Yang He (1); (1) Tsingtao Brewing Ltd., Qingdao, China
Yeast, Fermentation, and Microbiology
Poster
Brewery wort is a complex yeast growth and fermentation medium that
contains an array of assimilable nitrogen. Among all the assimilable
nitrogen, amino acids are the most abundant. Alterations related to
nutritional parameters (e.g., malt varieties, novel adjuncts, adjunct
composition, adjunct ratios or even mashing regimes, etc.) can lead to
changes in the concentration of specific amino acids in wort. Amino
acids composition and their utilization by yeast during wort
fermentation influence both yeast fermentation performance and the
flavor profile of the finished product, which, therefore, is critical
for maintaining product quality and consistency. This is particularly
the case with multisite brewing. Here, using an industrial lager brewing
strain of Saccharomyces pastorianus, we investigated the effect
of amino acids composition on yeast fermentation performance and beer
flavor. A two-level factorial Plackett-Burman design was applied to
screening the most significant amino acids in brewing wort. Based on the
results, glutamine and proline were found to be negatively affected by
yeast propagation and yeast amino acid utilization. Lysine was
identified as a important determinant for promoting yeast propagation.
Furthermore, the maturity of beer was positively exercised by the amount
of valine in wort. The statistical design tool greatly facilitates the
understanding of the importance of each amino acid and the desired ones
in wort. The future applications of this information could drastically
improve current regimes for selecting malt and adjunct or their formula.
Yang He is a scientist at State Key Laboratory of Biological
Fermentation Engineering of Beer, Tsingtao Brewing Ltd. Most of her
research is related to beer flavor production during fermentation by
monitoring yeast gene expression. She received her Ph.D. degree in
marine science from the Ocean University of China in 2011.