食品科学
酿造
质量(理念)
化学
发酵
物理
量子力学
作者
Christian Schubert,Rahul Sen,Nils Rettberg,Scott Lafontaine
标识
DOI:10.1080/10942912.2025.2520907
摘要
The influence of substituting barley malt with milled rice on the sensory and chemical characteristics of nonalcoholic beers (NAB) was investigated. Physicochemical and volatile analyses were conducted on the NABs. Original gravities ranged from 6.71% w/w (100% barley malt) to 7.15% w/w (100% rice), with alcohol contents between 0.33% v/v (70% barley/30 %rice) and 0.45 % v/v (100% rice). Color decreased from 10.8 EBC (100% barley malt) to 3.3 EBC (100% rice). Descriptive analysis sensory evaluations by trained panelists in the United States and European Union were used to characterize the sensory profiles of the NABs. Principal component analysis showed strong correlations between sensory and analytical data, with the first two components explaining 77.42% of variance. Barley malt contributed “worty” descriptors linked to aldehydes (e.g. methional), whereas NABs brewed with ARoma 22 rice exhibited “vanilla” notes associated with elevated 2-acetyl-1-pyrroline. Regional preferences differed between the trained panels: the U.S. panel favored the 70% barley/30% rice blend, while the E.U. panel preferred 30% barley/70% rice. These findings highlight rice’s potential as a malt substitute and the need to tailor flavor profiles to regional preferences in NAB development.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI