Grain Profile
Grain: The foundation of beer
Grain does so much for beer: provides the food for the yeast, gives the color needed, adds flavors that can not be created any other way and much more. Using two-row grain in beers is a practice that the world has adopted for making great beers, yet for the most part, America is the only brewing community that uses six-row in their grain bill. Most countries use six-row only for their cattle and think that six-row is lesser of a grain, due to its mutation of one dominant and one recessive gene. In actuality, both two-row and six-row have been around for an extremely long time.
As times roll by, breweries have requested more from these two types of grain, therefore today these two types of grain are more similar than not. The biggest differences are on a smaller scale, such as kernel size, extract rates, protein amounts, enzymes and much more.
Morphology: "the study of living organism and the relationships between them".
Two-row kernels are structured in a symmetrical or even size therefore, they seem to absorb water at the same rate as well as, germinate and dry all typically at the same time. Due to this symmetrical size they are easy to grind in the two roller mill.
On the other hand, six-row has a symmetrical center yet the two lateral rows are a bit smaller, thinner and twisted slightly. Therefore, maltsters separate the different sizes of grain for the purpose of water absorption rates. The larger the brewery the less concerned the size of the grain really is, considering the systems that the larger breweries would have to mill their grains.
Malting: Adding water to grain to change unfermentables to fermentable sugars, then stopping the growth stage by drying the grain in a kiln, also for color and different flavors.
Egyptians discovered the benefits of malting, therefore created a simple yet effective way to produce malt for their alcohol beverages. Over time, malting became more refined and even more specialized. The malting process created different flavors with an array of types of grains.
Depending on the size of the malt is really what determines where the malt is going. The thickest malt grains tend to go to the brewers, the thin grains would be sent to the distilleries and the thinnest grains would be for feeding animals.
The size of grains in six-row continue to increase yet two-row is still larger. The yields still depend on the region yet typically are 1%-2% lower than two-row.
Six-Row Pros:
- It has more protein, less starch, and a thicker husk than two-row.
- Higher protein levels may help speed conversion to fermentable sugars. This is important to homebrewers using high mash-in temps; more conversion would take place than otherwise.
- Six-row has higher enzyme content for converting starch into fermentable sugars. More enzymes means it can convert adjunct starches (which lack or are deficient in enzymes) during mashing. Offset this with more (less expensive) adjunct grain use, and you know why so many large breweries use six-row.
- Six-row is less expensive per pound, and allows further cost cutting through the higher use of inexpensive adjuncts to offset the high protein levels.
- Supplementing two-row malt with some six-row malt might increase extraction, conversion time, and fermentability, particularly if you have a high percentage of adjuncts.
- Six-row yields more per acre.
- Those thicker husks improve the filter bed for lautering.
Enzyme and protein levels are high enough that a brewer probably doesn’t want to use six-row barley exclusively in a recipe. (Adjunct grains are cheaper.) Unmalted cereals (corn and rice) are often mixed in with malt to compensate for the higher protein levels in six-row barley—up to 40 percent of six-row grist can be adjunct. New malt strains mean adding adjuncts is no longer necessary, but it’s economical and, in the case of some large breweries’ beers, traditional.
Six-Row Cons:
- Six row is more susceptible to the formation of dimethyl sulfide, a process begun through protein breakdown in malting. Some DMS is acceptable in some beer styles, but too much may contribute to a cooked or sweet corn flavor.
- Higher protein content can result in more break material during wort boiling and cooling, which can cause protein haze. Pay attention to this extra hot break for coagulation and removal.
- Six-row husks are high in polyphenols (tannins), which can contribute to protein-polyphenol haze, and can impart an astringent taste.
- Higher protein content often indicates less starch for conversion in malting. Six-row malting barley contains from 12-13.5 percent protein, whereas two-row has 11-13 percent. Malting doesn’t change the protein levels much.
- High protein levels can lengthen steeping time in the malting process, which causes erratic germination, particularly if low- and high-protein barleys are mixed to meet protein limits for malt. (And I was worried about controlling what went into my malt extract…)
- High proteins can lead to other beer quality issues like color control.
- Syrup adjuncts and six-row: Syrups are prepared by enzymatically hydrolyzing corn starch into fermentable sugars. It’s added to wort in fermentable form, which can take the wort over acceptable enzyme and soluble protein levels if you’re using six-row barley cultivars.
BARLEY: One of the foundation stones of beer is barley, which is transformed into brew-ready malt by taking a bath in hot water. This causes the grain to create the enzymes that transform proteins and starches into fermentable sugars, which yeast will later feast on to create alcohol. With brewing, top billing on the grain bill usually is reserved for barley malts. This is due mainly to an evolutionary advantage: barley contains husks, which keep the mash (the grains steeped in boiling water) loose and permit drainage of the wort—the broth that becomes beer. For flavor, brewers often blend the lead grain barley with a host of supporting fermentable grains (such as rye and wheat). There’s no global system for classifying the hundreds of varieties of barley, but they can be condensed into several broad categories.
BASE MALTS: These compose the bulk of the grain bill. Typically lighter-colored, these workhorse malts provide the majority of the proteins, fermentable sugars, and minerals required to create beer.
SPECIALTY MALTS: These auxiliary grains are great for increasing body, improving head retention, and adding color, aroma, and flavor, such as coffee, chocolate, biscuit, and caramel. Specialty grains are blended to achieve unique flavor profiles and characteristics.
Popular varieties include the following:
- Crystal (or caramel) malts, specially stewed to create crystalline sugar structures within the grain’s hull. They add sweetness to beer.
- Roasted malts, kilned or roasted at high temperatures to impart certain flavor characteristics. Coffee beans undergo a similar transformation.
- Dark malts, highly roasted to achieve the robust flavors associated with stouts, schwarzbiers, bocks, and black IPAs.
UNMALTED BARLEY: This imparts a rich, grainy character to beer, a key characteristic of styles such as dry stout. Unmalted barley helps head retention, but it will make a beer hazier than Los Angeles smog.
CORN: When used in beer, corn provides a smooth, somewhat neutral sweetness. It is utilized to lighten a beer’s body, decrease haziness, and stabilize flavor.
OATS: Used in conjunction with barley, oats create a creamy, full-bodied brew that’s as smooth as satin. Stouts are a natural fit.
RICE: As a beer ingredient, rice imparts little or no discernible taste. Instead, the grain helps create snappy flavors and a dry profile as well as lighten a beer’s body.
RYE: Working in conjunction with barley, rye can sharpen flavors and add complexity, crispness, and subtle spiciness as well as dry out a beer. The grain also can be kilned to create a chocolate or caramel flavor. Its shortcoming: since rye is hull-less, using large percentages of the grain during brewing can cause it to clump up and turn to concrete.
WHEAT: Packed with proteins, this grain helps create a fuller body and mouthfeel and a foamy head as thick and lasting as Cool Whip. A large proportion of wheat can result in a smooth, hazy brew such as a hefeweizen or a witbier. Wheat can impart a slight tartness.
American Grain
Imparts dryness. Unmalted; use in porters and dry stouts.
Provides color and sharp flavor in stouts and porters.
Use in all types to adjust color and add nutty, toasted flavor. Chocolate flavor.
Sweet, mild caramel flavor and a golden color. Use in light lagers and light ales.
Pronounced caramel flavor and a red color. For stouts, porters and black beers.
Sweet caramel flavor, deep golden to red color. For dark amber and brown ales.
Sweet, mild caramel flavor and a golden color. Use in light lagers and light ales.
Sweet, mild caramel flavor and a golden color. Use in light lagers and light ales.
Pronounced caramel flavor and a red color. For stouts, porters and black beers.
Sweet, mild caramel flavor and a golden color. Use in light lagers and light ales.
Sweet, smooth caramel flavor and a red to deep red color. For porters, old ales.
Balances body and flavor without adding color, aids in head retention. For any beer.
Sweet, toasted flavor and aroma. For Oktoberfests and malty styles.
Smooth, less grainy, moderate malt flavor. Basic malt for all beer styles.
Moderate malt flavor. Basic malt for all beer styles.
Sweet, grainy, coffee flavor and a red to deep brown color. For porters and stouts.
Provides a deep golden to brown color for ales. Use in all darker ales.
Provides a deep golden to brown color. Use in nut brown ales, IPAs and Scottish ales.
Increases malty flavor, provides balance. Use in Vienna, Märzen and Oktoberfest.
Light flavor and creamy head. For American weizenbier, weissbier and dunkelweiss.
Imparts a malty flavor. For American wheat beers, wheat bock and doppel bock.
Belgian Grain
Imparts a big malt aroma. Use in brown ales, Belgian dubbels and tripels.
Use as a base malt for any Belgian style beer with full body.
Warm baked biscuit flavor and aroma. Increases body. Use in Belgian beers.
A very light crystal malt that lends body, smoother mouth-feel and foam stability.
Caramel, full flavor, copper color. For Belgian ales, German smoked and bocks.
Belgian light crystal malt. Used in lighter Abbey or Trappist style ales.
Will add a deep red color and nutty/roasted taste.
Will add a deep black color without the astringent flavor of black malt.
Can be used in amounts of up to 70% of grist to create many wheat beer styles and aid in head retention in smaller amounts.
Light color, malty flavor. For pilsners, dubbels, tripels, whites and specialty ales.
Slightly roasted wheat which imparts a bready, nut-like quality.
Extreme caramel aroma and flavor. For dark Abbey beers and other dark beers.
British Grain
Roasted malt used in British milds, old ales, brown ales, nut brown ales.
Imparts a dry, biscuit flavor. Use in porters, brown, nut brown and Belgian ales.
Dry, burnt, chalky character. Use in porters, stouts, brown ales and dark lagers.
Imparts a dry, biscuit flavor. Use in porters, brown, nut brown and Belgian ales.
Adds body; aids head retention. For porters, stouts and heavier bodied beers.
Made from green malt, imparts a red hue and contributes to flavor and foam stability.
Nutty, toasted flavor, brown color. Use in brown ales, porters, stouts and bocks.
Sweet caramel flavor, adds mouthfeel and head retention. For pale or amber ales.
Sweet caramel flavor, mouthfeel. For porters, stouts, old ales and any dark ale.
Used to make light colored and flavored lagers.
Premium base malt for any beer. Good for pale ales.
Dry, nutty malty flavor. Promotes body. Use in English mild ales.
Enhances body and flavor. For winter beers, stouts, porters and other robust beers.
Moderate malt flavor. Used to produce traditional English and Scottish style ales.
Less roasted than regular chocolate malt, adds color and mild chocolate/coffee flavors to porters, milds & stouts.
Imparts a robust smoky flavor and aroma. For Scottish ales and wee heavies.
Dry, roasted flavor, amber color. For stouts, porters and Scottish ales.
Imparts nutty flavor and aroma. Use in IPAs and Scottish ales.
Puffed wheat created by high heat. Use in pale ales, bitters and milds.
Light flavor, creamy head. For wheat beers, stouts, doppelbocks and alt beers.
German Grain
High lactic acid. For lambics, sour mash beers, Irish stout, pilsners and wheats.
For dark ales, hefeweizen, dunkelweizen, wheat bocks and double bocks.
Adds aroma and color intensity to darker beers. For use in alts, bocks, stouts and porters.
Imparts a deep red color, adds body and malt aroma. For use in bocks, porters, stouts and ambers.
Gives deep aroma and color to dark beers, bocks, stout, alt and schwarzbier.
Carafa I, II and III also are available de-husked. Adds aroma, color and body.
Improves head retention and body.
For light colored beer for body; hefeweizen, pale ale, golden ale, Oktoberfest.
Provides body. For Oktoberfest, bock, porter, stout, red, amber and brown ales.
CaraMunich Malt III is dark crystal.
Provides body and a deep red color for use in red ales, lagers, Scottish ales and alts.
Enhances aroma of dark ales and improves color. For dunkel rye wheat and ale.
Intensifies aroma; improves color. For dark ales, alt, dark wheat, stout and porter.
Enhances body and aroma. Stout, schwarzbier, brown ale, dark and amber ales.
Traditionally for Kölsch-style beers, can be used in a variety of German and American styled beers. Adds a light, sweet, biscuity flavor.
For a desired malty, nutty flavor. Lagers, Oktoberfests and bock beer.
For amber lagers and ales, dark lagers and ales, Scottish & red ales.
For rauchbier, kellerbier, smoked porters, Scottish ales and barleywines.
Dry character. Can use as a base malt. For seasonal beers, roggenbier and ales.
European lager malt kilned slightly more than Pilsner malt. Full bodied, golden color.
Typical top fermented aroma, produces superb wheat beers.
Other Malts and Additions
Helps head retention, imparts creamy smoothness. For porters and stouts.
Lightens body and color. For light American pilsners and ales.
Adds body and creamy head. For stouts and oat ales.
Imparts a dry, crisp character. Use in rye beers.
Imparts a wheat flavor, hazy color. For wheat and Belgian white beers.
A unique malt which imparts a coffee flavor.
Nutty honey flavor. For brown ales, Belgian wheats, bocks and many other styles.
Imparts a corn/grain taste. Use in American lagers.
Prevents chill haze. Use in all beers except cloudy wheat and white beers.
Adds body and mouthfeel. For all extract beers. Does not ferment.
Creates cask-conditioned flavor and aroma. Use in IPAs, Belgian ales and Scottish ales.
Scottish pale ale malt; base malt for all Scottish beers.
Sugars
Smooth taste, good head retention, sweet aroma and high gravity without being apparent. Use in Belgian and holiday ales. Use clear for tripels.
Imparts rich, sweet flavor. Use in Scottish ales, old ales and holiday beers.
Smooth taste, good head retention, sweet aroma and high gravity without being apparent. Use in Belgian and holiday ales. Use amber for dubbels.
Smooth taste, good head retention, sweet aroma and high gravity without being apparent. Use in Belgian and holiday ales. Use dark in brown beer and strong golden ales.
Use in priming beer or in extract recipes where flaked maize would be used in a mash.
Imparts rich, sweet flavor. Use in Scottish ales, old ales and holiday beers.
Imparts mellow, sweet flavor. Use in English ales.
Imparts a mild sweet taste and smoothness. Use in English beers.
Extra light (2.5°), Light (3.5°), Amber (10°), Dark (30°), Wheat (3°)
Imparts sweet and dry taste. For honey and brown ales. Also: specialty ales.
Increases alcohol. Use in some Belgian or English ales. Use as an adjunct for priming. Made from sucrose. No dextrins. Use 1 cup for priming.
Adds sweetness and body. Use in sweet or milk stouts.
Adds a smooth flavor to stouts, porters, holiday ales and flavored beers.
Increases alcohol without flavor. Liquid Invert Sugar. Use in English and Belgian (Chimay) ales.
Crisp dry, earthy flavor. Use in pale ales, porters and maple ales.
Imparts a dry, woodsy flavor if used in the boil. If beer is bottled with it, it gives it a smooth sweet, maple taste. Use in maple ales, pale ales, brown ales and porters.
Imparts strong sweet flavor. Use in stouts and porters.
Lightens flavor without taste. Use in American and Asian lagers.
Increases alcohol. Use in Australian lagers and English bitters.
Extra Light (3.5°), Light (3.5 -5°), Amber (10°), Dark (30°), Wheat (2°).
Imparts intense, sweet flavor. A British mixture of molasses, invert sugar and golden syrup (corn syrup). Use in dark English ales.
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References
- Bernstein, J. M., & Bernstein, J. M. (2013, September 17). How the 10 Most Important Grains in Beer Affect Flavor. Retrieved May 8, 2019, from https://www.bonappetit.com/drinks/beer/article/how-the-10-most-important-grains-in-beer-affect-flavor
- Grains and Adjuncts Chart. (n.d.). Retrieved May 8, 2019, from https://byo.com/resource/grains/?grain-style=american-grains
- Two-Row vs Six-Row Barley. (2019, April 15). Retrieved May 8, 2019, from https://www.homebrewersassociation.org/zymurgy/zymurgy-extra-2-row-vs-6-row-barley/