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How is invert sugar used in brewing?
Invert sugars are used widely in the alcoholic beverage industry to make beers, ciders and perries. Invert sugars are preferred by industrial brewers as yeast can digest them more efficiently than sucrose and without byproducts that impact on quality. Invert sugars blended with other functional ingredients, such as molasses, can influence colour and flavour, and lead to a clearer pint.
Invert sugars for brewing come in two forms. Brewing invert sugar in block form, often called brewer’s block, is typically cast into 25kg solid sugar ingots for craft and traditional brewers. Invert sugar syrup is generally supplied to industrial brewers in 30,000 litre road tankers. This blog explores the latter bulk invert sugar syrup product.
What is invert sugar?
Invert sugars are a liquid syrup comprising varying proportions of water, sucrose, fructose and glucose. They are typically classed as full or partial inverts depending on how much sucrose is present. You can learn how invert sugars are manufactured on our invert sugar syrup product page, which explains how the disaccharide sucrose is broken down into its constituent monosaccharides, glucose and fructose.
The balance of sucrose, glucose and fructose in the syrup also dictates the application. Glucose and fructose have a more intense sweet flavour, so a full invert is up to 40% sweeter than sucrose. A famous partial invert sugar syrup, which has more sucrose than a full invert, is the delicious viscous amber coloured golden syrup.
When providing a syrup, Ragus typically supplies industrial brewers with full inverts, although very rarely golden syrup, a partial invert, is used for speciality beers.
Ragus’ invert sugars for brewing are formulated to meet the specific needs of the brewing industry. For example, once the invert sugar is manufactured, cane molasses or treacle may be added to the syrup providing additional colour and flavour. The proportion of molasses or treacle will vary according to the final taste, colour and mouthfeel desired by the brewer.
Why use invert sugars for brewing?
The beer industry has evolved so that there are generally two main approaches to brewing: traditional craft brewing, and highly industrialised high-volume brewing. The latter takes supplies of invert sugar syrups used in the fermentation stage via 30,000 litre bulk road tankers. Traditional, heritage and craft brewers still generally use solid ingots of brewer’s block in their brewing process.
The primary reason for using invert sugars for brewing is not for sweetness, as the ingredient does not sweeten the final brewed beverage. It is as an adjunct to the malted barley used in beer, or apple and pear in cider and perry, to more efficiently aid the fermentation process after initiation, and yeast can more readily digest and transform invert sugars into alcohol.
If using sucrose-based liquid sugars to aid fermentation, the yeast must first break down the disaccharide sucrose into its constituent monosaccharides, glucose and fructose. This adds a process step, and the byproducts and impurities of yeast breaking down sucrose into glucose and fructose impact on quality, resulting in a bitter tasting and unappealing looking final product. Full inverts already have a high percentage of fructose and sucrose, so the fermentation process becomes both more efficient and does not create the unpleasant byproducts.
Process efficiency and quality are key reasons industrial brewers use invert sugars, but the syrup ingredient has many other functional properties that influence the taste, appearance, and mouthfeel of the final brewed beer, cider and perry.
Invert sugar’s functional properties for brewing
Aids the fermentation process
As highlighted above, inverts are preferred by industrial brewers rather than granulated white sugar because it is more readily and efficiently fermentable, generating alcohol and adding flavour and colour but not sweetness.
Adds flavour and colour without sweetness
Ragus manufactures many different kinds of inverts for brewers that give distinctive tastes, colours and mouthfeels. Lagers and pale ales use a brewing sugar that is amber in colour and mellow in flavour, created by altering the concentration of cane molasses. A similar approach is used for amber-to-ruby ale, which has a higher cane molasses concentration resulting in a brewing sugar that is darker and stronger in flavour.
Mild ales, stouts and porters need an even higher concentration of cane molasses that gives the brewing sugar a dark-brown colour and richer caramel flavour, enhancing the final flavour, texture and mouthfeel of darker, richer, fuller-bodied beverages.
Nitrogen dilutant
Invert sugar syrups are a nitrogen dilutant. If, for example, there is a poor-quality malt harvest, more nitrogen enters the brewing process, which can cause quality issues such as hazing. Adding more invert sugar syrup dilutes the nitrogen, giving a clear pint.
Ragus manufactures full and partially inverted sugar syrups in bulk for industrial brewers. To learn more, contact our Customer Services Team. For more sugar news and updates, browse SUGARTALK and follow Ragus on LinkedIn.
Ben Eastick
A board member and co-leader of the business, Ben is responsible for our marketing strategy and its execution by the agency team he leads and is the guardian of our corporate brand vision. He also manages key customers and distributors.
In 2005, he took on the role of globally sourcing our ‘speciality sugars’. With his background in laboratory product testing and following three decades of supplier visits, his expertise means we get high quality, consistent and reliable raw materials from ethical sources.