What is hydrogen sulfide?
Where does the sulfur in beer come from?
Many yeast strains (especially lagers) often give off the smell of rotten eggs when fermenting beer. The most important source of rotten egg odor is hydrogen sulfide gas, which is usually produced as a by-product of yeast processing sulfur during active fermentation. Sulfur itself comes from a variety of sources, including roasting malt, because some sulfur is produced when roasting or roasting malt.
In addition, hops often contain sulfur-containing compounds and aromatic hydrocarbons, and certain water bodies contain high sulfur content. Yeast itself may also contain some sulfur, and certain yeast strains (such as many lager beers) produce higher levels of sulfur-containing gases during fermentation.
How is hydrogen sulfide formed in beer?
Yeast's decomposition of sulfur-containing amino acids
Yeast uses sulfate to form
Decomposition of cysteine
What factors affect the formation of hydrogen sulfide?
The influence of the type of yeast strain
Wort components
Threonine, glycine, and some other amino acids can inhibit the synthesis of methionine, so their presence will cause more hydrogen sulfide to be produced. Cysteine
Effects of fermentation
What measures can be taken to reduce the hydrogen sulfide content?
- Most of the sulfur-containing amino acids in wort come from malt, and auxiliary materials can be used to replace part of the malt to reduce the hydrogen sulfide content in beer.
- In the past, people thought that using copper wort boiling pots and pipes to brew beer tasted good. The practice has proved that the wort contains copper ions, and the H2S content in the brewed beer is indeed low. But, the harm of copper ions to beer flavor stability is also serious, and people still do not want to contain too many copper ions in the wort.
- The wort with completely separated cold and hot coagulum has reduced sulfide content and can reduce the generation of hydrogen sulfide during fermentation.
- Slow fermentation at low temperature or low inoculum can reduce the amount of H2S produced.
- At the end of fermentation, adding antioxidants (such as sulfite) or using a wine storage container sterilized at 50°C can easily cause more H2S to be generated.
- Activating yeast with phosphoric acid can eliminate most of the contaminating bacteria, but it is also easy to change the permeability of the yeast cell wall. This will make it easier for sulfate to enter human cells and be used, and promote the production of H2S.
- During the storage period, with the emission of a large amount of CO2, most of the volatile H2S can be eliminated. Generally speaking, the final content of H2S in beer can be controlled within the range of 0-10μg/L. But, wort contaminated with bacteria (coliforms, Zymomonas, etc.) will cause the beer to contain a lot of hydrogen sulfide.
- Sterilization of beer, especially prolonging the sterilization time, will greatly increase H2S, even more than 1 times the H2S content after filtering the beer so that the sterilized beer will have an immature beer taste. But, after a time, the H2S concentration will gradually disappear to the concentration before sterilization or lower.
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