Beer Brewery Analysis (Brooklyn Brewery).

For the beverage production experimental learning analysis as an alternative I decided to go to a beer brewery, because I couldn’t have the opportunity to go to a winery during the past 3 weeks. Which I found very interesting since we took the class beer 101 with the instructor and beneficiary of the Sixpoint Brewery. In which the class was able to learned many things about the beer industry such as the beer process, ingredients use to make beer, type of beers and tasting terminologies. The Brooklyn brewery is a great place to get some knowledge about beer in the city located at Brooklyn New York. The brewery offers free tours on weekends for a specific time depending on the audience. Yesterday on May 11th I was able to attend to one of the tours at 3:00 pm where a tour guide gives a brief explanation about the beer industry, and the way the company made their beer.

This is the entrance of the location once you walked in of the outside this are the first vessels that you’re going to see.

Selfie time outside of the brewery

Unfortunately the tour was not al long as I was expecting because there was not too many rooms or places to go within the brewery, however, the tour was short but very informative. A interesting fact that I noticed about this tour was that most of the people that was there where from Europe and Japan, the tour guide mentioned a bit of the history about the brewery which was establish on 1987 and how the owner start making beer after coming back from the Middle East to the United States.

The first room we visited was the brew room, where all the beer is store with the usage of the old brewing system and the old brewing system. It can also be used to store water.

Something that caught my attention about this beer vessel was that apart from being the biggest they had in the brewery, it was made 32 years ago in Germany and was brought to the US.

During the tour the guider explained us about the four major ingredients used to make beer in the brewery which are HOPS, BARLEY AND WATER. However, the major component and essential to make beer is water which is 85 and 90 % (percent) of beer. The brewery gets a high quality crystallized and naturalized water from the Catskills Mountains, which is not require to have the water go through a lot of treatments. half of their beers are made with malted barley. Malted are cereal grains germinated. The barley goes through a hot water process which cause the breaks down of its sugars. The final step is to transfer all the water from the procedure which is now all sugar from the grains.

These buckets contains waste of unmade beer.

Hops sample from the bar.

Barley grains from the flowers.

Malted barley

All this process of making beer start from the steps of brewing which are mashing, lautering, and vorteuting, our tour mentioned that the time limited to boil the water varies it could be  1, 2 or 3 hours, the color of the beer comes the the malt barley. That includes the process of malting which involves soaking the barley, allowing it to germinate and then stopping the germination with hot water.

Our tour guide was amazing a person who has been working for the industry for the past 15 years who name is Kristine. A very interesting and knowledgeable person.

During the tour I also learned that their technological systems can make 7 thousands of beer bottles per hour. At the end of the tour we where directly taken to the tasting are which is the bar, to taste their seasonal beer “summer ale” .

The “tasting room” which is the bar, and is where they also put all of the hops and barley samples they have.

Last but not least the cone shaped container, that contains all the barley and malted that is added to the fermentation tanks.

References

Brewery, B. (2004, March/April). Brooklyn Brewery. Retrieved May 11, 2019, from https://brooklynbrewery.com/verify

The history of Brooklyn brewery

Retail Beverage Shop

Yamir Nivar

HMGT 2402

Karen Goodland

 

Retail Beverage Shop

 

 

This is the front of the winery, which is one of the biggest in the area.

 

I live in Washington Heights for that reason I decided to go to a winery that I frequently go, which is PJ Wine, 4898 Broadway, nr. 204th St. Therefore, I used this place for the retail shop analysis, which was a assignment that I enjoyed a lot and at the same time learned many things within the wine industry. I was able to speak with one the supervisor who name is Tom, he is the one that is in charge to explain about each category of wines in the store. I noticed that they majority of wines they sell are from Latin America and Spain, they have a huge shelf from Spain. Tom was able to tell me which are the wines that they sell the most which Wines from Spain are, I also asked him a couple of questions about wines from France and he was able to recognize and tell me each of the wines region in France such as Alsace, Burgundy etc. They are very affordable prices for customers especially on wines from Latin America such as Chile, and Argentina. The shelf that I enjoy the most was the Toros shelf (Wines from Spain).

 

 

 

 

 

Red wine of a region I did not know they made wine, which is Uruguay. I was surprised because I really never thought that Uruguay was a wine maker country. However, I taste this wine ad it was gorgeous

A huge variety of red wines from Spain from the Toros Shelf, the store really offers a great variety of Spain wines especially from the wine region Rioja (Gran Reserva).

In the sparkling wines shelf the French sparkling wine are predominant, but one that caught my attention was a sparkling wine from Italy Prosecco Rustico.

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