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Characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer produced from different Nigerian rice varieties as influenced by varying malting conditions

Gluten-free beer could be produced with rice, although the latter would primarily serve as adjunct in combination with barley malt in today’s brewing. However, the recent growing realisation of the potential and applications of rice malt for brewing an all-rice malt beer through varying malting cond...

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Autores principales: Ofoedu, Chigozie E., Akosim, Chibugo Q., Iwouno, Jude O., Obi, Chioma D., Shorstkii, Ivan, Okpala, Charles Odilichukwu R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7983859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33777523
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.10968
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author Ofoedu, Chigozie E.
Akosim, Chibugo Q.
Iwouno, Jude O.
Obi, Chioma D.
Shorstkii, Ivan
Okpala, Charles Odilichukwu R.
author_facet Ofoedu, Chigozie E.
Akosim, Chibugo Q.
Iwouno, Jude O.
Obi, Chioma D.
Shorstkii, Ivan
Okpala, Charles Odilichukwu R.
author_sort Ofoedu, Chigozie E.
collection PubMed
description Gluten-free beer could be produced with rice, although the latter would primarily serve as adjunct in combination with barley malt in today’s brewing. However, the recent growing realisation of the potential and applications of rice malt for brewing an all-rice malt beer through varying malting conditions cannot be overlooked. In this study, therefore, the characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer from different Nigerian rice varieties (FARO 44, FARO 57, NERICA 7) as influenced by varying malting conditions (steeping duration (18, 24 and 30 h), germination periods (2, 3 and 4 days) and kilning temperatures (50 and 55 °C)), were investigated. Rice (grain) samples were examined by thousand kernel weight (TKW), germinative energy (GE), germinative capacity (GC), and degree of steeping (DoS). To ensure that rice wort/beer with unique beer style and enhanced attributes, comparable to barley wort/beer is produced, malting conditions that produced rice malts with peak diastatic power (DP), cold water extract (CWE), and hot water extract (HWE) were selected. Peak DP, CWE and HWE were obtained at FARO 44 (18 h steeping, 3 days germination, 55 °C kilning (S(18)G(3)K(55°))), FARO 57 (30 h steeping, 2 days germination, 50 °C kilning (S(30)G(2)K(50°))) and NERICA 7 (24 h steeping, 3 days germination, 55 °C kilning (S(24)G(3)K(55°))). Selected malts were further tested for moisture content, total nitrogen, malt yield and malting loss and subsequently progressed to wort and beer production. Wort’s pH, total soluble nitrogen (TSN), brix, kolbach index (KI), free amino nitrogen (FAN), dextrose equivalent (DE), original extract (OE) and sugar profile were determined, as well as beer’s pH, colour, apparent extract (AE), alcohol by volume (%ABV), turbidity and sensory attributes. Rice grain varied significantly (p < 0.05) in TKW, GE, GC and DoS across varieties. Despite wort’s pH, TSN, DE, OE as well as beer pH, colour, AE and turbidity resembling (p > 0.05) across varieties, wort’s brix, KI, FAN, sugar profile as well as beer’s %ABV, differed significantly (p < 0.05). Sensory attributes of appearance, colour, mouthfeel, and overall acceptability in beer differed noticeably (p < 0.05), except for aroma and taste (p > 0.05). Overall, the rice beer, though very slightly hazy, represented a pale yellow light lager, which is indicative of its peculiar beer style. Besides increased DP and enhanced hydrolysis, varying malting conditions of current study could serve as a pathway of reducing the cost of exogenous (commercial) enzymes or barley malt imports, together with decreasing barley’s dependency for brewing in the tropics.
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spelling pubmed-79838592021-03-26 Characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer produced from different Nigerian rice varieties as influenced by varying malting conditions Ofoedu, Chigozie E. Akosim, Chibugo Q. Iwouno, Jude O. Obi, Chioma D. Shorstkii, Ivan Okpala, Charles Odilichukwu R. PeerJ Agricultural Science Gluten-free beer could be produced with rice, although the latter would primarily serve as adjunct in combination with barley malt in today’s brewing. However, the recent growing realisation of the potential and applications of rice malt for brewing an all-rice malt beer through varying malting conditions cannot be overlooked. In this study, therefore, the characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer from different Nigerian rice varieties (FARO 44, FARO 57, NERICA 7) as influenced by varying malting conditions (steeping duration (18, 24 and 30 h), germination periods (2, 3 and 4 days) and kilning temperatures (50 and 55 °C)), were investigated. Rice (grain) samples were examined by thousand kernel weight (TKW), germinative energy (GE), germinative capacity (GC), and degree of steeping (DoS). To ensure that rice wort/beer with unique beer style and enhanced attributes, comparable to barley wort/beer is produced, malting conditions that produced rice malts with peak diastatic power (DP), cold water extract (CWE), and hot water extract (HWE) were selected. Peak DP, CWE and HWE were obtained at FARO 44 (18 h steeping, 3 days germination, 55 °C kilning (S(18)G(3)K(55°))), FARO 57 (30 h steeping, 2 days germination, 50 °C kilning (S(30)G(2)K(50°))) and NERICA 7 (24 h steeping, 3 days germination, 55 °C kilning (S(24)G(3)K(55°))). Selected malts were further tested for moisture content, total nitrogen, malt yield and malting loss and subsequently progressed to wort and beer production. Wort’s pH, total soluble nitrogen (TSN), brix, kolbach index (KI), free amino nitrogen (FAN), dextrose equivalent (DE), original extract (OE) and sugar profile were determined, as well as beer’s pH, colour, apparent extract (AE), alcohol by volume (%ABV), turbidity and sensory attributes. Rice grain varied significantly (p < 0.05) in TKW, GE, GC and DoS across varieties. Despite wort’s pH, TSN, DE, OE as well as beer pH, colour, AE and turbidity resembling (p > 0.05) across varieties, wort’s brix, KI, FAN, sugar profile as well as beer’s %ABV, differed significantly (p < 0.05). Sensory attributes of appearance, colour, mouthfeel, and overall acceptability in beer differed noticeably (p < 0.05), except for aroma and taste (p > 0.05). Overall, the rice beer, though very slightly hazy, represented a pale yellow light lager, which is indicative of its peculiar beer style. Besides increased DP and enhanced hydrolysis, varying malting conditions of current study could serve as a pathway of reducing the cost of exogenous (commercial) enzymes or barley malt imports, together with decreasing barley’s dependency for brewing in the tropics. PeerJ Inc. 2021-03-19 /pmc/articles/PMC7983859/ /pubmed/33777523 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.10968 Text en © 2021 Ofoedu et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Agricultural Science
Ofoedu, Chigozie E.
Akosim, Chibugo Q.
Iwouno, Jude O.
Obi, Chioma D.
Shorstkii, Ivan
Okpala, Charles Odilichukwu R.
Characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer produced from different Nigerian rice varieties as influenced by varying malting conditions
title Characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer produced from different Nigerian rice varieties as influenced by varying malting conditions
title_full Characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer produced from different Nigerian rice varieties as influenced by varying malting conditions
title_fullStr Characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer produced from different Nigerian rice varieties as influenced by varying malting conditions
title_full_unstemmed Characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer produced from different Nigerian rice varieties as influenced by varying malting conditions
title_short Characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer produced from different Nigerian rice varieties as influenced by varying malting conditions
title_sort characteristic changes in malt, wort, and beer produced from different nigerian rice varieties as influenced by varying malting conditions
topic Agricultural Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7983859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33777523
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.10968
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