Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UA expands education on brewing

- JOHN LOVETT

There’s something brewing at the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e.

To further support the growing beer brewing industry in Arkansas, the University of Arkansas Certificat­e of Proficienc­y in Brewing has added a fully licensed and bonded nanobrewer­y for “grain to glass” hands-on experience in beer production and quality control.

That nanobrewer­y is a 15-gallon, all-electric, four-vessel system, along with temperatur­e-controlled tanks for fermentati­on, which allows faculty to perform teaching and research on several topics, including the use of Arkansas rice in brewing.

Beer produced by the system is currently packaged in 5.2-gallon kegs and served on an eight tap station for research, training and extension purposes. The nanobrewer­y is housed in the food science building at the Milo J. Shult Agricultur­al Research and Extension Center. The certificat­e program incorporat­es courses from the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultur­al, Food and Life Sciences, the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Engineerin­g.

Scott Lafontaine, assistant professor of food chemistry, and Renee Threlfall, research scientist in enology and viticultur­e, with the Division of Agricultur­e and Bumpers College, are co-directors of the brewing certificat­e program. They conduct research through the Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station, the research arm of the Division of Agricultur­e.

“The brewing certificat­e program was initiated in 2020 to support Arkansas’ growing beer brewing industry, and we have had several students graduate from the program,” Threlfall said. “Hiring Dr. Lafontaine last year has enabled us to expand and revise the program.”

The nanobrewer­y was installed this year by Lafontaine and is licensed as the University of Arkansas Beverage Developmen­t Facility. As a bonded and licensed small brewery with the state of Arkansas, and as a pilot brewing plant with the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, the beer produced on the system can be served on location at special events to those of legal drinking age.

According to the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administra­tion, there are 46 active

small brewer permits and 12 active microbrewe­ry permits for a total of 58 craft breweries permitted to manufactur­e and sell beer in Arkansas. The number of craft breweries in Arkansas has grown steadily over the past 10 years, according to the Brewers Associatio­n, with production at about 53,000 barrels in 2022. A barrel of beer is 31 gallons.

Beer Serves America, the biennial economic impact study commission­ed by the Beer Institute and National Beer Wholesaler­s Associatio­n, reports that the beer industry in Arkansas supports 390 brewing and 883 agricultur­e jobs.

Lafontaine, who joined the food science department faculty in 2022, has been the author or co-author of many published research papers on studies of hop quality, non-alcoholic beer production and flavor analysis. In May, he was among the speakers at the Craft Brewers Conference & BrewExpo America for a seminar titled “Novel Strategies to Develop Preferable Non-Alcohol and Low-Alcohol Beer and Alternativ­es.”

The brewing certificat­e program is designed to provide students with a theoretica­l and practical introducti­on to brewing and fermentati­on. Once a student completes the 15-credit-hour certificat­e, Lafontaine said they will have a thorough understand­ing of the brewing process and how to measure the quality of beer and other beverages.

Previously, hands-on experience for brewing science students was obtained through internship­s with commercial brewing partners.

Core Brewing & Distilling in Springdale is one of the industry partners where students in the brewing certificat­e program participat­e in internship­s. Jesse Core, CEO of Core Brewing, expressed excitement for the brewing certificat­e program and Lafontaine’s involvemen­t as co-director.

“I’m thrilled about U of A’s choice to hire a brewing scientist like Dr. Lafontaine,” Core said. “Our past discussion­s were insightful, and his expertise will be invaluable to the future developmen­t of the beverage sector in Arkansas. Given Arkansas’s potential for new beverage ventures, we remain excited to support the program.”

With the new nanobrewer­y, students will get handson brewing experience on a standardiz­ed level, said Lafontaine. Along with learning how to design their own recipes, brewing science students will also learn more about quality control and flavor chemistry analysis through training with state-of-the-art methodolog­y and using instrument­s such as an Anton Paar Alcolyzer and a Shimadzu triple quadrupole gas-chromatogr­aph-mass spectromet­er.

“Depending on the scale of production and available funds, every brewery has different ways of handling quality analysis and control. Throughout the certificat­e, students will learn industry standard methods that were developed by brewing chemists, and how to apply them to monitor beverage quality,” Lafontaine said. “By the time someone finishes the brewing certificat­e program, my goal is that they become troublesho­oters and have a solid foundation­al knowledge which they can leverage in their future jobs with our commercial partners to generate excellent products.”

To learn more about Division of Agricultur­e research, visit the Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu. Follow the agency on Twitter at @ ArkAgResea­rch.

 ?? (Special to The Commercial/Fred Miller/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e.) ?? Scott Lafontaine investigat­es the compounds, health benefits and other characteri­stics of beer in this May 2, 2023, photo.
(Special to The Commercial/Fred Miller/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e.) Scott Lafontaine investigat­es the compounds, health benefits and other characteri­stics of beer in this May 2, 2023, photo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States