Brewing as an Art Form
The Marin brew house design combines maximum efficiency and quality
management. The equipment is set up in linear fashion, with the
mash tun near the patron’s entrance. The fermenters, serving
tanks, and bottling line are exposed by glass windows, extending
the length if the tap and bar area. The 14 barrel system is a
modern custom installation which Brendan designed. Marin has an
efficient bottling line which has enabled brews to be packaged
labeled and sent to select retailers throughout California.
Brew Process
Hot liquor (water) flows into the mash tun with the gradual addition
of milled barley and specialty grains. Grain's starch is converted
into maltose in the mashing process. In order to extract the maximum
amount of sugar, the grains are sparged or rinsed. The sweet wort
is then transferred to the boil kettle and the spent grains are
then either discarded or saved as feed for local cattle ranchers.
The boil is a method of condensing the wort and an opportunity
to bitter the wort with scheduled hop additions. Before entering
the fermenter the wort is run through a glycol chiller which lowers
the temperature of the wort to a point in which the yeast can
work effectively.
The fermentation process creates a copious amount of CO2 blowoff.
Once this settles down and the fermentation has run its full course,
the beer is filtered. The beer is then kegged, bottled, or transferred
into jacketed serving tanks.
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