01/29/2021 / By Virgilio Marin
Swedish researchers are exploring new ways to turn brewers’ spent grain into food products like flour and cereal. These beer production leftovers are often discarded or used as animal feed and a recent initiative led by Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden is seeking to change that by upcycling the grains into high-value products.
According to a 2016 report from Gibbs Laboratory, part of the Oregon Health & Science University, around six billion pounds of brewers’ spent grains are produced in the United States every year. Much of that spent grain gets sent to landfills.
Spent grains are by-products of brewing beer and are commonly comprised of wheat, corn, rice, sorghum, millet and barley. Though wet and drained of sugars, they’re still rich in fiber and protein, as well as nutrients like folic acid, biotin and riboflavin.
“Small breweries are paying for someone to come and remove the spent grain. They would like it to be used as animal feed, but it’s tricky and a logistical challenge,” said Joshua Mayers of Chalmer’s Department of Biology and Biological Engineering, who’s part of the research team.
Selling the grains for animal feed or biofuel is also the practice of big breweries, according to team member Max Bjorkman of Chalmers Industriteknik, the organization that heads the research. “This solution benefits both farmers and breweries, who then don’t pay for disposal,” Bjorkman added.
But a few small-scale projects have shown that the spent grains can also be used to produce high-value products like dough and may even have many other potential uses. These leftovers can be used as an ingredient in breakfast cereals, replace potato and corn starch, be puffed into cheese products and even become a replacement for meat and soy products.
“The raw material might not have the same taste, but the nutrition value is certainly higher as it contains less carbohydrates and more protein and fibers,” Mayers said.
The researchers have been mapping out the lifecycle of the spent grain, which is important for unlocking a new way of handling these leftovers and engaging the breweries’ interest in the research. The spent grains spoil quickly, which means the logistics and handling of the grains are a challenge. The team is also trying to understand how the spent grains may affect the product’s texture and taste.
“We know that spent grain could be used, but there’s a lot of questions to answer. There are challenges but we also know that there’s a big interest in solving this,” Mayers said.
The team highlighted the importance of the breweries’ investment and said that in the end, beer producers will be the ones to benefit by saving money on disposal and profiting from a new product. (Related: Ambitious study looks at converting food waste back into food.)
Erick Brockberg, head of quality control at the Swedish brewery Poppels, which is participating in the study, agrees with the researchers and said that in their breweries, large amounts of spent grains go to animal feed. However, if that plan gets disrupted, beer production will be disrupted too and put their schedule at risk. This will be costly so it’s important to know how to dispose of food waste reliably, Brockberg said.
Many businesses in the United States are also using spent grains to produce high-value foods. For instance, bakeries in Chicago have been using the brewery leftovers to make “spent grain loaves.” These shops have been sourcing spent grains directly from local breweries.
Learn more about the amazing uses of food waste at Ingredients.news.
Sources include:
Gibbs-Labs.com[PDF]
Tagged Under: clean food, food leftovers, food science, food supply, food waste, green living, natural ingredients, organics, research, science and technology, spent grains, upcycling
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