brewery n : a distillery where beer is
brewed
English
Noun
- A building where beer
is produced
- A company that brews
beer
Translations
building where beer is produced
- Czech: pivovar
- Danish: bryggeri
- German: Brauerei, Brauhaus
- Icelandic: ölgerð, ölgerðarhús
A brewery can be a building or place that
produces
beer, or a
business (brewing company) whose trade is the production and sale
of beer. Breweries can take up multiple city blocks, or be a
collection of equipment in a
homebrewer's kitchen. The
diversity of size in breweries is matched by the diversity of
processes, degrees of
automation, and kinds of beer
produced in breweries. Typically a brewery is divided into distinct
sections, with each section reserved for one part of the
brewing process.
History
see also
History of
beer The oldest brewery in the world still in operation is
believed to be the
Bavarian
State-owned brewery
Weihenstephan,
found in the
German city of
Freising,
which can trace its history back to 1040 Although the Zatec brewery
in the Czech Republic claims it can prove paying beer tax in
1004.
The industrialization of the brewery
Beer, in some form, can be traced back almost
5000 years to
Mesopotamian
writings describing daily rations of beer and bread to workers.
Before the rise of production breweries the production of beer took
place at home and was the domain of women, as baking and brewing
were seen as "women's work". Breweries, as production facilities
reserved for making beer, did not emerge until
monasteries and other
Christian
institutions started producing beer not only for their own
consumption, but also to use as payment. This industrialization of
brewing shifted the responsibility of making beer to men.
Early breweries were almost always built on
multiple stories, with equipment on higher floors utilized earlier
in the production process, so that
gravity could assist with the
transfer of product from one stage to the next. This layout is
often preserved in breweries today, but mechanical pumps allow more
flexibility in brewery design.
Early breweries typically used large copper
vats in the brewhouse, and
fermentation
and packaging took place in lined wooden containers. Such breweries
were common until the
Industrial
Revolution, when better materials became available, and
scientific advances led to a better understanding of the brewing
process. Today, almost all breweries are made of
stainless
steel.
Major technological advances
A handful of major breakthroughs have led to the
modern brewery and its ability to produce the same beer
consistently.
The
steam
engine, vastly improved in 1765 by
James Watt,
brought automatic stirring mechanisms, and pumps into the brewery.
It gave brewers the ability to more reliably mix liquids while
heating, particularly the
mash, to prevent scorching, and a
quick way to transfer liquid from one container to another. Almost
all breweries now use electric-powered stirring mechanisms and
pumps. The steam engine also allowed the brewer to make greater
quantities of beer, as human power was no longer a limiting factor
in moving and stirring.
Carl von
Linde, along with several other people, is credited with
developing the
refrigeration machine in
1871. Refrigeration allowed beer to be produced year-round, and
always at the same temperature.
Yeast is very
sensitive to temperature, and if a beer was produced during summer,
the yeast would impart unpleasant flavors onto the beer. Most
brewers would produce enough beer during winter to last through the
summer, and store it in underground cellars, or even caves, to
protect it from summer's heat.
Most importantly, the discovery of
microbes by
Louis
Pasteur was instrumental in the control of fermentation. The
idea that yeast was a
microorganism that worked
on
wort to produce beer
lead to the isolation of a single yeast cell by
Emil
Christian Hansen. Pure yeast cultures allow brewers to pick out
yeasts for their fermentation characteristics, including flavor
profiles and fermentation ability. Some breweries in
Belgium still rely
on "spontaneous" fermentation for their beers (see
lambic).
The modern brewery
Breweries today are made predominantly of
stainless
steel, although vessels often have a decorative
copper cladding for a nostalgic
look. Stainless steel has many favorable characteristics which make
it a well-suited material for brewing equipment. It imparts no
flavor in beer, it reacts with very few chemicals, which means
almost any
cleaning
solution can be used on
it (concentrated chlorine
bleach being a notable exception)
and it is very sturdy. Sturdiness is important, as most tanks in
the brewery have positive pressure applied to them as a matter of
course, and it is not unusual that a vacuum will be formed
incidentally during cleaning.
Heating in the brewhouse is usually achieved
through pressurized steam, although direct-fire systems are not
unusual in small breweries. Similarly, cooling in other areas of
the brewery is typically done by cooling jackets on tanks, which
allow the brewer to precisely control the temperature on each tank
individually, although whole-room cooling is also common.
Today modern brewing plants perform myriad
analyses on their beers for quality control purposes. Shipments of
ingredients are analyzed in order to correct for variations;
Samples are pulled at almost every step and tested for
oxygen content, unwanted
microbial infections, and other beer-aging compounds; and a
representative sample of the finished product is often stored for
months for comparison when complaints are filed.
Brewing process
Work in the brewery is typically divided
into 7 steps: Mashing, Lautering, Boiling, Fermenting,
Conditioning, Filtering, and Filling.
Mashing is the process of mixing milled grain
(typically
malted grain)
with water, and heating this mixture up with rests at certain
temperatures to allow
enzymes in the malt to break down
the
starch in the grain
into
sugars, typically
maltose.
Lautering is the
separation of the extracts won during mashing from the spent grain
to create
wort. It is
achieved in either a
lauter tun, a
wide vessel with a false bottom, or a
mash filter,
a plate-and-frame filter designed for this kind of separation.
Lautering has two stages: first wort run-off, during which the
extract is separated in an undiluted state from the spent grains,
and
sparging, in which
extract which remains with the grains is rinsed off with hot
water.
Boiling the
wort ensures its sterility, and
thus prevents infections. During the boil, hops are added, which
contribute their bitterness, aroma and flavor compounds to the
beer, and, along with the heat of the boil, cause proteins in the
wort to coagulate and the
pH of the wort to fall.
Finally, the vapors produced during the boil volatilize off
flavors, including
dimethyl
sulfide precursors.
The boil must be conducted so that it is even and
intense. The boil lasts between 60 and 120 minutes, depending on
its intensity, the hop addition schedule, and volume of wort the
brewer expects to evaporate.
Fermenting
Fermentation, as a step in the brewing process,
starts as soon as yeast is added to the cooled wort. This is also
the point at which the product is first called beer. It is during
this stage that sugars won from the
malt are metabolized into
alcohol and
carbon
dioxide. Fermentation tanks come in all sorts of forms, from
enormous tanks which can look like
storage
silos, to five
gallon
glass
carboys in a
homebrewer's closet.
Most breweries today use cylindroconical vessels,
or CCVs, have a conical bottom and a cylindrical top. The cone's
aperture is typically
around 60°, an angle that will allow the yeast to flow towards the
cones apex, but is not so steep as to take up too much vertical
space. CCVs can handle both fermenting and conditioning in the same
tank. At the end of fermentation, the yeast and other solids which
have fallen to the cones apex can be simply flushed out a port at
the apex.
Open fermentation vessels are also used, often
for show in brewpubs, and in Europe in wheat beer fermentation.
These vessels have no tops, which makes harvesting top fermenting
yeasts very easy. The open tops of the vessels make the risk of
infection greater, but with proper cleaning procedures and careful
protocol about who enters fermentation chambers when, the risk can
be well controlled.
Fermentation tanks are typically made of
stainless steel. If they are simple cylindrical tanks with beveled
ends, they are arranged vertically, as opposed to conditioning
tanks which are usually laid out horizontally.
A very few breweries still use wooden vats for
fermentation as wood is difficult to keep clean and infection-free
and must be repitched more or less yearly.
After high kraeusen, a bung device (German:
Spundapparat) is often put on the tanks to allow the
CO2 produced
by the yeast to naturally carbonate the beer. This bung device can
be set to a given pressure to match the type of beer being
produced. The more pressure the bung holds back, the more
carbonated the beer becomes.
Conditioning
When the sugars in the fermenting beer have
been almost completely digested, the fermentation slows down and
the yeast starts to settle to the bottom of the tank. At this
stage, the beer is cooled to around freezing, which encourages
settling of the yeast, and causes proteins to coagulate and settle
out with the yeast. Unpleasant flavors such as phenolic compounds
become insoluble in the cold beer, and the beer's flavor becomes
smoother. During this time pressure is maintained on the tanks to
prevent the beer from going flat.
If the fermentation tanks have cooling jackets on
them, as opposed to the whole fermentation cellar being cooled,
conditioning can take place in the same tank as fermentation.
Otherwise separate tanks (in a separate cellar) must be
employed.
Filtering
Filtering the beer stabilizes the flavour, and
gives beer its polished shine and brilliance. Not all beer is
filtered. When tax determination is required by local laws, it is
typically done at this stage in a calibrated tank.
Filters come in many types. Many use pre-made
filtration media such as sheets or candles, while others use a fine
powder made of, for example,
diatomaceous
earth, also called kieselguhr, which is introduced into the
beer and recirculated past screens to form a filtration bed.
Filters range from rough filters that remove much
of the yeast and any solids (e.g. hops, grain particles) left in
the beer, to filters tight enough to strain color and body from the
beer. Normally used filtration ratings are divided into rough, fine
and sterile. Rough filtration leaves some cloudiness in the beer,
but it is noticeably clearer than unfiltered beer. Fine filtration
gives a glass of beer that you could read a newspaper through, with
no noticeable cloudiness. Finally, as its name implies, sterile
filtration is fine enough that almost all microorganisms in the
beer are removed during the filtration process.
Packaging
Packaging is putting the beer into the containers
in which it will leave the brewery. Typically this means in labeled
bottles,
kegs and
casks, but it might include bulk
tanks for high-volume customers.
Some brewery descriptions
Breweries range widely in the volume and variety
of beer produced, ranging from small breweries that produce a few
dozen
barrels a
year, to large regional breweries which supply a limited quantity
of quality products to the world such as
The Firehouse Brewing Company in San Diego, to massive
multinational conglomerates,like
Anheuser-Busch
in St. Louis or
InBev, that produce
hundreds of
millions of
barrels annually. Some commonly used descriptions of breweries are:
- Microbrewery
– A late 20th century name for a small brewery. The term
started to be replaced with craft brewer
at the start of the 21st century.
- Brewpub
– A brewery whose beer is brewed primarily on the same
site from which it is sold to the public, such as a pub or
restaurant. If the
amount of beer that a brewpub distributes off-site beer exceeds
75%, it may also be described as a craft or microbrewery.
- Contract brewing company or contract brewery – A
business that hires another brewery to produce its beer. The
contract brewing company generally handles all of the beers
marketing, sales, and distribution, while leaving the brewing and
packaging to the producer-brewery (which, confusingly, is also
sometimes referred to as a contract brewer).
- Regional
brewery – An established term for a brewery that
supplies beer in a fixed geographical location. With modern
distribution methods this term is falling out of use.
- Craft brewer – A term that is replacing microbrewery.
A craft brewery is a brewery which does not use adjuncts
and/or is considered to make craft beer.
- Macrobrewery or Megabrewery – Terms for a large
brewery, which sometimes carry a negative connotation.
- A brewmaster, or formerly braumeister, is a person who is in
charge of the production of beer. The major breweries employ engineers with a Chemistry/Biotechnology
background. The title of Brewmaster is given to a person after 2½
years of extra study in the art of brewing thus earning a degree
equivalent to a Master's
degree.
Craft Brewing in the United States
Before
Prohibition in
the
United
States, breweries were local institutions, with a few
exceptions. The costs involved in moving large quantities of beer
while maintaining its quality necessitated that beer be made near
where it was to be consumed. Prohibition, as could be expected,
closed most of the breweries in the United States, and the few that
were able to remain open by producing
near beer, malt
extract, yeast, and other beer-related products, were in an
advantageous position to produce and sell beer after the
repeal
of Prohibition. During the same period, advancements in
refrigeration and
motor vehicles enabled large regional and national breweries to
maintain product quality while being transported a greater
distance. These remaining breweries quickly became large enough to
be household names all over the nation, and concentrated mostly on
the style with the broadest appeal:
American
light lager. Local breweries, primarily producing niche beers,
were lost in America.
In 1978,
Jimmy Carter
signed into law a bill explicitly allowing people to brew beer for
private consumption. As the homebrewing movement grew, homebrewers
looked to re-create beers they had enjoyed in places with a more
varied beer assortment. The rise of imported beers and homebrewing
brought a demand for more beer styles, and locally brewed beer.
Answering this need, smaller breweries started popping up across
America, and a whole industry grew around the
microbrewing industry. Many
of these startup microbreweries, have since grown into major
regional breweries in their own right.
Portland,
Oregon has earned the name "Beervana", with more breweries than
any other city in the world: 33 just within the city limits. The
McMenamin
brothers alone have over thirty brewpubs, distilleries and wineries
scattered throughout the metropolitan area, many in renovated
theaters and other old buildings otherwise destined for demolition.
Other notable Portland brewers include
Widmer
Brothers, Bridgeport Brewing Company and the
MacTarnahan's Brewing Company. In 1999, "beerhunter" and author
Michael Jackson called Portland a candidate for the beer capital of
the world because the city boasted more breweries than
Cologne,
Germany.
San
Diego, California has become the "21st Century Craft Beer
Capitol of the world" with more craft beer growth since 2000 than
any other city in the world. Major successes include Alesmith and
Pizza Port which have won beer awards around the area. The most
notable success has been the San Diego based "Firehouse Brewing
Company" which has seen more growth in the last three years than
any other regional brewery.
brewery in Bulgarian: Пивоварна
brewery in Czech: Pivovar
brewery in Danish: Bryggeri
brewery in German: Brauerei
brewery in French: Brasserie
brewery in Indonesian: Brewery
brewery in Italian: Birrificio
brewery in Luxembourgish: Brauerei
brewery in Dutch: Brouwerij
brewery in Japanese: ブルワリー
brewery in Norwegian: Bryggeri
brewery in Polish: Browar
brewery in Portuguese: Cervejaria
brewery in Russian: Пивоваренная компания
brewery in Simple English: Brewery
brewery in Slovak: Pivovar
brewery in Finnish: Panimo
brewery in Swedish: Bryggeri
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