Terms Flashcards
(132 cards)
Additive
Enzymes, preservatives and antioxidants which are added to simplify the brewing process or prolong shelf life.
Acetaldehyde
Green apple aroma, a byproduct of fermentation.
Adjunct
Fermentable material used as a substitute for traditional grains, to make beer lighter-bodied or cheaper.
Aerobic
An organism, such as top fermenting ale yeast, that needs oxygen to metabolize.
Alcohol
Ethyl alcohol or ethanol. An intoxicating by-product of fermentation, which is caused by yeast acting on sugars in the malt. Alcohol content is expressed as a percentage of volume or weight.
Alcohol by weight
Amount of alcohol in beer measured in terms of the percentage weight of alcohol per volume of beer, i.e., 3.2% alcohol by weights equals 3.2 grams of alcohol per 100 centiliters of beer. (It is approximately 20% less than alcohol by volume.)
Alcohol by volume
Amount of alcohol in beer in terms of percentage volume of alcohol per volume of beer.
Alcoholic
Warming taste of ethanol and higher alcohol’s.
Ale
Beers distinguished by use of top fermenting yeast strains, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The top fermenting yeast perform at warmer temperatures than do yeast’s used to brew lager beer, and their byproducts are more evident in taste and aroma. Fruitiness and esters are often part of an ale’s character.
All-malt
A relatively new term in America. “All malt” refers to a beer made exclusively with barley malt and without adjuncts.
Amber
Any top or bottom fermented beer having an amber color, that is, between pale and dark.
Anaerobic
An organism, such as a bottom-fermenting lager yeast, that is able to metabolize without oxygen present.
Aroma Hops
Varieties of hop chosen to impart bouquet. (See Hops)
Astringent
A drying, puckering taste; tannic; can be derived from boiling the grains, long mashes, over sparging or sparging with hard water.
Attenuation
Extent to which yeast consumes fermentable sugars (converting them into alcohol and carbon dioxide).
Bacterial
A general term covering off-flavors such as moldy, musty, woody, lactic acid, vinegar, or microbiological spoilage.
Balling Degrees
Scale indicating density of sugars in wort. Devised by C J N Balling.
Barley
A cereal grain that is malted for use in the grist that becomes the mash in the brewing of beer.
Barrel
A unit of measurement used by brewers in some countries. In Britain, a barrel holds 36 imperial gallons (1 imperial gallon = 4.5 liters), or 1.63 hectoliters. In the United States, a barrel holds 31.5 US gallons (1 US gallon = 3.8 liters), or 1.17 hectoliters.
Beer
Name given alcohol-containing beverages produced by fermenting grain, specifically malt, and flavored with hops.
Bitter
Bitterness of hops or malt husks; sensation on back of tongue.
Bitterness
The perception of a bitter flavor, in beer from iso-alpha-acid in solution (derived from hops). It is measured in International Bitterness Units (IBU).
Black malt
Partially malted barley roasted at high temperatures. Black malt gives a dark color and roasted flavor to beer.
Body
Thickness and mouth-filling property of a beer described as “full or thin bodied”.