An investigation of apparent total N-nitroso compounds in beer.

IARC Sci Publ

Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Food Science Laboratory, Norwich, UK.

Published: January 1988

The concentration of apparent total N-nitroso compounds (ATNC) in beer has been investigated using a group-selective procedure based on chemical denitrosation with hydrogen bromide and chemiluminescence detection of the released nitric oxide. In a survey of samples of 40 brands of beer and lager, detectable levels of ATNC were present in 17 samples at concentrations of 20-100 micrograms N-NO/kg in 11 and 100-500 micrograms N-NO/kg in six. To determine the origin of ATNC in beer the production of a commercial batch was examined in detail. ATNC levels were below the detection limit in the sweet wort (aqueous extract of malt), bitter wort (malt extract boiled with hops) and also at the start of fermentation, but during the course of fermentation the concentration of ATNC increased appreciably and that of inorganic nitrate decreased; detectable, though transitory, levels of inorganic nitrite were observed. None of the brewing ingredients contained sufficiently high enough levels of ATNC to account for the concentration of these compounds present in the beer after fermentation. These findings suggest that the presence of detectable levels of ATNC in some beers is a result of N-nitrosation reactions occurring in the fermenting wort with the nitrosating species derived from reduction of nitrate, due probably to the presence of microbial species with nitrate reductase activity.

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