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The Phenolic Compounds’ Role in Beer from Various Adjuncts

Background: The present article considers the influence of malt with various adjuncts on beer organic compounds and taste profile composition, with more attention paid to the phenol complex change. The topic under consideration is relevant since it studies the interactions of phenolic compounds with...

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Autores principales: Gribkova, Irina N., Eliseev, Mikhail N., Lazareva, Irina V., Zakharova, Varvara A., Sviridov, Dmitrii A., Egorova, Olesya S., Kozlov, Valery I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10004787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36903541
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28052295
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author Gribkova, Irina N.
Eliseev, Mikhail N.
Lazareva, Irina V.
Zakharova, Varvara A.
Sviridov, Dmitrii A.
Egorova, Olesya S.
Kozlov, Valery I.
author_facet Gribkova, Irina N.
Eliseev, Mikhail N.
Lazareva, Irina V.
Zakharova, Varvara A.
Sviridov, Dmitrii A.
Egorova, Olesya S.
Kozlov, Valery I.
author_sort Gribkova, Irina N.
collection PubMed
description Background: The present article considers the influence of malt with various adjuncts on beer organic compounds and taste profile composition, with more attention paid to the phenol complex change. The topic under consideration is relevant since it studies the interactions of phenolic compounds with other biomolecules, and expands the understanding of the adjuncts organic compounds contribution and their joint effect on beer quality. Methods: Samples of beer were analyzed at a pilot brewery using barley and wheat malts, barley, rice, corn and wheat, and then fermented. The beer samples were assessed by industry-accepted methods and using instrumental analysis methods (high-performance liquid chromatography methods—HPLC). The obtained statistical data were processed by the Statistics program (Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA, USA, 2006). Results: The study showed that at the stage of hopped wort organic compounds structure formation, there is a clear correlation between the content of organic compounds and dry substances, including phenolic compounds (quercetin, catechins), as well as isomerized hop bitter resines. It is shown that the riboflavin content increases in all adjunct wort samples, and mostly with the use of rice—up to 4.33 mg/L, which is 9.4 times higher than the vitamin levels in malt wort. The melanoidin content in the samples was in the range of 125–225 mg/L and its levels in the wort with additives exceeded the malt wort. Changes in β-glucan and nitrogen with thiol groups during fermentation occurred with different dynamics and depending on the adjunct’s proteome. The greatest decrease in non-starch polysaccharide content was observed in wheat beer and nitrogen with thiol groups content—in all other beer samples. The change in iso-α-humulone in all samples at the beginning of fermentation correlated with a decrease in original extract, and in the finished beer there was no correlation. The behavior of catechins, quercetin, and iso-α-humulone has been shown to correlate with nitrogen with thiol groups during fermentation. A strong correlation was shown between the change in iso-α-humulone and catechins, as well as riboflavin and quercetin. It was established that various phenolic compounds were involved in the formation of taste, structure, and antioxidant properties of beer in accordance with the structure of various grains, depending on the structure of its proteome. Conclusions: The obtained experimental and mathematical dependences make it possible to expand the understanding of intermolecular interactions of beer organic compounds and take a step toward predicting the quality of beer at the stage of using adjuncts.
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spelling pubmed-100047872023-03-11 The Phenolic Compounds’ Role in Beer from Various Adjuncts Gribkova, Irina N. Eliseev, Mikhail N. Lazareva, Irina V. Zakharova, Varvara A. Sviridov, Dmitrii A. Egorova, Olesya S. Kozlov, Valery I. Molecules Article Background: The present article considers the influence of malt with various adjuncts on beer organic compounds and taste profile composition, with more attention paid to the phenol complex change. The topic under consideration is relevant since it studies the interactions of phenolic compounds with other biomolecules, and expands the understanding of the adjuncts organic compounds contribution and their joint effect on beer quality. Methods: Samples of beer were analyzed at a pilot brewery using barley and wheat malts, barley, rice, corn and wheat, and then fermented. The beer samples were assessed by industry-accepted methods and using instrumental analysis methods (high-performance liquid chromatography methods—HPLC). The obtained statistical data were processed by the Statistics program (Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA, USA, 2006). Results: The study showed that at the stage of hopped wort organic compounds structure formation, there is a clear correlation between the content of organic compounds and dry substances, including phenolic compounds (quercetin, catechins), as well as isomerized hop bitter resines. It is shown that the riboflavin content increases in all adjunct wort samples, and mostly with the use of rice—up to 4.33 mg/L, which is 9.4 times higher than the vitamin levels in malt wort. The melanoidin content in the samples was in the range of 125–225 mg/L and its levels in the wort with additives exceeded the malt wort. Changes in β-glucan and nitrogen with thiol groups during fermentation occurred with different dynamics and depending on the adjunct’s proteome. The greatest decrease in non-starch polysaccharide content was observed in wheat beer and nitrogen with thiol groups content—in all other beer samples. The change in iso-α-humulone in all samples at the beginning of fermentation correlated with a decrease in original extract, and in the finished beer there was no correlation. The behavior of catechins, quercetin, and iso-α-humulone has been shown to correlate with nitrogen with thiol groups during fermentation. A strong correlation was shown between the change in iso-α-humulone and catechins, as well as riboflavin and quercetin. It was established that various phenolic compounds were involved in the formation of taste, structure, and antioxidant properties of beer in accordance with the structure of various grains, depending on the structure of its proteome. Conclusions: The obtained experimental and mathematical dependences make it possible to expand the understanding of intermolecular interactions of beer organic compounds and take a step toward predicting the quality of beer at the stage of using adjuncts. MDPI 2023-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10004787/ /pubmed/36903541 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28052295 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Gribkova, Irina N.
Eliseev, Mikhail N.
Lazareva, Irina V.
Zakharova, Varvara A.
Sviridov, Dmitrii A.
Egorova, Olesya S.
Kozlov, Valery I.
The Phenolic Compounds’ Role in Beer from Various Adjuncts
title The Phenolic Compounds’ Role in Beer from Various Adjuncts
title_full The Phenolic Compounds’ Role in Beer from Various Adjuncts
title_fullStr The Phenolic Compounds’ Role in Beer from Various Adjuncts
title_full_unstemmed The Phenolic Compounds’ Role in Beer from Various Adjuncts
title_short The Phenolic Compounds’ Role in Beer from Various Adjuncts
title_sort phenolic compounds’ role in beer from various adjuncts
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10004787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36903541
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28052295
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