An overview of farmhouse brewing in Norway, both as it exists today, and as it was historically. Extra information on the unique Norwegian yeast cultures that still survive.
Never too soon to go sour - sour beer homebrewing ideasGail Williams
Brewing sour beer at home. From a presentation for the San Francisco Homebrewers Guild. Tidbits about Lambics, pLambics, Brettanomyces, 100% Brett beers, Pediococcus and sick beer, blending your sour ales, and more.
An overview of farmhouse brewing in Norway, both as it exists today, and as it was historically. Extra information on the unique Norwegian yeast cultures that still survive.
Never too soon to go sour - sour beer homebrewing ideasGail Williams
Brewing sour beer at home. From a presentation for the San Francisco Homebrewers Guild. Tidbits about Lambics, pLambics, Brettanomyces, 100% Brett beers, Pediococcus and sick beer, blending your sour ales, and more.
Our spirits are distinct, and exceptional, because of our commitment to perfection.
Other brands may utilize similar ingredients, but Purity takes the process, and distillation methods, much further. As a family-owned business, all of our spirits begin in our handmade 600-liter copper still which can be found at the 13th century Ellinge Castle in Southern Sweden. Here, our Master Distiller uses only select, organic ingredients to slowly distill each batch until the heart of the spirit has the required character and complexity.
This handcrafted, time-consuming approach is necessary to create spirits that are refined enough to be considered ‘best in class’. Each bottle produced is then numbered, recognizing its small batch heritage, reflecting the award-winning spirit inside.
The presentation talked about the history of the spirit Gin , the time Gin was made , the main ingredients , which cocktail can use Gin , and the video of the making process of Bombay Shapphire
http://www.gloucestercounty-va.com Some really good history on distilling alcohol and how it was done in the good old days. The art and science of it. 1809 eBook. Free to download.
Following mankind's taste for alcohol from eating fermented fruit through the development of wine and up the present time of craft beers and botanical gins.
Our spirits are distinct, and exceptional, because of our commitment to perfection.
Other brands may utilize similar ingredients, but Purity takes the process, and distillation methods, much further. As a family-owned business, all of our spirits begin in our handmade 600-liter copper still which can be found at the 13th century Ellinge Castle in Southern Sweden. Here, our Master Distiller uses only select, organic ingredients to slowly distill each batch until the heart of the spirit has the required character and complexity.
This handcrafted, time-consuming approach is necessary to create spirits that are refined enough to be considered ‘best in class’. Each bottle produced is then numbered, recognizing its small batch heritage, reflecting the award-winning spirit inside.
The presentation talked about the history of the spirit Gin , the time Gin was made , the main ingredients , which cocktail can use Gin , and the video of the making process of Bombay Shapphire
http://www.gloucestercounty-va.com Some really good history on distilling alcohol and how it was done in the good old days. The art and science of it. 1809 eBook. Free to download.
Following mankind's taste for alcohol from eating fermented fruit through the development of wine and up the present time of craft beers and botanical gins.
Schibsted collects and analyzes 900 million events/day using AWS. This presentation gives an overview of the systems and architecture, including the solutions to GDPR.
NoSQL databases were created to solve scalability problems with SQL databases. It turns out these problems are profoundly connected with Einstein's theory of relativity (no, honestly), and understanding this illuminates the SQL/NoSQL divide in surprising ways.
NoSQL databases, the CAP theorem, and the theory of relativityLars Marius Garshol
A presentation showing how the CAP theorem causes NoSQL databases to have BASE semantics. That is, they don't support ACID consistency. Then shows how CAP is related to Einstein's theory of relativity. And finally shows how Google Spanner and F1 provide ACID that scales.
Hotel management involves overseeing all aspects of a hotel's operations to ensure smooth functioning and exceptional guest experiences. This multifaceted role includes tasks such as managing staff, handling reservations, maintaining facilities, overseeing finances, and implementing marketing strategies to attract guests. Effective hotel management requires strong leadership, communication, organizational, and problem-solving skills to navigate the complexities of the hospitality industry and ensure guest satisfaction while maximizing profitability.
Vietnam Mushroom Market Growth, Demand and Challenges of the Key Industry Pla...IMARC Group
The Vietnam mushroom market size is projected to exhibit a growth rate (CAGR) of 6.52% during 2024-2032.
More Info:- https://www.imarcgroup.com/vietnam-mushroom-market
Hamdard Laboratories (India), is a Unani pharmaceutical company in India (following the independence of India from Britain, "Hamdard" Unani branches were established in Bangladesh (erstwhile East Pakistan) and Pakistan). It was established in 1906 by Hakeem Hafiz Abdul Majeed in Delhi, and became
a waqf (non-profitable trust) in 1948. It is associated with Hamdard Foundation, a charitable educational trust.
Hamdard' is a compound word derived from Persian, which combines the words 'hum' (used in the sense of 'companion') and 'dard' (meaning 'pain'). 'Hamdard' thus means 'a companion in pain' and 'sympathizer in suffering'.
The goals of Hamdard were lofty; easing the suffering of the sick with healing herbs. With a simple tenet that no one has ever become poor by giving, Hakeem Abdul Majeed let the whole world find compassion in him.
They had always maintained that working in old, traditional ways would not be entirely fruitful. A broader outlook was essential for a continued and meaningful existence. their effective team at Hamdard helped the system gain its pride of place and thus they made an entry into an expansive world of discovery and research.
Hamdard Laboratories was founded in 1906 in Delhi by Hakeem Hafiz Abdul Majeed and Ansarullah Tabani, a Unani practitioner. The name Hamdard means "companion in suffering" in Urdu language.(itself borrowed from Persian) Hakim Hafiz Abdul Majeed was born in Pilibhit City UP, India in 1883 to Sheikh Rahim Bakhsh. He is said to have learnt the complete Quran Sharif by heart. He also studied the origin of Urdu and Persian languages. Subsequently, he acquired the highest degree in the unani system of medicine.
Hakim Hafiz Abdul Majeed got in touch with Hakim Zamal Khan, who had a keen interest in herbs and was famous for identifying medicinal plants. Having consulted with his wife, Abdul Majeed set up a herbal shop at Hauz Qazi in Delhi in 1906 and started to produce herbal medicine there. In 1920 the small herbal shop turned into a full-fledged production house.
Hamdard Foundation was created in 1964 to disburse the profits of the company to promote the interests of the society. All the profits of the company go to the foundation.
After Abdul Majeed's death, his son Hakeem Abdul Hameed took over the administration of Hamdard Laboratories at the age of fourteen.
Even with humble beginnings, the goals of Hamdard were lofty; easing the suffering of the sick with healing herbs. With a simple tenet that no one has ever become poor by giving, Hakeem Abdul Majeed let the whole world find compassion in him. Unfortunately, he passed away quite early but his wife, Rabia Begum, with the support of her son, Hakeem Abdul Hameed, not only kept the institution in existence but also expanded it. As he grew up, Hakeem Abdul Hameed took on all responsibilities. After helping with his younger brother's upbringing and education, he included him in running the institution. Both brothers Hakeem Abdul Hameed and Hakim Mohammed
3. Y E A S T S A R E F U N G I
• Humans and yeasts are eukaryotes
• Bacteria is something totally different
All life
Bacteria ArchaeaEukaryotes
Animals PlantsFungi
4. K I N D S O F Y E A S T S
Saccharomycetales
sugar fungi
Saccharomycetales
CandidaNakazawaea
? Saccharomycetaceae
Brettanomyces/
Dekkera
PichiaSaccharomyces
budding fungi
Nakazawaea
holstii
Brettanomyces
clausenii
Saccharomyces
cerevisiae
Saccharomyces
eubayanus
Saccharomyces
paradoxus
Saccharomyces
pastorianus
5. S A C C H A R O M Y C E S C E R E V I S I A E
• Porter
• IPA
• Kölsch
• Trippel
• Dubbel
• Hefeweizen
• Gose
• Bitter
• Altbier
• Saison
• Sahti
• Mild
• Stout
• Witbier
6. S A C C H A R O M Y C E S
P A S T O R I A N U S
• Bock
• Pilsner
• Helles
• Dunkel
• Baltisk porter
• Vienna
• Kellerbier
• American Lager
• Schwarzbier
• Rauchbier
7. T E M P E R A T U R E S
0° 20° 40°10° 30°
S A C C H A R O M Y C E S P A S T O R I A N U S
S A C C H A R O M Y C E S C E R E V I S I A E
L A C T O B A C I L L U S
Lager fermentation
11. S H A R I N G O F Y E A S T
• There was always a surplus of yeast
- brewing produced more yeast than people needed
• Farmhouse brewers borrowed from each other
• Commercial brewers did the same
• In 18th century Copenhagen, brewers were required to
give yeast to bakeries for free
12. L O U I S
P A S T E U R
• Proved that yeast was
alive
• Invented methods to get
rid of bacteria
• Introduced brewers to
microbiology methods
13. E M I L C H R .
H A N S E N
• Invented method to purify
yeast
• Invented an apparatus to
grow yeast safely
• Introduced the purified,
non-reused yeast
• Took over completely
within the 19th century
14. E X T I N C T I O N
1935
1940
1980
1975
1950
1990
1970
1950
16. F A M I L Y T R E E O F Y E A S T
Domestication and Divergence of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Beer Yeasts, Gallone et al., 2016, Cell 166, 1397–1410 September 8, 2016 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2016.08.020
17. R E U S E O F Y E A S T
• Gallone et al thinks reuse of yeast began late 16th
century
• Common ancestor of Beer 1 started diverging then
- Beer 2 likewise
• They claim this coincides with a shift to larger
breweries
18. T E C H N O L O G Y
• A piece of wood is enough
• Or a ring of straw
• And some knowledge
19. S I M P L E L O G I C
• Beer was usually brewed for feasts
- Christmas sacrifice, Christmas, childbirth, betrothal, freeing of
a slave, guilds, …
• With spontaneous fermentation result uncertain
- how could this be acceptable for an important feast?
- would the farmers gamble precious grain for a process that’s
so uncertain?
29. B A C T E R I A I N L A M B I C
The Microbial Diversity of Traditional
Spontaneously Fermented Lambic Beer,
Spitaels et al, PlosONE, April 18, 2014,
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0095384.
31. S A C C H A R O M Y C E S C E R E V I S I A E
• Grows fast
• Lowers pH in the wort
• Produces alcohol
• Consumes the oxygen
• Consumes the simple sugars
33. C H A N G E S I N B R E W E R ’ S Y E A S T
• Better at consuming maltotriose
• Can’t handle drying
• Higher alcohol tolerance
• Doesn’t make 4-vinyl-guaiacol (phenol)
• Flocculates better
34. E V O L U T I O N I N P R A C T I C E
• Maltotriose
• Alcohol tolerance
• Flocculation
35. P O F + A N D P O F -
• Wild yeasts are POF+, brewer’s yeast usually POF-
• Yeast does not need 4-vinyl-guaiacol
- makes it to get rid of harmful acids
• These acids exist in nature, but there’s little of them in beer
• Two genes responsible: PAD1 og FDC1
- Gallone et al found that these were disabled by “nonsense mutations”
• These mutations don’t give any benefits for surviving in wort
- humans have actively selected POF- yeasts
36. W H A T C A N L I V E I N B E E R ?
• Mold
• Bacteria
• Yeast
- rare yeast types
- Brettanomyces
- Saccharomyces
• Saccharomyces cerevisiae
• Wild yeast
• Domesticated yeast
• Saccharomyces pastorianus
• Saccharomyces paradoxus
• …
39. A N A L Y S I S B Y
• National Collection of Yeast Cultures (NCYC)
- Norwich, UK
- commercial company
- started by British breweries
- purpose: to preserve yeast cultures
• Escarpment Labs
- Guelph, Canada
- commercial vendor of yeast
40. K V E I K S
# Name Species POF
1 sigmund Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
3 Stranda Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
4 Muri Hybrid +
5 Raftevold Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
6 Lærdal Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
7 Granvin Saccharomyces cerevisiae & Pichia -
8 Sykkylven Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
9 Ebbegarden Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
10 Framgarden Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
11 Lida Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
12 Nupen Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
13 Årset Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
14 Eitrheim Saccharomyces cerevisiae -
41. T H E M U R I M Y S T E R Y
• Last brew at Muri farm in Olden was in 1991
- kveik dried and left in a farm storehouse
• Retrieved in 2014 by Bjarne Muri
- went through many rounds of washing before he got it to grow
• Gave it to Bryggselv
- sold commercially by White Labs as WLP 6788
42. T R I P L E H Y B R I D
• Only kveik that’s another species
• Only kveik that’s POF+
• Makes sulphur aroma - have to mature the beer for months
• Was the yeast dead? Did Bjarne Muri grow something from the air?
• Saccharomyces eubayanus never found in Europe
44. # 3 5 W O L L S Æ T E R
• From Hellesylt
- revived after 30 years by William Holden
- and by DeWayne Schaaf
• Results from the two attempts seem different
- looks like the yeast was dead
- and they probably grew something else
• Not 100% certain yet
45. S T R A I N S
• The kveiks contain more
than one strain
• Usually the strains are
very similar
• But not always …
46. M I X E S
• Sunnmøre and Nordfjord have a tradition for mixing
kveiks
• This is visible in analysis
• Many more strains
• Often large variation
47. S T R A I N S
# Name Strains Source
1 Sigmund 3
NCYC
2 Rivenes 7 NCYC
3 Stranda 1 NCYC
4 Muri 2 NCYC
5 Raftevold 8 NCYC
8 Sykkylven 10 NCYC
1
6
Simonaitis 5 NCYC
? ? 2 NCYC
? ? 6 NCYC
3
9
Marina 2 Escarpment
48. F E R M E N T A T I O N
T E M P E R A T U R E S
fermentation temperature in Celsius
number of
kveiks
51. F E R M E N T A T I O N
T E M P E R A T U R E S
number of
sources
fermentation temperature in Celsius
52. W H Y S O H O T ?
• During cooling temperature falls slower the lower you
get
- with old-fashioned methods and 150 liters this was slow
• Brewers were impatient
• The longer they waited, the greater the risk of infection
• The warmer you could ferment, the better
53. D R Y I N G
• Brewer’s yeast usually cannot be dried
• It loses this ability because it’s not needed
• Brewers keep it wet between brews
• But kveik can be dried - why?
57. F L O C C U L A T I O N
• Sigmund harvests from the bottom
- kveik flocculates very, very quickly
• Terje Raftevold harvests from the top
- kveik gathers like porridge on top of the wort
• Eitrheim family harvests wherever
- the kveik flocculates, but stick a spoon in it and it whirls up
58. F E R M E N T A T I O N T I M E
fermentation time in hours
brewers
59. G R O W T H S P E E D
• Saccharomyces cerevisiae 80 minutes
• Lactobacillus 25 minutes to several hundred
• The yeast usually grows faster than the bacteria
- the beer usually doesn’t sour before after a week
- at that time the yeast has already finished
• Harvesting the yeast early reduces the chances of infection
60. F E R M E N T A T I O N S P E E D
Data from Øyvind Løkling, Tilt Brewometer, Nøgne Ø Porter, fermented with #6 Lærdal
61. A T H E O R Y
• Several yeasts researchers say the different strains
need each other
- some might produce vitamins that the others need
• But pure cultures will also grow
• From Richard Preiss’s results it looks like the single
strains grow more slowly
- because the need the vitamins?
• Pure speculation so far
62. H O W T O B R E W W I T H K V E I K
• Use same temperature as the owner
• Short fermentation time
• Harvest the yeast the same way as the owner
• How to get the most flavour
- underpitch (compared with normal yeast)
- lots of oxygen!
68. T H E Y E A S T S
# Name Species POF
16 Simonaitis Saccharomyces cerevisiae +
X ? Saccharomyces cerevisiae + ?
X ? Saccharomyces cerevisiae ?
X ? Saccharomyces cerevisiae ?
X ? Nakazawaea holstii ?
X ? Brettanomyces + ?
69. K E E P I N G T H E Y E A S T
• Aldona Udriene, Jovaru Alus
- kept the yeast in a jar, buried in the ground
• Julius Simonaitis
- keeps the yeast in a jar in the well
• Lithuanians would brew when the barrel was empty
• Yeast probably can’t be dried
70. L I T H U A N I A N Y E A S T
• Doesn’t seem to be related to the Norwegian ones
• Handles high temperatures
• Much greater species variation
• Less tradition for sharing the yeast in Lithuania
- is that why?
77. T H E Y E A S T S
• #39 Marina
- pitched at 39
- both Saccharomyces and non-Saccharomyces
• #40 Rima
- contains mould, bacteria, and yeast
- both Saccharomyces and non-Saccharomyces
- makes good beer
79. “ K V E I K ”
• What should it mean?
- Farmhouse yeast?
- Norwegian farmhouse yeast?
- Farmhouse yeast from western Norway?
• Where does “gong” from Hallingdal fit?
80. K V E I K
• Definitely domesticated yeast, not wild
• In many ways a super-yeast
- high alcohol tolerance
- very fast fermentation
- extreme temperature tolerance
- can be dried
- new flavours
- easy to use
81. F A R M H O U S E Y E A S T
• It seems farmhouse yeasts all over Europe were
temperature tolerant
• They also don’t seem to be related
• Most modern yeasts descend from just 2 strains
• Is the modern yeast a deviant? And the kveik normal?
82. – J U S T I N A M A R A L ,
M A I N I A C A L B R E W I N G C O M P A N Y ,
U S
“I can't say enough good things about Kveik. They
are beasts.”
Gjæren var altså tilpasset varm temperatur. Og det ser vi på de forskjellige kveikstammene som er samlet. Men ikke tro at WLP 6788 gir appelsinaroma. Det gjør den ikke. De ulike kveikene er veldig forskjellige.