2

What would the result be of a brew done with say, brewing sugar (or equivalent), used as the only fermentable?

Quite an ambiguous question I know - obviously flavour is dependant on many factors, but in general, would there beer any 'weird' flavours that would normally be masked/Non-existant in a standard brew?

What about body? Head retention? How it pours? Etc. Etc.

Any details welcome!

Thanks.

1
  • 1
    Try it and report back!
    – Wyrmwood
    Oct 22, 2014 at 14:48

3 Answers 3

3

Because sugar is 100% fermentable, there will be essentially no body or head retention. Flavor would range from non existent to a harsh alcohol flavor. Without additional nutrients, fermentation will be problematic.

3

Sugar doesn't contain the nutrients yeast need to reproduce properly. It's likely that you'd end up with a stuck fermentation, and off-tastes (notably cidery, from acetaldehyde). As Denny mentioned, that would be pretty much the only taste in there, so it would likely be quite unpleasant.

3

With just sugar, you wouldn't be making beer, since malted grain is a key ingredient. It would be closer to mead, and like mead, the resulting drink would have no head since that's created by protein, which there is none in sugar. There would also be no residual sweetness or any other flavoring other than the alcohol, so it would taste pretty bad. You can add yeast nutrients just as when making mead to provide the free-amino nitrogen and other trace elements required to reduce any fermentation off flavors, but due to the lack of any real flavor in the ingredients and residual sweetness it would not taste good if you let it ferment out completely.

In Norway, and I believe in most of Scandinavia, some people make a low-alcohol drink that is water, sugar, yeast and optionally a little flavoring, such as a few raisins or some apple juice. This is called sukkerøl - sugarbeer. The trick with this is to let it ferment at room temperature just enough to produce the carbon dioxide required, and then the beers are stored in a cool cellar/fridge to almost halt fermentation. By stopping the fermentation early, there is still some unfermented sugar, giving some sweetness to the beer. It's important to chill the beers after a couple of days of fermentation or all the sugar will ferment out, producing a bitter, harsh tasting drink, and also the risk of bottle explosions.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.