Malt Explained

Malt is any cereal grain that has been made to germinate by soaking in water and then stopped from germinating further by drying with hot air, a process known as "malting".[1] [2] [3] [4] Malted grain is used to make beer, whisky, malted milk, malt vinegar, confections such as Maltesers and Whoppers, flavored drinks such as Horlicks, Ovaltine, and Milo, and some baked goods, such as malt loaf, bagels, and Rich Tea biscuits. Malted grain that has been ground into a coarse meal is known as "sweet meal".[5] [6]

Malting grain develops the enzymes (α-amylase, β-amylase) required for modifying the grains' starches into various types of sugar, including monosaccharide glucose, disaccharide maltose, trisaccharide maltotriose, and higher sugars called maltodextrines. It also develops other enzymes, such as proteases, that break down the proteins in the grain into forms that can be used by yeast. The point at which the malting process is stopped affects the starch-to-enzyme ratio, and partly converted starch becomes fermentable sugars.

Malt also contains small amounts of other sugars, such as sucrose and fructose, which are not products of starch modification, but which are already in the grain. Further conversion to fermentable sugars is achieved during the mashing process.

Various cereals are malted, though barley is the most common. A high-protein form of malted barley is often a label-listed ingredient in blended flours typically used in the manufacture of yeast bread and other baked goods.[7] The term "malt" refers to several products of the process: the grains to which this process has been applied, for example, malted barley; the sugar, heavy in maltose, derived from such grains, such as the baker's malt used in various breakfast cereals; single malt whisky, often called simply "single malt"; or a product based on malted milk, similar to a malted milkshake (i.e. "malts").

History and traditional usage

Malted grains have probably been used as an ingredient of beer since ancient times, for example in Egypt (Ancient Egyptian cuisine), Sumer, and China.

In Persian countries, a sweet paste made entirely from germinated wheat is called samanū (Persian: سمنو) in Iran, samanak (Persian: سمنک) in Afghanistan, (Tajik: суманак); (Uzbek: sumalak) or sümölök (Kirghiz; Kyrgyz: сүмөлөк), which is prepared for Nowruz (Persian new year celebration) in a large pot (like a kazan). A plate or bowl of samanu is a traditional component of the Haft sin table symbolising affluence. Traditionally, women have a special party to prepare it during the night, and cook it from late in the evening until the daylight, singing related songs. In Tajikistan and Afghanistan, they sing: Samanak dar Jūsh u mā Kafcha zanēm – Dīgarān dar Khwāb u mā Dafcha zanēm[8] [9] (meaning: "Samanak is boiling and we are stirring it, others are asleep and we are playing daf"). In modern times, making samanu can be a family gathering. It originally comes from the Great Persian Empire.

Mämmi, or Easter Porridge, is a traditional Finnish Lenten food. Cooked from rye malt and flour, mämmi has a great resemblance (in the recipe, color, and taste) to samanū. Today, this product is available in shops from February until Easter. A (nonrepresentative) survey in 2013 showed that almost no one cooks mämmi at home in modern-day Finland.[10]

Malting

See main article: Malting.

Malting is the process of converting barley or other cereal grains into malt for use in brewing, distilling, or foods, and takes place in a maltings, sometimes called a malthouse, or a malting floor. The cereal is spread out on the malting floor in a layer of 8to depth.[11]

Drying
  • The malting process starts with drying the grains to a moisture content below 14% and then storing for around six weeks to overcome seed dormancy.
    Steeping
  • When ready, the grain is immersed or steeped in water two or three times for two or three days to allow the grain to absorb moisture and to start to sprout.
    Germination
  • When the grain has a moisture content of around 46%, it is transferred to the malting or germination floor, where it is constantly turned over for about four to six days while it is air-dried.[12]
    Pre-toasting
  • The grain at this point, called "green malt", is then dried and toasted in an oven (or kiln) to the desired color and specification.[13] Malts range in color from very pale through crystal and amber to chocolate or black malts.[14]
    Smoking
  • The sprouted grain is then further dried and smoked by spreading it on a perforated wooden floor. Smoke coming from an oasting fireplace (via smoke channels) is then used to heat the wooden floor and the sprouted grains. The temperature is usually around 55C.

    A "maltings" is typically a long, single-storey building with a floor that slopes slightly from one end of the building to the other. Floor maltings began to be phased out in the 1940s in favor of "pneumatic plants", where large industrial fans are used to blow air through the germinating grain beds and to pass hot air through the malt being kilned. Like floor maltings, these pneumatic plants use batch processes, but of considerably greater size, typically 100-ton batches compared with 20-ton batches floor maltings.

    , the largest malting operation in the world was Malteurop, which operates in 14 countries.[15]

    Production

    Barley is the most commonly malted grain, in part because of its high content of enzymes, though wheat, rye, oats, rice, and corn are also used.[16] Also very important is the retention of the grain's husk, even after threshing, unlike the bare seeds of threshed wheat or rye. This protects the growing acrospire (developing plant embryo) from damage during malting, which can easily lead to mold growth; it also allows the mash of converted grain to create a filter bed during lautering.

    Malts

    Diastatic and nondiastatic

    As all grains sprout, natural enzymes within the grain break down the starch of which the grain is composed into simpler sugars, which taste sweet and are easier for yeast to use as food. Malt with active enzymes is called "diastatic malt". Malt with inactive enzymes is called "nondiastatic malt". The enzymes are deactivated by heating the malt.

    Base and specialty

    See also: Mash ingredients. Malt is often divided into two categories by brewers: base malts and specialty malts.

    Base malts have enough diastatic power to convert their own starch and usually, that of some amount of starch from unmalted grain, called adjuncts.

    Specialty malts have little diastatic power, but provide flavor, color, or "body" (viscosity) to the finished beer. Specialty caramel or crystal malts have been subjected to heat treatment to convert their starches to sugars nonenzymatically. Within these categories is a variety of types distinguished largely by the kilning temperature.

    Two-row and six-row

    In addition, barley malts are distinguished by the two major cultivar types of barley used for malting, two-row, and six-row.[17] [18]

    Malt extract

    Malt extract, also known as extract of malt, is a sweet, treacle-like substance used as a dietary supplement.[19] It was popular in the first half of the 20th century as a nutritional enhancer for the children of the British urban working class, whose diet was often deficient in vitamins and minerals. Children were given cod liver oil for the same reason, but it proved so unpalatable that it was combined with extract of malt to produce "Malt and Cod-Liver Oil."

    The 1907 British Pharmaceutical Codexs instructions for making a nutritional extract of malt do not include a mashout at the end of extraction and include the use of lower mash temperatures than is typical with modern beer-brewing practices. The Codex indicates that diastatic activity is to be preserved by the use of temperatures not exceeding 55C.

    Malt extract production

    Malt extract is frequently used in the brewing of beer. Its production begins by germinating barley grain in a process known as malting, immersing barley in water to encourage the grain to sprout, then drying it to halt the progress when the sprouting begins. The drying step stops the sprouting, but the enzymes remain active due to the low temperatures used in base malt production.[20] In one before-and-after comparison, malting decreased barley's extractable starch content by about 7% on a dry matter basis and turned that portion into various other carbohydrates.[21]

    In the next step, brewers use a process called mashing to extract the sugars. Brewers warm cracked malt in temperature-modulated water, activating the enzymes,[22] which cleave more of the malt's remaining starch into various sugars, the largest percentage of which is maltose. Modern beer-mashing practices typically include high enough temperatures at mash-out to deactivate remaining enzymes, thus it is no longer diastatic. The liquid produced from this, wort, is then concentrated by using heat or a vacuum procedure to evaporate water from the mixture. The concentrated wort is called malt extract.

    Malt extract types

    Two forms of malt extract are used by brewers: liquid malt extract (LME), containing about 20% water, and dry malt extract (DME), dehydrated to 2% water. LME is a thick syrup that typically gives off more pleasant flavors than its counterpart, while DME provides better consistency in color. When using large amounts of extract, LME is typically used because its ability to dissolve in boiling temperatures, whereas DME can clump up and become difficult to liquefy. However, those in favor of DME, enjoy its longer shelf life.[23] LME is also sold in jars as a consumer product.

    A new encapsulating technology permits the production of malt granules. This process dries and coats layers of wort such that flavoring substances within the original wort are not volatilized during storage or transport, further extending shelf life, and reducing dust during handling. This new process may allow for more centralized and standardized production of the extract than what would have been traditionally prepared at individual breweries.[24]

    Research

    Scientists aim to discover what happens inside barley grains as they become malted to help plant breeders produce better malting barley for food and beverage products. The United States Agricultural Research Service scientists are interested in specialized enzymes called serine-class proteases[25] that digest beta-amylases, which convert carbohydrates into "simple sugars" during the sprouting process.[26] The enzyme also breaks down stored proteins into their amino-acid derivatives. The balance of proteins and carbohydrates broken down by the enzyme affects the malt's flavor.

    Enzyme-rich malt extract

    Enzyme-rich malt extract (ERME) is a specialised form of barley malt extract (marketed by Ateria Health[27]), that has undergone preparation to activate the natural amylase and glucanase enzymes in the grain. Initially researched as an equine food supplement,[28] [29] pilot studies using ERME as a human food supplement have suggested that it could potentially improve the symptoms of Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) and chronic constipation,[30] due to the way it can break down carbohydrates in the small intestine that IBS has been found to hinder.[31] However further research is ongoing to fully prove this link.[32] [33]

    See also

    Further reading

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: How to brew manually by John Palmer . 6 October 2014.
    2. News: Quality Factors for Malting, Brewing and other End-uses . Oregon State University . 13 April 2007 . 4 October 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171004195239/http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/css/330/five/BarleyOverview.htm#BarleyMaltingQuality . dead .
    3. Web site: What is malting? . 6 October 2014.
    4. Book: Kirk-Othmer Food and Feed Technology . Wiley-Interscience . 2007 . 978-0-470-17448-7 . New York . 116–120 . 7 July 2010.
    5. Book: Horace Kephart . Our southern highlanders . The Macmillan Company . 1922 . eBook . New York . 134 . The sprouted corn is then dried and ground into meal. This sweet meal is then made into a mush with boiling water, and is let stand two or three days. . 10 April 2011.
    6. Book: Mills, Margaret H. . South Asian folklore: an encyclopedia: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka . Claus, Peter J. . Diamond, Sarah . Routledge . 2003 . 0-415-93919-4 . New York . 5 . The grain's own conversion of stored starch to sugar while sprouting ('malting') results in a sweet meal, which is then cooked for hours with water, oil, and additional wheat flour. . 10 April 2011.
    7. Book: Evers, A. D. . Technology of cereals: an introduction for students of food science and agriculture . Kent, N. . Pergamon Press . 1994 . 0-08-040834-6 . New York . 181 . 7 July 2010.
    8. Web site: Nowruz in Afghanistan, BBC Persian . 6 October 2014 . Persian.
    9. Web site: 24 ساعت – نو روز باستانی در کشور عزیز ما افغانستان . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160307072245/http://www.24sahat.com/archive/content/view/78/14/ . 2016-03-07 . 27 March 2013 . 24sahat.com.
    10. http://pap-tasters.blogspot.fi/2013/03/how-to-tame-your-mammi.html"How to tame your mämmi?
    11. Web site: Malting – Whisky.com . www.whisky.com.
    12. Web site: UK Malt, the Maltsters' Association of Great Britain How malt is made . 24 February 2019 . www.ukmalt.com.
    13. Web site: How Malt is Made . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110717150131/http://www.ukmalt.com/howmaltismade/maltmade.asp . 17 July 2011 . 26 March 2011 . www.ukmalt.com.
    14. Book: Michael Lewis . Brewing . Tom W. Young . 31 October 2002 . Springer, 2002 . 9780306472749 . 204 . 26 March 2011.
    15. News: 4 January 2015 . Bad barley crop probably won't affect beer prices . . .
    16. Web site: Wheat and Rye Malt Use in Brewing Beer. . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130524231915/http://www.beer-brewing.com/beer-brewing/barley_malts/other_malted_grains.htm . 24 May 2013 . 26 March 2011 . www.beer-brewing.com.
    17. Goldhammer, Ted (2008), The Brewer's Handbook, 2nd ed., Apex,, p. 31 ff.
    18. "Two-Row vs Six-Row Barley". Zymurgy, 1 May 2013, American Homebrewers Association. Retrieved 7 October 2020
    19. Book: British pharmaceutical codex . Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain . 1907 . 401–404 . The extract is given to children and adults for its nutritive properties. ... Extract of malt is used as a vehicle for the administration of cod-liver oil (see Extractum Malti cum Oleo Morrhuae), ... . 28 March 2011.
    20. Book: Joseph La Villa . The Wine, Beer, and Spirits Handbook: A Guide to Styles and Service . John Wiley & Sons, Inc. . 2010 . 978-0-470-53757-2 . 347 . The base malt in any brewing process is called pale malt. It is dried at around 122°F. Specialty malts are made either by heating the barley before it is dry or by roasting the dried malt. . 30 March 2011.
    21. Book: Stevens, Roger . Brewing: science and practice . Dennis E. Briggs . Chris Boulton . Brookes, Peter . Woodhead . 2004 . 0-8493-2547-1 . Cambridge . 123 . 29 March 2011. See tables 4.15 & 4.16
    22. Web site: How to Brew – By John Palmer – Mashing Defined . 28 March 2011.
    23. Web site: DME vs LME . 2022-08-18 . www.urbanbrewers.com.
    24. Web site: Patent EP1385931 Malt Granules . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121002225623/http://www.freepatentsonline.com/EP1385931.html . 2 October 2012 . 25 May 2009 . www.freepatentsonline.com.
    25. Web site: 2 February 2010 . Like Malt? You'll Love This Malting Barley Research! . USDA Agricultural Research Service.
    26. Web site: 3 February 2010 . Secrets to Superb Malting Barleys Explored by ARS Researchers . 7 March 2011 . USDA Agricultural Research Service.
    27. Web site: Our Ingredient – Ateria Health Ltd . 2023-10-11 . ateriahealth.com.
    28. Hunter . JO . 2009 . Do horses suffer from irritable bowel syndrome? . Equine Veterinary Journal . 41 . 9 . 836–40. 10.2746/042516409X474284 . 20383978 .
    29. Proudman . C. J. . Hunter . J. O. . Darby . A. C. . Escalona . E. E. . Batty . C. . Turner . C. . June 2014 . 2014 . Characterisation of the faecal metabolome and microbiome of Thoroughbred racehorses . Equine Veterinary Journal . en . 47 . 5 . 580–586 . 10.1111/evj.12324 . 25041526 . 1473275 . 0425-1644.
    30. Haworth . Jordan . Bloor . Sarah . Hobson . Anthony . June 2022 . June 2022 . P230 Open label pilot study: an enzyme-rich malt extract (ERME™) for the treatment of chronic constipation . . BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Society of Gastroenterology . 71 . Suppl 1 . A153.1–A153 . 10.1136/gutjnl-2022-BSG.284. 249904295 .
    31. King . TS . Elia . M . Hunter . JO . 1998 . October 10, 1998 . Abnormal colonic fermentation in irritable bowel syndrome . The Lancet . 352 . 9135 . 1187–1189 . 10.1016/s0140-6736(98)02146-1 . 9777836 . 1750363 . 0140-6736.
    32. Can an enzyme-rich malt extract improve the symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome? . Cunningham . Andrew . ISRCTN . 10.1186/isrctn14173715 . en . free .
    33. Web site: Edith Cowan University . Perth . 2021-04-06 . Does Enzyme Rich Malt Extract improve symptoms and quality of life for those with Irritable Bowel Syndrome? . 2023-10-03 . ECU . en-AU.