Abstract

Lambic beer is the oldest style of beer still being produced in the Western world using spontaneous fermentation. Gueuze is a style of lambic beer prepared by mixing young (one year) and older (two to three years) beers. Little is known about the volatiles and semi-volatiles found in commercial samples of gueuze lambic beers. SPME was used to extract the volatiles from nine different brands of lambic beer. GC-MS was used for the separation and identification of the compounds extracted with SPME. The pH and color were measured using standard procedures. A total of 50 compounds were identified in the nine brands. Seventeen of the 50 compounds identified have been previously identified. The compounds identified included a number of different chemical groups such as acids, alcohols, phenols, ketones, aldehydes, and esters. Ethyl acetate, 4-ethylphenol, and 4-ethylguaiacol are known by-products of the yeast, Brettanomyces, which is normally a spoilage microorganism in beer and wine, but important for the flavor characteristics of lambic beer. There were no differences in pH, but there were differences in color between the beer samples.

Highlights

  • Lambic beer is one of the oldest styles of beer still being brewed today [1]

  • The pH range observed for the nine commercial beers that we examined ranged from 3.23 to 3.62 (Table 1)

  • A total of 50 volatile and semi-volatile compounds were identified in the nine commercial brands

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Summary

Introduction

Lambic beer is one of the oldest styles of beer still being brewed today [1]. Eight lambic breweries (Belle Vue, Boon, Cantillon, De Troch, Girardin, Lindemans, Mort Subite, Timmermans), five blenders (De Cam, Drie Fonteinen, Hanssens, Oud Beersel, Tilquin), and two lambic breweries located in West Flanders (Bockor, Van Honsebrouck) are currently producing and selling lambic beer.the distribution of this type of beer is very limited within the United States [2]. Many lambic brewers and blenders are in financial trouble because of the time required to produce lambic beer; they can spend up to several years aging in casks or fermentation tanks before they are ready to be sold. This causes breweries to hold onto hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of inventory while the beer is aging. Another issue that arises from aging lambic beer is that the current tax system in place forces brewers to pay taxes on their beer within a year of being produced. In the U.S craft industry, there has been a great deal of interest in complex fermented sour beers in the last few years

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