Gain access to the best research from the 2015 ASBC Annual Meeting! The Online Proceedings includes presentations from the meeting held in La Quinta, CA, June 14–17, 2015. Oral presentations include the author’s full slide show complete with graphics, and posters can be magnified to focus on specific figures, images, tables, and graphs.
You may view the table of contents for the oral and poster presentations in the contents tab. All presentation abstracts are open access, but you must purchase access to view the full presentation or poster.
Please note that the presentation files are compressed for web delivery but with attention given to the fidelity of the images. Presentations are still large web files and may take a few moments to open.
Interested in the recorded presentations? Not an ASBC member? Join ASBC first, then you receive the 2015 proceedings at no charge.
2015 ASBC Annual Meeting Online Proceedings
Oral Presentations
1. L. Guerdrum. A contemporary tool for a new age in brewing: Bringing modern science into everyday flavor analysis
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2. J. Hort. Measuring the emotional response to beer: The long and the short of it!
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3. B. Gadzov. Beer quality and stability on the market
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4. A. G. Barlow. New methods of sensory evaluation: Their implications and applications for drinkability assessment and beer–food pairing based upon statistical and consumer studies
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5. A. R. Bhat. Evaluating a portable yeast pitching skid for reliable and accurate pitching for craft breweries
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6. J. Carvell. Practical experiences with an automated yeast cell counter using methylene blue in breweries
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7. K. McCulley. Rapid yeast viability detection method in complex brewing samples using the Cellometer X2 image cytometry
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8. D. C. Sharp. Contributions from the ß-glucosidase activity of brewing yeast to hoppy beer aroma
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9. T. Praet. Sesquiterpene oxidation products as key impact compounds for “kettle hop” aroma
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10. D. M. Vollmer. The influence of oil content on aroma in beer dry-hopped with Cascade
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11. J. Wei. Measurement of terpene alcohols and their stereoisomers in beer and the applications for improving beer hop aroma
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12. A. L. Heuberger. Non-volatile metabolites associated with flavor stability in beer
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13. N. Doi. What compound is primarily responsible for the metallic flavor in beer?
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14. N. Rettberg. Permeation of volatile organic compounds into packaged beer—Tools for practice oriented simulation and analysis
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15. Y. Katayama. Improvement of wort foam stability by yeast-derived substances
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16. C. Neugrodda. Influence of hop products and natural foam enhancer on beer foam
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17. Y. Zhou. The influence of beer protein components and content on beer colloidal and foam quality
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18. T. Kato. Fermentation ability of bottom fermenting yeast exhibiting defective entry into the quiescent state
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19. J. Bergsveinson. Search for genetic markers for lactic acid bacteria beer-spoilage and the role of dissolved CO2/pressure on bacterial growth in beer
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20. S. Deckers. Gushing Task Force: Round table on “primary gushing”
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21. C. Geissinger. Fusarium species on barley malt—Visual assessment as an appropriate tool?
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22. C. L. Almaguer. From raw materials to malts: Influence of the malting parameters on malt aroma development
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23. D. W. Herb. Barley contributions to beer flavor I: Effect of variety, location, and genotype × environment interaction on beer flavor
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24. C. I. Nnamchi. Influence of added commercial enzyme preparations and mashing temperature on extract recovery of laboratory malted Nigerian grown pearl millet and wheat
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25. K. L. Christiansen. Overcoming pre-harvest sprout damaged malt: The effects of enzyme addition
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26. D. Sedin. Development of a GC method for the analysis of twelve key fermentation derived volatiles utilizing deuterated internal standards, SPME, and SIM
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27. C. A. Hughey. Beeromics: From QC to IDs of differentially expressed compounds
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28. A. R. Spevacek. NMR metabolomics reveals molecular details of the brewing process
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29. F. Verkoelen. The evolution of CO2 measurement within the brewing industry: What does it bring to breweries and what will be the next step?
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30. M. Biendl. Hard resins: The complementary bitter fraction present in hops, pellets, and ethanol extract
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31. G. Hasman. Direct ESI-MS quantitation of bittering acids, isomerization, and oxidation products in hops and beer for calculation of the hop storage index and international bitterness units
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32. C. Schoenberger. The influence of mode of dry hopping on flavor stability of dry-hopped beers
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33. M. C. Qian. Key aroma compounds in “Centennial,” “Citra,” and “Nelson Sauvin” hop identified by aroma extract dilution analysis
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34. Y. Muraoka. Very high gravity brewing: Effects of the processes on fermentation in 30°Plato wort
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35. A. Speers. Monitoring of industrial ale and lager brewing fermentations
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36. T. Irie. Analysis of sugar attenuation with a curve-fitting method and its application for industrial fermentation control
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37. G. Zhou. Study on proanthocyanidins-rich beer
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38. B. M. Titus. The effects of polyphenols extracted during dry hopping on beer flavor stability
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39. D. J. Cook. A novel beer fining and stabilizing agent extracted from hops
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Posters
40. M. Postulkova. Origin of hydrophobins and the constant “k” in Henry’s Law govern the volume of foam formed by primary gushing of beer
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41. S. Huang. Optimization of kilning conditions for multiparameter equilibrium of malt using response surface methodology
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42. K. Inomoto. Establishing a new quantitative method for Fusarium hydrophobins using LC/MS/MS
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43. J. Yu. Identifying the protein molecular weight distribution of different malting barley varieties by capillary gel electrophoresis
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44. W. J. Lee. Development of a detection method and occurrence of citrinin in corn and rice from China
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45. A. I. MacLeod. Effect of increasing nitrogen fertilization on barley protein content and endosperm modification during malting
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46. M. Kanauchi. Components in black malt impacting beer foam
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47. T. Watanabe. Determination of wheat protein in beer using the wheat/gluten (gliadin) ELISA kit: 2014 BCOJ Collaborative Work
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48. X. Li. Chinese barley malt filterability related proteins explored by the proteomic strategy
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49. D. O. Letcher. Information to action: Using the ASBC Flavor Wheel to unwind the complexity of beer flavor
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50. M. Peltz. Sensory bitterness quality of oxidized hop acids: Humulinones and hulupones
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53. A. Donelan. Comparison of tetrad and triangle testing as an applicable discrimination test
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54. W. A. Deutschman. Determination of sugar metabolism profiles of non-traditional yeasts in the Saccharomyces and Brettanomyces families
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56. M. C. Qian. Simultaneous quantification of furaneol and sotolon in beer and other alcoholic beverages by in-solution derivatization-GC-MS analysis
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57. K. McCulley. A simple, cost-effective treatment for declumping super yeast
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58. J. P. Maye. Formation of humulinones in hops and hop pellets And its implication for dry-hopped beers
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59. S. J. Britton. Characterization of Humulus lupulus microbial communities by Illumina 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing
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60. Y. Noro. Selective adsorption of hop derived aroma substances by nonviable dry brewing yeast
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61. C. Ermey. Examination of extraction solvents to improve laboratory efficiency and reduce solvent use for the analysis of hop products
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62. V. Algazzali. A comparison of quality: Freeze-dried versus kiln-dried Cascade hops
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63. B. Buffin. Sensory and analytical assessment of advanced hop products and the influence of hop starting material on bitterness
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65. S. Hu. Validation and application of osmolyte concentration as an indicator to evaluate fermentability of wort and malt
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Publish Date: 2015