The demands for a variety of craft beer flavors have been increasing in the United States. To meet this rising demand, breweries have been experimenting with kettle sour beer that utilizes lactic acid-producing bacteria for fermentation. The current standard bacterial quantification method is insufficient for rigorous quality control, thus there is a need for a better method to monitor lactobacilli concentration in a kettle sour environment. In this work, an automated Lactobacillus counting method was developed using fluorescence-based image cytometry. Three commonly used species were cultured, the concentrations were measured using image cytometry and evaluated against the standard spread-plating method. This procedure was undertaken in vitro at different dilutions and the method was repeated with two species in a kettle sour environment at different time points. Both the in vitro and fermentation experiments were repeated three times. Results demonstrated that the new method was not significantly different when compared to the standard plating method in either controlled settings or within the kettle sour fermentation. The proposed method provides a rapid tool to monitor and control lactobacilli growth in kettle sour beer production, and allows for standardization of the products due to the availability of near instantaneous information for quality control.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mimet.2020.106031 | DOI Listing |
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