Course Tutors
Course Code: 8.0.1
Semester: 8th
Course hours: flexible
ECTS: 12
LEARNING OUTCOMES
After the end of the course students will be able to:
- Design and execute recipes for beer production
- To manage relations with the market, suppliers, customers
- To manage the raw materials, products and equipment of a brewery
- To calculate the cost of the product, the losses and the yields
- To control and manage the production process and the quality of the product, from the raw materials to the final product, including the image of the product (labels, etc.)
- To produce beer in real conditions
- Evaluate results with critical thinking, know the impact of different conditions on the production process and solve production problems in real time
General Skills
- Search, analysis and synthesis of data and information, using the necessary technologies
- Adaptation to new situations
- Decision making
- Autonomous work
- Teamwork
- Work in an international environment
- Work in an interdisciplinary environment
- Project planning and management
- Respect for the natural environment
- Demonstration of social, professional and ethical responsibility
COURSE CONTENT
The students with the help and support of the professors:
- They will attend lectures/seminars on special brewing topics
- They will take on roles in the pilot brewery, similar to those in industry
- They will undertake the support/training of volunteer students of lower semesters
- They will be involved in the design, production, monitoring, analysis and bottling of a number of beers and deliver a full team report on each beer produced
- They will take part in a few-day placement in a brewery to produce, analyze and bottle beer
- They will participate in educational technical visits of breweries
- They will undertake an individual project (design or construction)
RECOMMENDED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- H. Palmer, Cereals in malting and brewing. In Cereal Science and Technology, Aberdeen University Press, Scotland, 1989.
- H. Palmer, Cereal science and malting technology-The future. Journal of the American Society of Brewing Chemists 50(4):121-129, 1992.
- J. Lewis and T. W. Young, Brewing, Chapman & Hall, 1995
- .D. E. Briggs, C.A. Boulton, P.A. Brookes and R. Stevens. Brewing Science and practice. 2004 Woodhead Publishing Limited and CRC Press, LLC
- M. Eslinger Handbook of Brewing: Processes, Technology, Markets. 2009 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
- J. Lewis & C.W. Bamforth. Essays in Brewing Science. 2006. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
- W. Bamforth. Brewing New technologies. 2006, Woodhead Publishing Limited •
- Kunze. Technology of Brewing & Malting. 2004. VLB Berlin. Germany.
- G. Priest, G.G. Stewart. Handbook of brewing. 2nd ed. 2006. Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
- Katherine Smart. 2008. Brewing Yeast Fermentation Performance. Wiley
- Chris Boulton and David Quain (Editors). 2007. Brewing Yeast and Fermentation. Wiley
- G. Priest. 2013. Brewing microbiology. Springer
- Annie Hill (Editors). 2015. Brewing Microbiology—Managing Microbes, Ensuring Quality and Valorizing Waste. Woodhead Publishing. Elsevier
- Nicholas A. Bokulich and Charles W. Bamforth. 2017. Brewing Microbiology: Current Research, Omics and Microbial Ecology. Publisher: Caister Academic Press
- Pires, Eduardo, Brányik, Tomáš. 2015. Biochemistry of Beer Fermentation. Springer International Publishing
Συναφή επιστημονικά περιοδικά
- Journal of The Institute of Brewing (JIB-IBD)
- Journal of the ASBC
- Brewing Science
- Cerevisia
Assessment Method
Project, assessment of participation/written reports