Team:TU Munich/Project/Brewing
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#'''(1A)''' We start by filling 20 l of water in a steel pot and heating it to about 50 °C and then add 4-5 kg malt. If you are in possession of a special bag for mash, a so called "Maischesack", you can fill the malt in the bag and hang it into the pot. Mind that the bag should not touch the bottom of the pot as this could lead to burning of the bag and result in a slightly burned taste. | #'''(1A)''' We start by filling 20 l of water in a steel pot and heating it to about 50 °C and then add 4-5 kg malt. If you are in possession of a special bag for mash, a so called "Maischesack", you can fill the malt in the bag and hang it into the pot. Mind that the bag should not touch the bottom of the pot as this could lead to burning of the bag and result in a slightly burned taste. | ||
- | #'''(1B)''' We keep up the temperature of 50 °C and continuously stir the mixture for 30 minutes. During these 30 minutes proteases will decompose proteins contained in the shredded malt. After those 30 minutes we heat the mixture to 63 °C and keep | + | #'''(1B)''' We keep up the temperature of 50 °C and continuously stir the mixture for 30 minutes. During these 30 minutes proteases will decompose proteins contained in the shredded malt. After those 30 minutes we heat the mixture to 63 °C and keep this temperature up for 60 minutes. Subsequently we heat to 73 °C and keep stirring continuously.[[file:TUM12_Beer_iodine.png|300px|right|thumb|'''Figure 4.''' Four succeeding samples from an iodine test]][[file:TUM12_Beer_degree_determ.png|300px|right|thumb|'''Figure 3.''' Measurement of original wort]] |
#'''(1C)''' The next step is the iodine test to verify whether starch was completely converted to sugar. We remove a small sample of mash and add iodine. A resulting blue-violet coloring indicates that there is still some leftover starch so the temperature of 73°C is kept up and this step is repeated until no staining is visible.<br> As soon as the iodine does not cause any stain the mash is heated to 78 °C for 90 minutes - again under continuous stirring. | #'''(1C)''' The next step is the iodine test to verify whether starch was completely converted to sugar. We remove a small sample of mash and add iodine. A resulting blue-violet coloring indicates that there is still some leftover starch so the temperature of 73°C is kept up and this step is repeated until no staining is visible.<br> As soon as the iodine does not cause any stain the mash is heated to 78 °C for 90 minutes - again under continuous stirring. | ||
#'''(1D/E)''' The next step in the procedure is the lautering: a lautering cloth is strained over the opening of a large plastic pot and all the mash is filtered through this cloth. As all the malt will be filtered out in this step the lautering cloth needs to be well fixated to the plastic pot as it will need to carry weights of up to 5 kg. | #'''(1D/E)''' The next step in the procedure is the lautering: a lautering cloth is strained over the opening of a large plastic pot and all the mash is filtered through this cloth. As all the malt will be filtered out in this step the lautering cloth needs to be well fixated to the plastic pot as it will need to carry weights of up to 5 kg. |
Revision as of 17:44, 21 October 2012
Contents |
Brewing
Contrary to popular opinion the chief ingredient of beer is not YPD but gyle, a carefully prepared mixture of malt, hop and water. Although the name of the yeast strain commonly used in the lab, S. cerevisiae, suggests that it is used in the beer brewing process, the yeast strains generally employed in brewing process have strongly adapted to gyle, as they are reutilized in every succeeding brewing cycle. Hence some investigation on how our yeast performs in gyle was necessary.
Our experiments show that the growth of several different yeast strains is not impaired in gyle!
Expression assays proved the necessity of genome integration for a proper SynBio Beer.
The Brewing Process
Preparation of the Mash
- (1A) We start by filling 20 l of water in a steel pot and heating it to about 50 °C and then add 4-5 kg malt. If you are in possession of a special bag for mash, a so called "Maischesack", you can fill the malt in the bag and hang it into the pot. Mind that the bag should not touch the bottom of the pot as this could lead to burning of the bag and result in a slightly burned taste.
- (1B) We keep up the temperature of 50 °C and continuously stir the mixture for 30 minutes. During these 30 minutes proteases will decompose proteins contained in the shredded malt. After those 30 minutes we heat the mixture to 63 °C and keep this temperature up for 60 minutes. Subsequently we heat to 73 °C and keep stirring continuously.
- (1C) The next step is the iodine test to verify whether starch was completely converted to sugar. We remove a small sample of mash and add iodine. A resulting blue-violet coloring indicates that there is still some leftover starch so the temperature of 73°C is kept up and this step is repeated until no staining is visible.
As soon as the iodine does not cause any stain the mash is heated to 78 °C for 90 minutes - again under continuous stirring. - (1D/E) The next step in the procedure is the lautering: a lautering cloth is strained over the opening of a large plastic pot and all the mash is filtered through this cloth. As all the malt will be filtered out in this step the lautering cloth needs to be well fixated to the plastic pot as it will need to carry weights of up to 5 kg.
- (3A-C) The filtrate, the so called gyle, should now have a wort of about 12 %. The wort is measured with the help of a refractometer or a hydrometer. If the target of 12 % is not reached, hot water should be filtered through the mash and the lautering cloth until 12 % wort are attained.
- (1F) Eventually the mash should be filled back into the steel pot, after carefully cleaning it.
Brewing the beer
- After heating the gyle to 100 °C, 30-40 gram of hops are added. The best results are obtained when the hop is not directly added to the gyle but filled in a small bag with small stones and then thrown into the gyle.
- The temperature of 100 °C should be kept up for 60 minutes. During this time the plastic pot should be cleaned and sterilized. The lautering cloth should also be cleaned, using boiling water.
- Now another filtration step is necessary which is exactly the same as step 4 above although this time every utensil employed needs to be kept sterile.
- The plastic pot should now be stored in a cold place where the gyle can cool down. Speeding up this procedure as long as the gyle is kept sterile is highly advised.
- The following steps depend heavily on type of yeast that will be used.
- As S. cerevisiae is a bottom-fermenting yeast the gyle should have a temperature of about 10 °C. From now on all temperatures should be checked regularly as heat is generated during the fermentation process.
- When the target temperature is attained the yeast is added and the gyle is stirred to homogeneously spread the yeast in the gyle. The plastic pot should be closed with a cap (not air-tight!) and stored for 24 h at about 20 °C.
- When working with a fermenting tube it should now be attached to the cap and filled with boiling water. This should close the pot air-tight.
- Now the beer should be stored for 8-11 days until no more bubbles are visible on top of the gyle. This will conclude the brewing process.
- The finished beer can now be filled in bottles. Pay attention that no yeast is dispersed from the bottom of the pot! When working with transgenic yeast, sterile filtering should be used to assure that no transgenic yeast enters the bottle!
Results
Experiment 1: Survival and growth of different yeast strains under various conditions
To ensure that our yeast strain INVSc grows in a medium which is typical for the brewing process we set up an experiment with different conditions.
We compared the growth rate of the laboratory yeast INVSc to a yeast strain, which is typically used for brewing beer and to a yeast strain, which can be purchased at a normal supermarket. We inoculated those three strains with the same OD in three different mediums: gyle with and without hop, and the typically laboratory medium YPD, which we used for all our expression experiments. The growth rate was measured after a defined time period by measuring the OD at 600 nm.
The results show no difference in the growth behavior. Neither the three different strains grew unequal in the same medium, nor the various mediums had an effect on the growth rate of the yeast strains. This experimental proof of principle shows the ability of our genetically modified yeast to grow in the given environment in an adequate amount we will need for our experiments. Hence we do not have to switch to a specialized brewing yeast for our brewing experiments.
Experiment 2: Experiments with expression cassettes on a transient transfected vector
A first attempt to use our genetically engineered yeasts to brew a SynBio Beer was conducted using a transient transfection with a constitutive promoter. The drawback is that in gyle the selection pressure is not preserved and the loss of the plasmid is possible.
Three liters of gyle were inoculated with 100 ml of a stationary yeast culture grown in YPD that was transiently transfected with a plasmid harboring a constitutive expression cassette for the limonene synthase.
We analyzed this first beer for limonene content via headspace (SPME needle) GC-MS. Unfortunately, we could not yet proof a significant difference between the beer containing limonene and the negative control beer. This might be due to a loss of the plasmid which encodes limonene synthase. We will try to integrate the limonene synthase expression cassette into the genome of yeast and afterwards we will repeat the experiment.