Bira Sözlüğü
Bira ve bira yapımı terminolojisinin kapsamlı sözlüğü — ABV'den wort'a, kategoriye göre düzenlenmiş.
Brewing Basics
Boil
The vigorous boiling phase after lautering, typically lasting 60-90 minutes. Boiling sterilizes the wort, isomerizes hop alpha acids for bitterness, …
Final Gravity (FG)
The specific gravity of beer after fermentation is complete, reflecting residual unfermented sugars and dissolved solids. A lower FG relative …
Gravity Points
A simplified way to express specific gravity by dropping the leading '1.0' — a wort at 1.048 has 48 gravity …
Hot Break
Clumps of coagulated proteins and tannins that form during the vigorous boil. Hot break appears as flaky, egg-drop-soup-like particles floating …
Lautering
The separation of sweet wort from spent grain after mashing. The grain bed acts as a natural filter; the brewer …
Mashing
The process of soaking crushed malted grain in hot water to activate enzymes that convert starches into fermentable sugars. Mash …
Original Gravity (OG)
A measurement of the density of wort before fermentation, expressed as a specific gravity value (e.g., 1.050). OG indicates the …
Sparging
Rinsing the grain bed with hot water during lautering to extract residual sugars. The three main techniques are fly sparging …
Whirlpool
A post-boil technique where wort is stirred rapidly and then allowed to settle, causing hot break material and hop debris …
Wort
The sweet, sugar-rich liquid extracted from the mash before fermentation. Wort contains fermentable sugars, proteins, hop compounds, and minerals that …
Fermentation
Acetaldehyde
A fermentation intermediate with a green-apple or raw-pumpkin aroma. Acetaldehyde is a precursor to ethanol; healthy yeast reduce it during …
Attenuation
The percentage of wort sugars consumed by yeast during fermentation, calculated from the difference between original and final gravity. Apparent …
Cold Crash
Rapidly chilling fermented beer to near-freezing temperatures (32-38 °F / 0-3 °C) to encourage yeast, proteins, and other haze-forming particles …
Diacetyl
A fermentation byproduct with a buttery or butterscotch flavor and aroma. While acceptable at low levels in some English ales …
Ester
Aromatic compounds produced by yeast during fermentation that contribute fruity flavors and aromas to beer. Common esters include isoamyl acetate …
Flocculation
The tendency of yeast cells to clump together and settle out of suspension after fermentation. High-flocculation strains drop clear quickly, …
Krausen
The thick, foamy head that forms on top of fermenting beer during the most active phase of fermentation. High krausen …
Lagering
The cold storage and conditioning phase of lager production, traditionally conducted near 32-40 °F (0-4 °C) for weeks to months. …
Phenol
A class of aromatic compounds that produce spicy, smoky, or medicinal flavors in beer. Desirable phenols include the clove-like 4-vinylguaiacol …
Pitching Rate
The quantity of yeast cells added to wort at the start of fermentation, typically expressed as millions of cells per …
Hop Science
Alpha Acid
The primary bittering compounds in hops, expressed as a percentage of the hop cone's weight. During the boil, alpha acids …
Beta Acid
Hop compounds that do not isomerize during the boil but slowly oxidize over time into bitter compounds. While less immediately …
BU:GU Ratio
The ratio of bitterness units (IBU) to gravity units, used to estimate the balance between hop bitterness and malt sweetness. …
Dry Hopping
Adding hops to beer after fermentation (or during late fermentation) without heat, extracting volatile oils and aromatic compounds while adding …
First Wort Hopping
Adding hops to the kettle during lautering, before the boil begins. The hops steep in the hot wort as it …
Hop Creep
An unintended refermentation caused by enzymes present on hop matter during dry hopping. These enzymes (primarily amyloglucosidase) break down residual …
Hop Oils
Volatile aromatic compounds found in hop lupulin glands, including myrcene (herbal, resinous), humulene (spicy, earthy), caryophyllene (woody, peppery), and linalool …
IBU
International Bitterness Units, a measurement of the concentration of isomerized alpha acids in beer. One IBU equals one milligram of …
Lupulin
The yellow, resinous powder found at the base of hop cone petals (bracts), containing concentrated alpha acids, beta acids, and …
Whirlpool Hop
Hops added during the whirlpool or hop stand phase, after the boil has ended and wort temperature drops to 170-200 …
Malt & Grain
Adjunct
Any non-barley fermentable added to the grain bill, including corn, rice, wheat, oats, rye, sugar, and honey. Adjuncts can lighten …
Base Malt
The primary grain in a beer recipe, providing the bulk of fermentable sugars and the enzymatic power (diastatic power) needed …
Crystal Malt
A specialty malt that undergoes saccharification inside the husk before kilning, creating glassy, crystalline sugar structures. Available in a spectrum …
Diastatic Power
A measure of a malt's enzymatic ability to convert starch into fermentable sugars, expressed in degrees Lintner. Pale malts have …
Grain Bill
The full list of grains and their proportions used in a beer recipe. The grain bill determines the color, body, …
Kilning
The controlled drying and heating of malted grain to halt germination and develop color and flavor. Pale kilning at low …
Lovibond (SRM)
A scale measuring the color intensity of malt and beer. SRM (Standard Reference Method) replaced degrees Lovibond for beer, but …
Maillard Reaction
A complex chemical reaction between amino acids and reducing sugars that occurs during kilning and wort boiling, producing melanoidins — …
Modification
The degree to which the barley endosperm has been broken down during the malting process. Well-modified malts have fully degraded …
Specialty Malt
Kilned or roasted malts used in small quantities to add color, flavor, and body to beer. Examples include crystal/caramel malts …
Beer Styles
Ale
A broad category of beers fermented with top-fermenting Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast at warm temperatures (60-75 °F / 15-24 °C). Ales …
Barleywine
A strong ale (8-14% ABV) with intense malt sweetness, complex fruit esters, and significant alcohol warmth. English barleywine emphasizes toffee, …
BJCP
The Beer Judge Certification Program, a non-profit organization that certifies beer judges, publishes style guidelines, and sanctions homebrew competitions. The …
India Pale Ale (IPA)
A hop-forward ale style originally brewed in England for export to India, now the flagship of the American craft beer …
Lager
A category of beers fermented with bottom-fermenting Saccharomyces pastorianus yeast at cool temperatures (45-55 °F / 7-13 °C), followed by …
Pilsner
A pale lager style originating in Pilsen, Bohemia in 1842, featuring brilliant clarity, noble hop bitterness, and crisp malt character. …
Session Beer
A beer with relatively low alcohol content (typically under 5% ABV) designed for extended, multi-pint drinking sessions without excessive intoxication. …
Sour Beer
A category of beers intentionally acidified by Lactobacillus, Pediococcus, or Brettanomyces. Traditional sour styles include Belgian Lambic, Gueuze, Flanders Red, …
Stout
A dark, top-fermented beer style brewed with roasted barley or malt, producing flavors of coffee, chocolate, and caramel. Sub-styles include …
Wheat Beer
A family of ales and occasional lagers brewed with a significant proportion (typically 50%+) of wheat malt. German Hefeweizen features …
Packaging & Serving
Beer Glassware
Purpose-designed glasses that enhance the drinking experience for specific beer styles. The tulip concentrates hop aromas for IPAs; the Weizen …
Bottle Conditioning
Carbonating beer naturally by adding priming sugar (or fresh wort) before sealing in bottles. Residual or added yeast ferments the …
Carbonation
Dissolved carbon dioxide in beer, measured in volumes of CO2. Most beers range from 2.0 to 3.0 volumes; British cask …
Cask Ale
Unfiltered, unpasteurized beer that undergoes secondary fermentation and conditioning in the cask (firkin) from which it is served. Cask ale …
Crowler
A 32-ounce aluminum can filled and seam-sealed on demand at a taproom or brewery. Crowlers combine the portion size of …
Draft System
The complete setup for dispensing kegged beer, including kegs, gas cylinders (CO2 or nitrogen), regulators, beer lines, faucets, and a …
Force Carbonation
Dissolving CO2 into beer by applying pressurized gas from a CO2 tank, typically in a Cornelius keg. Set-and-forget methods use …
Growler
A reusable container — traditionally a 64-ounce glass jug — filled directly from a draft tap at a brewery or …
Nitro Pour
A serving method using a nitrogen-CO2 gas blend (typically 75% N2, 25% CO2) pushed through a restrictor plate. Nitrogen creates …
Serving Temperature
The optimal drinking temperature for a beer style, which affects aroma volatility, flavor perception, and mouthfeel. Light lagers serve best …
Sensory & Tasting
Beer Clarity
The visual transparency of beer, ranging from brilliant (perfectly clear) to hazy or opaque. Clarity depends on yeast flocculation, protein-tannin …
Chill Haze
A temporary haze that appears when beer is chilled below 32 °F (0 °C) and clears as it warms. Caused …
DMS (Dimethyl Sulfide)
A sulfur compound that produces a cooked corn, creamed corn, or cooked vegetable aroma in beer. DMS is formed from …
Flavor Threshold
The minimum concentration of a compound at which it becomes detectable in beer. Flavor thresholds vary between individuals and are …
Head Retention
The persistence and quality of foam on top of poured beer. Good head retention depends on proteins (especially from wheat …
Lacing
The patterns of foam residue left on the inside of a glass as beer is consumed. Good lacing — rings …
Light-Struck
A skunky off-flavor caused by UV light reacting with isomerized hop compounds (iso-alpha acids) to produce 3-methyl-2-butene-1-thiol (MBT). Green and …
Mouthfeel
The tactile sensation of beer in the mouth, encompassing body (thin to full), carbonation level (flat to effervescent), astringency (puckering), …
Off-Flavor
Any flavor or aroma in beer that is unintended, undesirable, or inappropriate for the style. Common off-flavors include diacetyl (butter), …
Oxidation
Chemical degradation of beer caused by exposure to oxygen after fermentation, producing papery, cardboard, sherry-like, or wet-paper flavors. Oxidation accelerates …
Equipment
Airlock
A one-way valve fitted to the fermenter that allows CO2 to escape during fermentation while preventing outside air, bacteria, and …
Brew Kettle
The vessel used to boil wort with hops. Brew kettles range from stovetop stock pots (5-10 gallon homebrews) to multi-barrel …
Cornelius Keg
A 5-gallon stainless steel pressure vessel originally designed for the soft drink industry, widely adopted by homebrewers for draft beer. …
Fermenter
The vessel where cooled wort is pitched with yeast for fermentation. Common types include plastic buckets, glass carboys, stainless steel …
Hydrometer
A glass instrument that measures the specific gravity (density) of a liquid by floating at different levels depending on sugar …
Mash Tun
The vessel where crushed grain is mixed with hot water for mashing. Homebrewers often use insulated coolers with false bottoms …
pH Meter
An electronic instrument for measuring the hydrogen ion concentration (acidity/alkalinity) of mash and wort. Mash pH should target 5.2-5.6 for …
Refractometer
An optical instrument that measures sugar concentration in a liquid by measuring how much light bends as it passes through …
Sparge Arm
A rotating or fixed device that distributes hot sparge water evenly over the grain bed during lautering. Even water distribution …
Wort Chiller
A heat exchanger used to rapidly cool boiled wort to pitching temperature. Immersion chillers (copper coils in the kettle), counterflow …
Beer History
Anchor Steam
Anchor Brewing Company in San Francisco, founded in 1896 and revived by Fritz Maytag in 1965, is widely regarded as …
Burton-upon-Trent
An English town renowned as the historic capital of British brewing, famed for its mineral-rich water high in calcium sulfate …
Homebrew Legalization
The 1978 U.S. federal law (signed by President Carter) that legalized home brewing of beer and wine for personal consumption. …
Lambic Tradition
The centuries-old Belgian practice of spontaneous fermentation, where wort is cooled overnight in a shallow coolship vessel, exposed to wild …
Monastery Brewing
The medieval tradition of brewing within religious communities, particularly Benedictine and Trappist monasteries, which were among the first institutions to …
Pale Ale Revolution
The 18th-century shift from dark, smoky beers to clear, pale ales enabled by coke-fired kilns that could dry malt without …
Pasteurization
The heat treatment of beer to kill spoilage microorganisms, named after Louis Pasteur who first explained fermentation scientifically in the …
Prohibition
The period from 1920 to 1933 when the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution banned the production, sale, and transportation …
Reinheitsgebot
The German Beer Purity Law of 1516, originally decreed in Bavaria, stipulating that beer could only be brewed from water, …
Trappist Beer
Beer brewed within the walls of a Trappist monastery under the supervision of the monastic community. Only 14 monasteries worldwide …
Industry & Business
Barrel-Equivalent
A standard unit of measurement in the U.S. beer industry equal to 31 U.S. gallons (117.3 liters). Production volume, tax …
Brand Consolidation
The trend of large beer conglomerates (AB InBev, Molson Coors, Heineken) acquiring or investing in craft breweries. Major acquisitions include …
Brewers Association
The U.S. trade group representing small and independent American craft brewers, founded in 2005 from the merger of the Association …
Contract Brewing
An arrangement where a brand owner (the 'contract' or 'virtual' brewer) hires an existing brewery to produce beer according to …
Craft Brewery
As defined by the Brewers Association, a craft brewery is small (under 6 million barrels annual production), independent (less than …
Distribution Footprint
The geographic area where a brewery's products are available through wholesale distribution channels. Expanding distribution requires partnerships with regional or …
Excise Tax
A federal and state tax levied on beer production or importation. U.S. federal excise tax is $3.50 per barrel for …
Franchise Law
State-level legislation governing the relationship between breweries and their distributors. Franchise laws typically make distribution agreements very difficult to terminate, …
Taproom Model
A brewery business strategy focused on selling beer directly to consumers in an on-site taproom, maximizing profit margins by eliminating …
Three-Tier System
The U.S. alcohol distribution model established after Prohibition, requiring separation between producers (breweries), distributors (wholesalers), and retailers (bars, shops). Each …
Beer Culture
Beer Advent Calendar
A seasonal product containing 24 or 25 different beers, one for each day of December leading to Christmas. Beer advent …
Beer Garden
An outdoor drinking area, originating in 19th-century Bavaria where breweries planted chestnut trees above their underground lagering cellars to shade …
Beer Pairing
The practice of matching beer styles with complementary or contrasting foods to enhance both. Classic pairings include Belgian Witbier with …
Beer Tourism
Travel motivated by visiting breweries, beer festivals, historic brewing sites, and beer-centric destinations. Popular beer tourism destinations include Belgium (abbey …
Great American Beer Festival
The largest commercial beer competition and festival in the U.S., organized by the Brewers Association and held annually in Denver, …
Homebrew Club
An organized group of homebrewing enthusiasts who meet regularly to share recipes, techniques, and beers. Clubs often host competitions, group …
Oktoberfest
The world's largest beer festival, held annually in Munich, Germany from late September to early October. Only six Munich breweries …
Pub Culture
The British tradition of the public house as a community institution for socializing, dining, and consuming cask ales. British pub …
Untappd
A popular social networking app for beer enthusiasts to check in, rate, and review beers. Launched in 2010, Untappd has …
Zymurgy
The science of fermentation, derived from the Greek word 'zyme' (leaven). In brewing context, zymurgy encompasses the biochemistry of yeast …
Craft Beer
Beer Release Day
A scheduled event where a brewery releases a limited or special beer to the public, often generating long lines, social …
Collaboration Brew
A beer jointly created by two or more breweries, combining their creative visions, house yeasts, or signature techniques into a …
Fruited Sour
A kettle-soured or traditionally soured beer with substantial fruit additions — often puree, concentrate, or whole fruit. Modern fruited sours …
Haze Craze
The early 2010s-present trend toward intentionally hazy, turbid beers, led by New England-style IPAs. Haze results from suspended yeast, protein-polyphenol …
Independent Craft
The Brewers Association's 'Independent Craft' seal — an upside-down bottle icon — certifies that a brewery is not more than …
Nano Brewery
A very small-scale commercial brewery, generally producing fewer than 3 barrels (93 gallons) per batch. Nano breweries often operate as …
New England IPA (NEIPA)
A hazy, unfiltered American IPA style pioneered in Vermont and Massachusetts, emphasizing juicy tropical fruit flavor, soft mouthfeel, low bitterness, …
Pastry Stout
A sub-style of imperial stout brewed with dessert-inspired adjuncts like vanilla, cocoa nibs, marshmallow, peanut butter, maple syrup, cinnamon, and …
West Coast IPA
A sub-style of American IPA characterized by assertive bitterness, clear appearance, dry finish, and resinous/piney/citrusy hop character. West Coast IPAs …
Whale
Slang for an extremely rare, highly sought-after beer release that commands premium secondary market prices or long queue waits. Whales …