The method is suitable for the determination of water vapor volatile aroma compounds in beer.
Volatile aroma compounds are driven out of the sample through steam distillation. The ethanolic distillate is saturated with NaCl. Potassium hydrogen sulfite is added to separate carbonyl groups that might interfere with the analysis. The extraction of the aroma compounds is performed by shaking out with dichloromethane and the phases separated by centrifuging.
The method is suitable for beer brewed to any original gravity or to any alcohol content.
Volatile compounds in beer are concentrated through distillation and extracted with dichloromethane. The solvent phase is analyzed with a gas chromatograph. The linearity of the detector and the determination of the concentrations of analytes in the sample are achieved by using multiple concentration levels within the relevant range and through evaluation of the relative area under the peaks.
Determination of organic acids by means of reversed phase chromatography/ion chromatography
This method is suitable for wine, fruit juice and other non-alcoholic beverages.
The organic acids are separated using two combined columns, reversed-phase HPLC and an ion exchange column and are then determined using a UV detector.
Determination of the total acidity through titration
This method is used to determine the total titratable acids in beverages and concentrates.
Titratable acidity represents the sum of the free acids present in a beverage, with the exception of the dissolved carbon dioxide (carbonic acid). In fruit juices and the beverages prepared from them, they usually consist of malic acid, citric acid and tartaric acid.
The titration of the degassed beverage sample (freed from carbonic acid) is carried out potentiometrically using 0.25 mol/l sodium hydroxide solution either to a pH of 7.0 calculated as tartaric acid or to a pH of 8.1 calculated as citric acid.
The method describes how to determine the iso-α-acids, α-acids and β-acids in hop extracts and isomerized extracts by means of high-pressure liquid chromatography.
Hop extract and isomerized hop extract intended for use in beer brewing or elsewhere in the food industry
Hop extracts and isomerized hop extracts are dissolved in methanol. The iso-α-acids, α-acids and β-acids are separated using hig-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) with gradient elution and measured spectrophotometrically at a wavelength of 270 nm (iso-α-acids) and 314 nm (α-acids and β-acids).
Applicable for malt (or the wort produced from it) and all (laboratory) worts
The analysis sample (e.g., Congress wort or wort from above the grain bed during lautering) undergoes a chemical reaction with an acetic acid/thiobarbituric acid solution; the resulting product is yellow in color and is measured spectrophotometrically.