Abstract

Continuous beer production was investigated in a high cell-density culture system which consisted of two stages for the fermentation and sedimentation of yeast cells. The continuous culture was carried out for a fermentation time of 5,500 h without contamination, at varying dilution rates and fermentation temperatures in the ranges of 0.017-0.033 h −1 and 6.5–8.5°C, respectively. This process was found to be suitable for continuous and stable beer brewing. Under these conditions, the cell concentration in the first stage was about 80 times as high as that in the exit of the second stage. Concentrations of viable cells, sugar and ethanol were maintained at 1.3 × 10 9 cells/ml, 25 and 36 g/ l, respectively, and were hardly affected by fermentation temperature. Concentrations of ethyl acetate, isoamyl alcohol and isoamyl acetate were similar in the fermentation temperature ranges of 6.5–8.5°C, and the amounts at a fermentation temperature of 7°C were comparable to those of lager-type beer. Diacetyl flavor, which is known to be an effluent component that causes deterioration in the second stag e (young beer), was maintained at 1.2 ppm at a dilution rate and fermentation temperature of 0.022 h −1 and 7°C, respectively. The diacetyl flavor was due to the accumulation of vicinal diketone, the precursor of which is acetohydroxy acid. The acetohydroxy acid was converted to vicinal diketone by pretreatment at 60°C for 30 min. The vicinal diketone was then consumed by the yeast during after-fermentation at a fermentation temperature of 3°C. Using this method, total vicinal diketone decreased below 0.3 ppm for an after-fermentation time of 6.8 h, which was 225 times as fast as that of after-fermentation without the pretreatment. This process may make it possible to achieve continuous beer fermentation from the fermentation stage to after-fermentation for diacetyl removal.

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