Franconian Beer Message Board
North American Adjunct Lagers |
Posted by FredW on 2014-03-27 22:50:27 |
North American barley was traditionally of the 6-row variety as opposed to the 2-row found in Europe. This impacted brewing in a number of ways....
It actually was more expensive to use these adjuncts as they had to be boilded first as the starches at normal mash temperatures were not soluable in water (which is one reason malted barley is the grain of choice for beer). So intead of the 3 vessel system found in Germany (mash, lauter, boil) you had 4 vessel systems (cerial cooker, mash, lauter, boil). Shortages of barley during WW I plus the growing temperance movement led brewers to increase the portion of corn/rice from the 10-15% to 25-30%. This made a lighter bodied beer which became popular and so brewers continued this. As late as the early 60's, Anheuser Busch made all malt beers for local consumption is St Louis (which has a large number of people decended from German immegrents) Much more than you wanted to know.... |
Followups: |
North American Adjunct Lagers by Nick B. on 2014-03-28 01:34:30 |
North American Adjunct Lagers by barry on 2014-03-28 02:21:19 |