Friday, September 12, 2008

Talk of the Nation: Science Friday - lager beer yeast

As you continue to read about our increasingly annoying excitement, we are going to Germany soon, the land of crisp yellow lager. (What??? Really? You don't say. I never knew.....) NPR's daily afternoon progam Talk of the Nation turns nerdy (nerdier) on Fridays with a special edition called Science Friday. Today's episode that ties into yet another Germany trip reference?

Beer Yeast Separates The Ales From The Lagers

Listen to the 17 minute portion here.

Talk of the Nation, September 12, 2008 ·
Different types of beers — ales, stouts, etc — are distinguished primarily by their yeast, but now these groupings might get even more complicated. Scientists have examined the genetic sequences of 17 unique lager yeast strains from breweries in Europe and North America, tracing variations in their genetic code back through time.

Guest: Gavin Sherlock, assistant professor of genetics at the Stanford University School of Medicine

In the world of beer, ales are separated from lagers by their yeast. Lager yeast collects on the bottom of the fermenting vessel and ferments sugars into alcohol at lower temperatures that ale yeast, which operates at higher temperatures at the top of the fermentation vat. In new research published this week in the journal Genome Research, scientists examined the genetic sequences of 17 unique lager yeast strains from breweries in Europe and North America, tracing variations in the genetic code of those yeasts back through time. The researchers found that a key hybridization step, in which genetic information from two different yeasts combined and rearranged to yield a new 'lager yeast' organism, may have actually happened twice. The researchers found two different family groupings in the lager yeasts they studied, with one lineage associated primarily with Carlsberg breweries in Denmark and breweries in what is now Czechoslovakia, and the other family grouping connected mainly to breweries in the Netherlands, including Heineken. In this segment, we'll talk with one of the authors of the study about genetics and beer, and about the genes behind lager beer styles such as Pilsners, Märzen, Dortmunders, and Bocks. Cheers!

1 comment:

Unknown said...

So, could, so, this, so, guy, so, Gavin, so , say , so, so, so, a, so, little, so, more?

I can hear myself being interviewed:

Um, I ,um, like, um, beer. Um, I, um, think, um, it, um, is, um, good.

Um,

duke