Difference between revisions of "The Theory of Mashing"

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Mashing is the process in which the milled grain is mixed with water. This activates enzymes that were already present in the barley seed or have been formed during the malting process. These enzymes work best in particular temperature and pH ranges. By varying the temperature of the mash, the brewer has control over the enzyme activity. The following sections describe the enzymes that are more or less important for the mashing process.
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Mashing is the process in which the milled grain is mixed with water. This activates enzymes that were already present in the barley seed or have been formed during the malting process. These enzymes work best in particular temperature and pH ranges. By varying the temperature of the mash, the brewer has control over the enzyme activity. In essence, mashing needs to been seen as an extension of the malting process. The following sections describe the enzymes that are more or less important for the mashing process.  
  
 
==Starch converting enzymes (Beta Amylase, Alpha Amylase, Limit Dextrinase)==
 
==Starch converting enzymes (Beta Amylase, Alpha Amylase, Limit Dextrinase)==

Revision as of 02:15, 11 February 2007

Mashing is the process in which the milled grain is mixed with water. This activates enzymes that were already present in the barley seed or have been formed during the malting process. These enzymes work best in particular temperature and pH ranges. By varying the temperature of the mash, the brewer has control over the enzyme activity. In essence, mashing needs to been seen as an extension of the malting process. The following sections describe the enzymes that are more or less important for the mashing process.

Starch converting enzymes (Beta Amylase, Alpha Amylase, Limit Dextrinase)

This is from How to brew and needs replacing or a acknowledgement adding... It's just an example and place holder really.

Beta amylase works by hydrolyzing the straight chain bonds, but it can only work on "twig" ends of the chain, not the "root" end. It can only remove one (maltose) sugar unit at a time, so on amylose, it works sequentially. (A maltose unit is composed of two glucose units, by the way.) On an amylopectin, there are many ends available, and it can remove a lot of maltose very efficaciously (like a hedge trimmer). However, probably due to its size/structure, beta cannot get close to the branch joints. It will stop working about 3 glucoses away from a branch joint, leaving behind a "beta amylase limit dextrin."

Protein converting enzymes (Peptidase)

Other Enzymes active during mashing

Glucanase

Phosphatase

Maltase

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