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Heavy and light beer: a carbon isotope approach to detect C(4) carbon in beers of different origins, styles, and prices

Authors :
Sue Phillips
J. Renée Brooks
Jed P. Sparks
Nina Buchmann
Mike Lott
William T. Pockman
Bruce Ehleringer
Dave Williams
Luiz Antonio Martinelli
R. David Evans
Darren R. Sandquist
Lynda Sperry
James R. Ehleringer
Source :
Journal of agricultural and food chemistry. 50(22)
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

The carbon isotope ratios (delta(13)C) of 160 beers from around the world ranged from -27.3 to -14.9 per thousand, primarily due to variation in the percentage of C(3) or C(4) plant carbon in the final product. Thirty-one percent of beers had a carbon signature of C(3) plants (barley, rice, etc.), whereas the remaining 69% contained some C(3)-C(4) mixture (mean of mixtures, 39 +/- 11% C(4) carbon). Use of C(4) carbon (corn, cane sugar, etc.) was not confined to beers from any particular region (Pacific Rim, Mexico, Brazil, Europe, Canada, and the United States). However, the delta(13)C of European beers indicated mostly C(3) plant carbon. In contrast, U.S. and Canadian beers contained either only C(3) or C(3)-C(4) mixtures; Brazilian, Mexican, and Pacific Rim beers were mostly C(3)-C(4) mixtures. Among different lagers, U.S.-style lagers generally contained more C(4) carbon than did imported pilsners. Among different ales, those brewed by large high-production breweries contained significant proportions of C(4) carbon, while C(4) carbon was not detected in microbrewery or home-brew ales. Furthermore, inexpensive beers generally contained more C(4) carbon than expensive beers.

Details

ISSN :
00218561
Volume :
50
Issue :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of agricultural and food chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fee1a9ffd9988cbe7c03ecf2f64c1ab0