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I came across an article in Craft Beer & Brewing talking about Pasteurization in commercial and home brewing. This lead to a necro thread here on HBT, with the end result being a lot of math, some science, and a lot of opinions. The main take-away from going down this rabbit hole was that heating capped bottles of home brew in 60C/140F water for 15~30 minutes would actually result in Pasteurized (don't conflate with sterilized) home brew. Heating and maintaining a bottled beer for each minute @ 60C/140F = 1 PU (Pasteurization Unit). Commercial standards for breweries range from 5-100 PUs, with 20~30 being average values, and with 50 PUs recommended for NA beers. There's a formula for determining time/temperature equivalents for Pasteurization Units using different protocols; i.e., flash, tunnel, etc., methodologies, but 25 PUs appears to be the sweet spot for home brewing beer, sweet ciders and meads.
Is anyone currently using Pasteurization in their home brewing? In some correspondence I had recently with Brad Smith (BeerSmith) he minimized the risks of pathogens in beer due to the presence of alcohol and the antibiotic properties of hops, assuming otherwise normal handling and sanitation by the brewer (you and me). This becomes problematic in the case of LA/NA beers due to the absence of alcohol. The trend is toward lower alcohol, and there are increasing availability of ingredients and recipes for brewing Non-alcoholic home brew. I've been interested in following this trend in my brewing, but have resisted the temptation so far due to the potential health risks. This hot water bath approach seems easy and doable (sous vide precision temperature controlled bath). The science is pretty straight forward, as long as bottles don't start exploding!
So getting back to the original question, is anybody doing this? What have been your experiences, good and bad? Sous vide method would be precise and safe, as long as the beer wasn't bottle conditioned and carbonated, and the fermentation had been allowed to fully complete to terminal gravity. Assuming good oxygen mitigation from mash to packaging, the brief exposure to high temperature shouldn't result in premature staling. I want to try this, but first I want to hear about any missteps as well as successes.
Is anyone currently using Pasteurization in their home brewing? In some correspondence I had recently with Brad Smith (BeerSmith) he minimized the risks of pathogens in beer due to the presence of alcohol and the antibiotic properties of hops, assuming otherwise normal handling and sanitation by the brewer (you and me). This becomes problematic in the case of LA/NA beers due to the absence of alcohol. The trend is toward lower alcohol, and there are increasing availability of ingredients and recipes for brewing Non-alcoholic home brew. I've been interested in following this trend in my brewing, but have resisted the temptation so far due to the potential health risks. This hot water bath approach seems easy and doable (sous vide precision temperature controlled bath). The science is pretty straight forward, as long as bottles don't start exploding!
So getting back to the original question, is anybody doing this? What have been your experiences, good and bad? Sous vide method would be precise and safe, as long as the beer wasn't bottle conditioned and carbonated, and the fermentation had been allowed to fully complete to terminal gravity. Assuming good oxygen mitigation from mash to packaging, the brief exposure to high temperature shouldn't result in premature staling. I want to try this, but first I want to hear about any missteps as well as successes.