What’s Brewing
- Share via
Fall has traditionally been the time when beer consumption spikes. At football and hockey games, the World Series and especially Octoberfest celebrations, beer is king. In fact, Oktoberfest began in 1810 as an elaborate wedding reception for a Bavarian king and is now celebrated in countries around the world, including the U.S., where a resurgence of brewpubs has attracted attention to the beermaking craft. In honor of the German holiday and the revival of handcrafted American beer, here’s a closer look at microbrewing.
*
1) MILLING (2 hours)
Store malted barley in grain silo
Depending on beer recipe, blend additional grains in roller mill
Transport milled malt, called grist, by auger
Store grist in elevated hopper
*
2) MASHING (30 minutes to 2 hours)
Mix grist with hot water in mash tun.
Mashing converts starches in malt to sugars.
Lautering draws sweet liquid called wort off bottom of tun
*
3) BREWING (30 minutes to 1 1/2 hours)
Pump hot wort to brewkettle, bring to boil
During hour-long boil, add bittering hops at beginning, hops for aroma and flavor at end
Let wort settle, cool by pumping through heat exchanger to fermentation tank
*
4) FERMENTING (3 days to 2 months)
Inject yeast to initiate fermentation
Yeast ingests sugars in wort, produces alcohol and carbon dioxide
Ales ferment for 3-4 days, lagers for 1-2 weeks
Remove yeast from beer using diatomaceous earth filter
*
5) SERVING (Batch typically lasts 2 weeks)
Carbonate, store beer beer in chilled serving tanks
Draw beer at bar from tank
Holds up to 24 tons of 2-row malt
More grain = more alcohol
Darker grains = darker beer
Archimedean screw draws grain from silo to hopper
Liquor tank stores 180 (degree) F water
Holds up to 3,000 lbs. grain
Rotating rake stirs mash
Grated bottom strains wort
Spent grain discarded
Cook mash at 120-170 (degrees) F
Add 5-15 lbs. hops
Drops temperature from 212 (degrees) F to below 70 (degrees) F
Refrigerant keeps tank 45-70 (degrees) F - ales warmer, lagers colder
Foamy carbon dioxide bled from tank
Fermenting wort
15-gal. of yeast - reused from previous batches
38 (degrees) F
*
BEER BREAKDOWN
Blonde
Light-bodied German golden ale
Light grains, few hops
*
Hefeweizen
Unfiltered Bavarian wheat beer
Wheat grains, few hops
*
Pale
American-style bitter ale
Heavy grains and hops
*
Red
Irish-style strong ale
Heavy grains and hops
*
Porter
English dark ale
Dark grains, light hops
*
Stout
Strong, rich English beer
Heavy grains, hops
*
ORANGE COUNTY MICROBREWERIES
ANAHEIM
J.T. Schmid’s Restaurant & Brewery
2610 E. Katella Ave.
(714) 634-9200
*
BREA
BJ’s Pizza Grill & Brewery
Brea Mall
(714) 990-2095
*
COSTA MESA
Skewers Restaurant & Brewery
298 E. 17th St.
(949) 645-6459
*
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Huntington Beach Beer Co.
201 Main St.
(714) 960-5343
*
IRVINE
Backstreet Brewery
14450 Culver Dr.
(949) 654-5734
*
McCormick & Schmick’S Seafood Restaurant
2000 Main St.
(949) 756-0505
*
Rock Bottom Restaurant & Brewery
71 Fortune Dr.
(949) 453-0777
*
Steelhead Micro Brewery
4175 Campus Dr.
(949) 856-2227
*
LAGUNA BEACH
Laguna Beach Brewing
422 South Coast Hwy.
(949) 494-2739
*
Ocean Brewing Co.
237 Ocean Ave.
(949) 497-3381
*
NEWPORT BEACH
Newport Beach Brewing Co.
2920 Newport Blvd.
(949) 675-8449
*
ORANGE
Alcatraz Brewing Co.
The Block at Orange
(714) 939-8686
*
Gordon Biersch Brewery Restaurant
1623 W. Katella Ave.
(714) 288-0115
*
Old Towne Brewing Co.
186 N. Atchison St.
(714) 744-4181
*
TUSTIN
Tustin Brewing Co.
13011 Newport Ave.
(714) 665-2337
Source: John Oliver, BJ’s Pizza & Brewery in Brea
Graphics reporting by BRADY MacDONALD
More to Read
Eat your way across L.A.
Get our weekly Tasting Notes newsletter for reviews, news and more.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.