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Beer trivia. What additives are used in brewing and preserving beer?

We always talk about additives and the big brewers do not want to list them (even a few) but what are they?

Answer:

You don't specify which country you are drinking in and unfortunately you use bars where the staff do not appear to be educated in the products they are retailing.I can only speak for England (and parts of Wales and Scotland)where I drink regularly where my hobby is to find and imbibe real ale that is brewed locally and where the person serving the product is knowledgable of its contents.Invariably local Micro Breweries use only well sourced genuine ingredients that will not include any chemical additives that interfere with the finished product.As an addendum I must add that occasionaly I have been known to suffer with excess flatulence the following morning.Lastly German lagered beers brewed in Germany tend to be the real 'McCoy' unlike the poor copies brewed under licence in the country of consumption.
Ininglass is an additive for finning beer. Cobalt was once used as a foam stabilizer.(no longer used) Probably BHT and others. I have read once that more than 50 even a 100 additives were used in some beers.
Info for the common misunderstanding of hops Miller beers. The hops are indeed chemically treated. They are treated in such a way as to prevent the carbon ring responsible with the formation of a skunk-like smell (isopentenyl mercaptan) compound. The hops are called Rho hops. I knew about the cobalt and I know many more are in or used in big brewery beers but I can only find a few. Cut paste articles. In the mid-60s, for instance, about 50 people died when brewers began putting cobalt sulfate into their products as a foaming agent. Beverage manufacturers don't intentionally murder their customers, of course. But the fact is that a fair number of people are allergic or otherwise sensitive to booze additives, and in the absence of labeling the only way to find out if there's anything bad in a given brew is to take a hefty swig of it and see if you keel over. I don't mean to single out the Miller company, but you may be interested to know that Miller Lite contains propylene glycol alginate, water, barley malt, corn syrup, chemically modified hop extracts, yeast, amyloglucosidase, carbon dioxide, papain enzyme, liquid sugar, potassium metabisulfite, and Emka-malt, whatever that is. I would venture to say that light beers as a class tend to have more additives than others, simply because they'd be totally flat and tasteless otherwise. Cobalt salts stabilize beer foam synthetic banned in 1966 due to Toxic effects on heart. Isinglass is made from the air bladders of sturgeons: thus, fish guts. *^%$#!* Yesterday scientists in the USA revealed that beer contains small traces of female hormones. To prove their theory they fed 100 men 12 pints of beer and observed that 100% of them started talking nonsense and couldn't drive.

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