Abstract

Lambic beer is produced using spontaneous fermentation. Gueuze is a style of lambic beer that blends “young” (1 year old) and “aged” (2+ years old) beers. Little is known about the development of volatile aroma compounds in lambic beer during aging. Solid-phase microextraction and gas chromatography–mass spectrometry were used to analyze volatile compounds from 3, 6, 9, 12, and 28-month-old commercial samples of lambic beer. Compounds were identified using standardized retention time and mass spectra of standards. Gas chromatography–olfactometry was used to characterize the aroma profiles of the samples. A total of 41 compounds were identified using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS). Ethyl lactate, ethyl acetate, 4-ethylphenol and 4-ethylguaiacol were identified in the 9, 12, and 28-month old samples. These four compounds have been linked to the microorganism Brettanomyces. Twenty-one aroma active compounds were identified using Gas chromatography–olfactometry (GC–O). As the age of the gueuze samples increased, a larger number of aroma compounds were identified by the panelists; the compounds identified increased from seven for the 3-month-old samples to nine for the 6-month-old samples, and eleven for both the nine and twelve-month-old samples, and seventeen for the twenty-eight-month-old samples.

Highlights

  • Spontaneous fermentation has been used for the traditional manufacturing of beer, wine and apple cider

  • Use of spontaneous fermentation is rare in beer manufacture because of the lack of control over the fermentation process; lambic beer is still being produced through spontaneous fermentation

  • The concentration of fruit orchards and traditional farmhouse breweries provide an ideal environment for wild yeast and bacteria to become air borne so they can reside in the breweries that make lambic beer [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Spontaneous fermentation has been used for the traditional manufacturing of beer, wine and apple cider. Use of spontaneous fermentation is rare in beer manufacture because of the lack of control over the fermentation process; lambic beer is still being produced through spontaneous fermentation. Lambic beers are traditionally produced within fifteen kilometers of Brussels [1,2]. The Senne Valley and the surrounding region provide favorable conditions for spontaneous fermentation to occur. The concentration of fruit orchards and traditional farmhouse breweries provide an ideal environment for wild yeast and bacteria to become air borne so they can reside in the breweries that make lambic beer [3]. The brewing season for lambics begins in September and continues until sometime in April [4]

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