Friday, October 23, 2016
12pm to 1pm: Registration – Please stop in and tell us you’re
here!
1pm
– Bob Seaman –
How Can We Improve Our Packaging Line Efficiency?
The presentation will
provide insight as to how to set up a packaging line with respect to sizing
equipment and the other factors that will determine how efficiently the
packaging line can and will run.
2pm
– Alastair Pringle –
Packaging Quality: the final frontier
Packaging is the
final step of the beer production process; however, it is also where the best
intentions of earlier efforts can be undone.
For the brewer to be successful a number of quality control points need
to be controlled before and during packaging to avoid issues such as
off-flavors, exploding bottles, glass shards, regulatory compliance, and shelf
life. This presentation will review how
the major issues attributable to packaging can be avoided
3pm
– Jon Larson –
Bottle Design: Bottle Design, Developments, & Light-Weighting
Advancements
The presentation
walks through the design process of bottle selection from the initial meeting
with the client to discuss the design and concepts to the design release as a
final product. The manufacture and design of plastic bottles is discussed.
4pm – District Philadelphia
Briefing
4:30pm – Happy Hour – Wyndham
Hotel –
6:30pm
– Welcome Reception –
Join us for dinner, drinks, and more socializing
The Irish Pōl
114 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106
The Irish Pōl features a state-of-the-art 40-tap system, full kitchen
with a phenomenal chef, shiny bathrooms, happy hour, friendly knuckleheads
behind the bar, and, downstairs...The Barrel Room devoted to bourbons and
other spirits.
Saturday, October 24, 2015
8am to 9am: More Registration plus
coffee and pastries!
Morning Sessions: Franklin-Jefferson-Hancock Rooms
Raffle tickets will be available during morning registration and during
lunch. The drawing will be held during the last break
9am
– John Bryce –
The Food Safety Modernization Act – Comply or Die
In January of 2011, the FDA’s Food
Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) was signed into law. FSMA is the most sweeping
reform in food safety in over 70 years. It is designed and aimed at preventing
contamination rather than responding to it. This is the basis of why
understanding as well as a practice in food safety is not only important; it is
now required by law. FSMA's
final rules and compliance deadlines were published in Sept 2015. In April
2015, MBAA launched HACCP training for brewery operations to help the brewing
industry understand the requirements for GBPs, HACCP, FSMA, and how they all
fit together.
10am
– Levi Duncan and Josh Skinner –
Biofine Clear fining trials
and findings at Champion Brewing
The purpose of the
Biofine Clear trials was to optimize the use and application of the
product. Little information was
available on the subject so Levi Duncan and Josh Skinner began trials at both
Champion Brewing Company’s Missile Factory with its 60 bbl fermenters and
Champion’s brew pub with its 6 bbl fermenters.
Process modifications as a product of our research optimized our yield,
reducing cellar loss and producing a clear finished product without the use of
traditional beer filtration. Many
methods of application are in use currently.
Our trials covered two unsuccessful methods and finally settled on a
modification of the “Coronado Method” which is the major focus of the
paper. We will discuss in depth our
application process and our results over time.
11am
– George F. Murphy –
Keg Quality: Your Beer Depends on It!
Virtually all
brewers including those who sell the majority of their product on premise or in
package incorporate kegs in their business to some degree. With that in mind,
attention to the quality of kegs and their handling is an integral component to
quality product service. This presentation will address those aspects related
to keg quality brewers can actively control including: cooperage and clean/fill
equipment selection, keg quality program implementation, best practices, “fill
ready”/fill verification, and useful data that can be collected.
12pm to 1:30pm
– Lunch –
Dining Room and Betsy
Ross Room
1:30pm
– Dave Scheuerman –
Aluminum Canned Craft Beer
A review will be
presented covering aluminum packaging of craft beers, including the advantages,
nomenclature, can and end manufacture, sales order requirements, a typical
canned beer packaging line, engineering considerations, and line personnel
training. Samples of the can and end manufacturing sequence will be shown.
2:30pm
– Karl J. Siebert –
Oxygen in Brewing and Packaging
Oxygen plays a number of
important roles in brewing. Oxidative reactions occur during mashing; some of
these form precursors of stale flavor compounds. Kettle boiling drives out
oxygen (and other dissolved gasses). Wort cooling is needed to increase oxygen
solubility so that aeration (or oyygenation) then provides adequate amounts of
oxygen for yeast. Fermentation quickly consumes all the wort oxygen and this
provides enough energy for yeast to double and then double again well after the
oxygen is gone. Although much more energy is derived
from oxidative than fermentative metabolism, Saccharomyces
cerevisiae (and S. pastorianus) ferments even in the
presence of oxygen as long as sugars are readily available (Crabtree effect).
The conditions during fermentation lead to chemical reduction of many
compounds. Among these is sulfate, which is reduced to ultimately form
sulfur-containing amino acids. One of the intermediates is sulfite, which can
diffuse out of the yeast cells. Sulfite is both a powerful antioxidant and
combines with stale flavor aldehydes to form untasteable complexes. This
reaction is reversible, so as sulfite is consumed, some stale flavor aldehydes
are released from the complexes while more are produced from the remaining
precursors. Brewers are careful to purge lines and equipment with CO2 or
deaerated water to minimize oxygen pickup after fermentation. However, care
must be taken because the solubility of oxygen in liquid CO2 is
actually greater than that of oxygen in water. ‘Aging’ of liquid CO2 before
use reduces the oxygen content. Packaging is typically a source of oxygen that
is minimized as much as possible. Bottle crown liners behave as semi-permeable
membranes, allowing O2 and N2 to enter the
package even though it is under pressure. Cans, with a longer, more torturous
path (through the double seam), suffer much less O2 ingress
than bottles.
3:30pm
– Joe Hertrich –
Round Table Discussion
5pm to 7pm – Happy Hour – Wyndham
Hotel –
- Conference End
-
Thank you for
your kind attention!
Biographical
Information about our Speakers
Bob Seaman
After eight years of Instrumentation and Controls work in
the Nuclear Power industry and several years of homebrewing as a hobby, Bob
decided to change careers and become a professional brewer. In the fall of 1994 Bob attended the ten-week
Craft Brewer’s Apprenticeship program at the American Brewer’s Guild located in
Davis, CA. Bob served his apprenticeship
at Mountain Valley Brewpub in Suffern, New York under Jay Misson. Bob joined The Lion Brewery in Wilkes-Barre,
PA in May of 1995 as a Brewing Supervisor.
In January of 1996 he attended Siebel Institute of Technology in Chicago
Illinois and completed the Long Course in Brewing Science and Technology. After graduating from Siebel Institute in
March of 1996 he went on to hold numerous positions within The Lion Brewery
which included Assistant Brewmaster, Plant Engineer, Packaging Manager and
Director of Packaging and Engineering.
In 2004, after ten year at The Lion Brewery Bob joined SAB/Miller for
three years where he held positions of Packaging Team Leader and Packaging
Reliability Engineer. While working at
SAB/Miller Bob was asked to author a chapter in the MBAA’s ‘Beer Packaging’
second edition titled ‘Packaging Line Design, Control and Instrumentation’. In
September of 2007 Bob joined Yuengling Brewing Company as the Plant Manager of
both of their Pennsylvania facilities and is responsible for operations and
capital projects to date.
Bob holds Associates degree in Electronics Technology from
Lincoln Technical Institute in Allentown, Pennsylvania an Associate’s degree in
Nuclear Engineering Technology from Luzerne County Community College in
Nanticoke, Pennsylvania and a Bachelor Degree in Business Administration with
specialization in Project Management from Colorado Technical University. He presently resides in Orwigsburg,
Pennsylvania with his wife Julie and sons Christopher, Thomas, James and
Andrew.
Alastair
Pringle
Alastair holds a Ph.D. in Microbiology from the University
of Bath, UK. He founded Pringle-Scott LLC after working at
Anheuser-Busch Inc for 25 years, where he held a number of senior technical
positions including Senior Director of Brewing Research. As well as principal consultant he is Associate Instructor in Microbiology at
Maryville University and is a member of the Board of Examiners at the
Institute of Brewing and Distilling.
Jon Larson
Jon Larson joined
Krones in 1996. His first 10 years were
spent in the Engineering Department. His primary role was to manage the
design and construction of customized packaging equipment. In 2006 Jon
joined the Sales Department, responsible for PET Technologies. These technologies encompass PET package blow
molding machines and the division for PET Recycling. His knowledge and
expertise lies in the US PET beverage and recycling markets for the region of
North America.
John Bryce
John Bryce is a brewer,
entrepreneur, and lover of all things technical brewing. He built his first
brewery (Blacksburg Brewing Co.) on a shoestring budget in 2002 and his career
continued at several Virginia breweries, including Capitol City, Old Dominion,
and Starr Hill. John Bryce graduated from Versuchs- und Lehranstalt für
Brauerei (VLB) in 2008. He has also worked as an independent consultant to help
craft breweries launch and/or optimize operations. In 2014 he (and three other
guys with day jobs) built The Lupulin Exchange to help brewers navigate the
secondary hop market. John Bryce served as Technical Chair of MBAA District Mid
Atlantic for many years and is currently the Technical Outreach Director of
MBAA.
Levi Duncan
Levi Duncan is Director of
Brewing Operations at Champion Brewing Company.
He is also a teacher at Piedmont Virginia Community College, American
Brewer’s Guild Graduate, and a Member of the MBAA Mid-Atlantic District who
resides in Charlottesville, VA.
Josh
Skinner
Josh Skinner is Lead Brewer at Champion Brewing
Company. He holds a B.S. in Anthropology
from Radford University along with a Diploma
from Siebel Institute. He is a Member of
the MBAA Mid-Atlantic District and resident of Charlottesville, VA.
George F. Murphy
George Murphy started in the brewing industry in 1991. He has held various positions at Regional
Craft Breweries, Micro-Breweries, and Brewpubs; responsible for brewery and
packaging operations, staff training, raw material acquisition/management,
QA/QC, product development, facility maintenance, sales and marketing. George has been involved in 14 brewery start
up projects as well as numerous expansion projects involving all aspects of
system design, equipment ordering, brewery installation, and commissioning.
Since 2006 he’s held technical support positons with several
allied trade companies ranging from chemical supply to complete raw material
supply. At the beginning of this year George joined MicroStar Logistics as
Regional Quality Manager.
George has been an active member of the Master Brewers of
the Americas Association since 2000, currently serving on District New
England’s Technical Committee and as West New York’s Membership Chairman.
David J. Scheuerman CFS
David J. Scheuerman has worked with customers in the food
and beverage packaging industry for over 40 years, the last 17 years with Ball
Corporation as a Technical Advisor in the Quality & Customer Technical
Service, Metal Beverage Packaging Div., Americas. For the past several years he
has assisted many craft breweries in installing aluminum can lines and training
their production line personnel.
He was the New Products Manager at Reynolds Metals, Can
Division for 14 years, helping to commercialize both carbonated and liquid
nitrogen pressurized non-traditional beverages in aluminum containers
David received a B.S. in Biology from Capitol University,
Columbus, Ohio in 1969 and a M.S. degree in Horticulture/Food Technology from
the Ohio State University in 1975.
He was a past member
of the MBAA, St. Louis Chapter; has presented at the Northern California, St.
Louis, and Rocky Mountain Chapters of the MBAA; is recognized as a Certified
Food Scientist in the Institute of Food Technologists (IFT); and is a member of
the International Society of Beverage Technologists (ISBT), where he has
chaired several Technical Committees and presented many papers. Last, David has
been an amateur home brewer since the early 1970’s.
Karl J.
Siebert
Karl Siebert received a Ph.D. in biochemistry from Penn
State in 1970. He then joined the Stroh Brewery Company in Detroit, where he
spent 18 years and held positions from Research Associate to Director of
Research. In 1990, he joined Cornell University as Professor of Biochemistry in
the Department of Food Science, where he has continued to work on beverages,
particularly beer. He received two MBAA Presidential Awards, and with his
colleague, Penny Lynn, received the Eric Kneen Memorial Award (for the best
paper in JASBC in the prior year)
three times. He received the ASBC Award of Distinction in 1999 and the MBAA
Award of Merit in 2011. Dr. Siebert's current research interests involve foam
and haze in beverages, perception of astringency and other flavors, and the
application of chemometric methods in food science. He is active as a
consultant in beverage technology and chemometrics.
Joe
Hertrich
Joseph D. Hertrich is the retired Group Director, Brewing
Raw Materials at Anheuser-Busch, Inc.
His responsibilities included the operation of the company’s malt
plants, rice mills and hop farms, and the supervision of all facilities that
produced and handled brewing raw materials for Anheuser-Busch products
worldwide.
Prior to joining Anheuser-Busch, Mr. Hertrich held various
positions in brewing with The Stroh Brewery Company, the Pabst Brewing Company,
and the Christian Schmidt Brewing Company.
In retirement, he continues to consult, write, and speak on his
observations over a 50 year career in the U.S. brewing industry.
Mr. Hertrich is a member of MBAA, ASBC, Brewers Association,
and the Craft Maltsters Guild. He is
also a past member of the American Malting Barley Association and the Canadian
Brewing and Malting Barley Research Institute.