Analysis of beers from an 1840s' shipwreck.
John Londesborough, Michael Dresel, Brian Gibson, Riikka Juvonen, Ulla Holopainen, Atte Mikkelson, Tuulikki Seppänen-Laakso, Kaarina Viljanen, Hannele Virtanen, Arvi Wilpola, Thomas Hofmann, Annika Wilhelmson
Index: J. Agric. Food Chem. 63(9) , 2525-36, (2015)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Two bottles of beer from an about 170-year-old shipwreck (M1 Fö 403.3) near the Åland Islands in the Baltic Sea were analyzed. Hop components and their degradation compounds showed that the bottles contained two different beers, one more strongly hopped than the other. The hops used contained higher levels of β-acids than modern varieties and were added before the worts were boiled, converting α-acids to iso-α-acids and β-acids to hulupones. High levels of organic acids, carbonyl compounds, and glucose indicated extensive bacterial and enzyme activity during aging. However, concentrations of yeast-derived flavor compounds were similar to those of modern beers, except that 3-methylbutyl acetate was unusually low in both beers and 2-phenylethanol and possibly 2-phenylethyl acetate were unusually high in one beer. Concentrations of phenolic compounds were similar to those in modern lagers and ales.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2015-01-03
[Vaccine 33(2) , 346-53, (2014)]
2014-01-01
[BMC Biotechnol. 14 , 962, (2015)]
Process development for scum to biodiesel conversion.
2015-06-01
[Bioresour. Technol. 185 , 185-93, (2015)]
2015-06-01
[Bioresour. Technol. 185 , 49-55, (2015)]
Investigation of the interactions between the EphB2 receptor and SNEW peptide variants.
2014-12-01
[Growth Factors 32(6) , 236-46, (2014)]