If by 'what' you mean 'who' then I, for one, defy low carb beer. It's pointless and tasteless IMO.hooper80 said:What defies a low carb beer?
Low carb from what I understand means low FG.hooper80 said:Hi guys, just wondering what is used or substituted in a low carb beer?
Umm... Not quite. Go to http://www.calorieking.com.au/calories-in-beer.html and see which has more calories and where those calories come from. Alcohol contributes to calories, not just sugar, or carbohydrates. Low carb is a con and you get fat from all the s*8t you eat along with the 10 beers you drink, not just because it's high gravity or low gravity OG or FG. calories are calories, whether from proteins, carbs, fats or alcohol.Danscraftbeer said:yeah kinda but if you drink more higher final gravity beers, higher body beers that have a lot more unfermented residual sugars then it will more favour the growth of the beer belly gut thing.
Which is why I usually mash at temps 62 to 65c.
Also because I really don't like sweet higher bodied beer, or cider etc. Or sweet anything like soft drinks, cordial etc. Sugar is bad for you that is a fact no doubt.
I can't see that as being an economical proposition for a large brewery. Malt is expensive so why go out of your way to put in place procedures to convert the malt into simple sugars - doesn't make sense. What does make sense is to use substitutes that are cheap and have little flavour and fermet out. So that means in the mash uses maize, rice etc. OR sugar is added further down the brewing process such as the boil or in the fermentation tank. I'm suggesting sugar is the driver behind 'dry' beersJack of all biers said:To really answer your question though. Commercially they use lower mash temps and likely an enzyme (as intimated by Danscraftbeer above) to ensure that most complex sugars are converted to simpler sugars that can be consumed by the yeast and converted to alcohol and if it goes over the level they want they will water it down with de-oxygenated water (hence my sarcastic comments about more alcohol or more water).
Well that's looking pretty good then for my low carb beer experiment. I only have Beersmith for analysis though. With my knowledge of the ingredients. All Grain I say all the way. No adjunct/sugars.Jack of all biers said:Umm... Not quite. Go to http://www.calorieking.com.au/calories-in-beer.html and see which has more calories and where those calories come from. Alcohol contributes to calories, not just sugar, or carbohydrates. Low carb is a con and you get fat from all the s*8t you eat along with the 10 beers you drink, not just because it's high gravity or low gravity OG or FG. calories are calories, whether from proteins, carbs, fats or alcohol.
Sugar is not necessarily bad for you, though the most recent scientific theories are that Fructose is probably not great in the amounts the typical Westerner consumes it in (Sucrose contains one molecule Fructose and one molecule glucose so alot of confusion exists out there).
So you don't use wheat or rye either?Danscraftbeer said:Well that's looking pretty good then for my low carb beer experiment. I only have Beersmith for analysis though. With my knowledge of the ingredients. All Grain I say all the way. No adjunct/sugars.
That's right. Liquid sugar is common is aussie lagers, rice in asian lagers, corn in american lagers.labels said:I can't see that as being an economical proposition for a large brewery. Malt is expensive so why go out of your way to put in place procedures to convert the malt into simple sugars - doesn't make sense. What does make sense is to use substitutes that are cheap and have little flavour and fermet out. So that means in the mash uses maize, rice etc. OR sugar is added further down the brewing process such as the boil or in the fermentation tank. I'm suggesting sugar is the driver behind 'dry' beers
I thought CUB beer was "made from beer"?good4whatAlesU said:Nice one.
I wonder if CUB and Lion are doing the same or whether they are dropping in refined cane sugar?
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