Kari Murad (1),
Mohammad Hussain (1), Olivia Junco (1), Rachel McCormick (1), Jana
McGinnis (1); (1) The College of Saint Rose, Albany, NY, U.S.A.
Yeast, Fermentation, and Microbiology
Poster
Spontaneous fermentation is dependent upon the yeasts available in
the local environment. In fact, for generations brewers, bakers and
vintners relied on the ferments produced by microbes present on the
grains/fruits, in the facilities and floating in the air. These wild
yeasts can produce desirable ferments but often travel in the company of
spoilage bacteria and molds. Due to the variability in using wild
yeast, most production breweries and distilleries use commercially
available yeast during fermentation to ensure production quality and
consistency; however, we know that nuance in bouquet and flavor often
come from terroir and the unexpected in fermentation. As the
second-largest apple-producing state in the United States, New York has
no shortage of family orchards, some of which have turned to expanding
their markets through the production of apple-based alcohols. We teamed
up with orchard distilleries to collect wild yeast from the fruits
during apple harvest season. Initial research isolated five potentially
viable strains. The wild yeast strains were identified and then
characterized for their glucose tolerance and consumption, ethanol
tolerance and production, propagation potential and viability. These
strains were then tested further in small-batch, beer-brewing trials.
Kari Murad received her Ph.D. degree in pathology at Albany
Medical College in Albany, NY. After working in hospital-based
laboratories, she was hired to teach microbiology and immunology at the
College of Saint Rose in Albany, NY, in 1999. Exploits in her kitchen
lab and collaborations with local farms, breweries/distilleries and food
safety labs led her to design an undergraduate food microbiology
research lab and subsequent food microbiology course. Relatively new to
the brewing world, she has recently become a member of ASBC and is
always looking forward to her next adventures with microbiology.