The article linked by verysupple is about the best information outside professional literature that I have seen. It reads like a popular science version of Foam by Charlie Bamforth (a good investment for anyone Pro Brewing or going that way).
The big take home message
"Good foam seems to follow good general brewing practices. There is no silver bullet to getting good foam, so focus on making good beer and the foam should come naturally."
What makes the biggest difference, to my mind isn't so much the foam building ingredients/processes as the foam degrading ones. Of what we have control over, yeast stress is the most important, contact time with old yeast being a big part of that.
Too long on old yeast will kill foam!
Mark
Edit crap formatting
M
The big take home message
"Good foam seems to follow good general brewing practices. There is no silver bullet to getting good foam, so focus on making good beer and the foam should come naturally."
What makes the biggest difference, to my mind isn't so much the foam building ingredients/processes as the foam degrading ones. Of what we have control over, yeast stress is the most important, contact time with old yeast being a big part of that.
Too long on old yeast will kill foam!
Mark
Edit crap formatting
M