China Daily (Hong Kong)

Raising a toast to beer made from bread

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DRIFFIELD, England — At a brewery nestled in rolling farmland in northern England, the process of making beer begins with dropping dozens of unwanted loaf ends, thrown away by a sandwich factory, into a large stainless steel tank.

Add water, hops and yeast, and out comes the unmistakab­le golden beverage popular the world over.

“We’re essentiall­y substituti­ng part of the malt for bread,” says Alex Balchin, head of the Wold Top Brewery, near Driffield in Yorkshire, of the brew which has no discernibl­e bread-like taste.

The brewery uses some of the tons of discarded uneaten bread in Britain to produce beer in support of an initiative fighting food waste — and the idea is being exported around the world.

Behind the concept of Toast Ale is Tristram Stuart, who set up Feedback, an antifood waste organizati­on.

He began producing the beverage last year, drawing inspiratio­n from a small Belgian microbrewe­ry — Brussels Beer Project — that started making a beer from leftover bread, called “Babylone”, in 2015.

“They explained to me that the ancient Babylonian­s actually invented beer to preserve bread and other grains that otherwise would be wasted,” says 40-year-old Stuart.

“That was the original purpose of the drink.”

Stuart’s research has found that “industrial quantities” of bread are being wasted globally, more than food aid charities can utilize, while the global craft beer brewing movement has continued to flourish.

“I wanted to set up a company that matches up local sources of wasted bread, local brewers, local nonprofits, and build Toast Ale into a global company that turns bread that is perfectly good into beer that is even better,” Stuart says.

The profits, after partner brewers have claimed their production expenses, are donated to Feedback, while any grains left after brewing are recycled to feed livestock.

In Britain, 9.8 tons of bread have already been used to produce more than 300,000 beers, sold for between 2.5 and 3 pounds each ($1.3 — $4), a similar price to other craft beers.

It is a small step for the environmen­t, but there is a lot left to do.

Some 44 percent of the bread produced in Britain ends up in the rubbish, nearly 900,000 tons annually, making it the most wasted food item.

“It is deeply depressing if you look at what is going on globally,” says Stuart.

“But the solution of this problem turns (out) to be delicious.”

 ?? LINDSEY PARNABY / AFP ?? Alex Balchin, head of the Wold Top Brewery in Yorkshire, England, pours a glass of ‘Toast Ale’.
LINDSEY PARNABY / AFP Alex Balchin, head of the Wold Top Brewery in Yorkshire, England, pours a glass of ‘Toast Ale’.

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