Laboratory-Scale Studies of the Impact of Oxygen on Mashing

ABSTRACT An assessment of the impact of oxygen and hydrogen peroxide on mashing and wort parameters has been made on a laboratory scale. Oxygen has been stridently eliminated by using an anaerobic chamber during mash analysis. Additionally the relative importance of proanthocyanidin species has been...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Institute of Brewing 2003, Vol.109 (3), p.273-283
Hauptverfasser: Stephenson, W.H., Biawa, J.-P., Miracle, R.E., Bamforth, C.W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ABSTRACT An assessment of the impact of oxygen and hydrogen peroxide on mashing and wort parameters has been made on a laboratory scale. Oxygen has been stridently eliminated by using an anaerobic chamber during mash analysis. Additionally the relative importance of proanthocyanidin species has been assessed by comparing the behaviour of “conventional” malt and a malt produced from a low proanthocyanidin variety. It seems that oxygen and peroxide act independently in causing the oxidation of thiol‐containing materials and polyphenols in mashes and that oxygen is not primarily exerting its impacts through the intermediacy of peroxide. The removal of thiols (presumably at least in part through the production of disulphide bridges between proteins) and of polyphenols (presumably via polymerisation) both contribute to increased wort turbidity and decreased rates of wort separation after mashing. Three inhibitors (nordihydroguaiaretic acid, ethylenediamenetetraacetate and potassium cyanide) have been employed in an attempt to differentiate between enzymic and non‐enzymic events and also to identify whether lipoxygenase and peroxidase are catalysing key events. Whilst it seems that peroxidase has a key role in catalysing the oxidation of polyphenols by H2O2, it does not appear that either peroxidase or lipoxygenase is involved in the removal of measurable thiol. Nonetheless a significant proportion of the thiol elimination is likely enzyme‐catalysed. We have been unable to demonstrate the production of hydroperoxides in mashes, but added hydroperoxide is undetectable, which suggests that these materials are either lost by onward conversion or by adsorption onto spent grains.
ISSN:0046-9750
2050-0416
DOI:10.1002/j.2050-0416.2003.tb00168.x