy 2006 The Good Beer Guide to New England UPNE ISBN 978 1 58465 469 8 Kaneda Hirotaka Kano Yukinobu Kamimura Minoru Osawa Toshihiko Kawakishi Shunro 1990 Detection of Chemiluminescence Produced during Beer Oxidation Journal of Food Science 55 3 881 882 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2621 1990 tb05260 x ISSN 0022 1147 Kaneda Hirotaka Kano Yukinobu Osawa Toshihiko Ramarathnam Narasimhan Kawakishi Shunro Kamada Kozo 1988 Detection of Free Radicals in Beer Oxidation Journal of Food Science 53 3 885 888 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2621 1988 tb08978 x ISSN 0022 1147 Rabin Dan Forget Carl 1998 The Dictionary of Beer and Brewing Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 57958 078 0 External links editExplanation from Brew Your Own Archived 2009 08 25 at the Wayback Machine How To Brew Hop Bittering Calculations Colour Measurement Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Beer measurement amp oldid 1180834096 Other density scales, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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