Description

Book Synopsis

Quality assurance and quality control (QA/QC) is both a system and a state of mind. In Quality Labs for Small Brewers, author Merritt Waldron walks you step-by-step through the process of establishing and writing a quality program for your brewery. Your quality policy should align with your company values and inculcate a quality-first culture throughout your brewery. Building an effective quality program will empower staff to directly influence the consistent production of safe, quality beer from grain to glass.

A good quality program has many moving parts but it is underpinned by good manufacturing practice (GMP) and food safety requirements. GMP covers every aspect of a brewery's operation, not just how personnel comport themselves, but how goods in are handled and stored, how beer is held in the warehouse, and how equipment, plant, and the grounds are maintained. Learn how to set standards and critical control points, and how to effectively monitor your process so that any deviation is quickly addressed.

Discover how policies, procedures, and specifications can help ensure quality throughout every process. Involve your staff in establishing standard operating procedures, corrective actions, and improvements. Learn how to effectively delegate responsibility and also ensure that management is armed with the information they need to ultimately make what may be some tough decisions. If the worst happens, understand that being able to make a tough call and having a robust recall procedure in place means you can move quickly to rectify matters, which helps your brewery retain the confidence of your customers and distributors.

Brewers will see results through the application of GMP and food safety prerequisite programs. Your quality manual laying out standard operating procedures, product specifications, and corrective action plans will give your staff the confidence to implement your quality program. With these programs in place, the author then takes you through each area of your brewery operation and breaks down how key parameters are measured and analyzed at critical control points. Sampling plans are outlined for monitoring density, temperature, pH, yeast viability and growth, alcohol, carbonation, dissolved oxygen, titratable acidity, fill height, and packaging integrity. Explore setting up an effective sensory panel, even a small one, that will help ensure each beer remains true-to-brand. Waldron outlines building your brewery laboratory and looks at how to implement an in-house microbiology program. Throughout this, the focus is on scaling your efforts to the size of your operation and always being ready to expand your quality program as your brewery grows. The author makes it clear that no brewery is too small to implement QA/QC and discusses pragmatic solutions to building out your capabilities.

Beyond taking meaningful, accurate measurements, the author also explores how to analyze data. Learn some basics of statistics and data organization and how to apply these techniques to continuously monitor processes and spot when corrective action is needed. These routines will help pinpoint any risks or areas of improvement and ensure that only quality beer reaches the customer, time after time.



Table of Contents

Table of Contents


Introduction

About the book

What I assume about the reader

What's this Quality Control Thing About Anyway?

Quality Control

Quality Assurance

Quality System

The Structure

Part I – Building a Solid Foundation

Chapter 1 – Food Safety Modernization Act

Introduction

Food Safety Terms

What FSMA Means for Craft Brewers

What if My Facility is a Brewpub?

How Do I comply?

Chapter 2 - Good Manufacturing Practices

What are Good Manufacturing Practices?

GMPs vs. SSOPs

Familiarize Ourselves with GMP Requirements

Personnel

Plants and Grounds

Sanitary Operations

Sanitary Facilities and Controls

Equipment and Utensils

Warehousing and Distribution

Holding and Distribution of Human Food By-Products

Defect Action Limits

Culture of Food Safety and Quality First

Writing a GMP Manual

Next Steps, Auditing

Chapter 3 – Food Safety Program

Common Food Safety Hazards Around the Brewery

Physical Hazards

Chemical Hazards

Biological Hazards

Control Points and General Control Methods

Assemble Your GMP/Food Safety Team

Put it in Writing

Monitoring Principles

Critical Control Limits

Recall Planning

General notes About Your Recall

Recall Plan in Seven Steps

Things to Add to Your Food Safety Program

Chapter 4 – Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs)

Writing an SOP

Supporting Components

Using a Template

Implementation, Training, and Upkeep

Chapter 5 - Cleaning and Sanitation

Cleaning

Sanitation

Application Variables

Part II – Starting Your Quality Program

Chapter 6 – Starting Your Quality Program

Planning Your Program

Safety

Identifying Quality Control Points

Sampling Plan

Pulling it all Together

Chapter 7 - Writing a Quality Manual

Quality Policy

Quality Governance and Management

Standard Procedures

Specifications of Finished Products

Consumer and In-house Complaints

Corrective Action Plan

Master Sanitation Schedule

Good Laboratory Practices

Calibration Plan

Conclusion

Part III - Measurement

Chapter 8 - Weight, Volume, Concentration, and Dilution Equations

Basic Volume Calculations

Area

Volume

Volume and Temperature Relationship

Volume, Density, and Weight

Problem Solving by Dimensional Analysis and Unit Conversions

Making a Standard Solution

Serial Dilution

Mixing Equation

Scaling

Chapter 9 – Density

Specific Gravity and Plato

Where to measure

Sampling Plan

Troubleshooting

Chapter 10 – Temperature

Temperature Scales

How to Measure

Where to Measure

Sampling Plan

Troubleshooting

Chapter 11 – pH

pH: A Closer Look

Hydrogen Ion Sources

Buffers

How to Measure

Where to Measure

Sampling Plan

Troubleshooting

Chapter 12 – Yeast

Yeast Management

How to Measure

Microscope Basics

Getting to Know Your Hemocytometer

Viability & Methylene Blue

Limitations and Counting Rules

Serial Dilution

ASBC Yeast-3

Craft Brewers Quick Method

Pitch Rate

Where to Measure

Sampling Plan

Troubleshooting

Chapter 13 – Sensory

What is Sensory Analysis

Sensory Program

What We Measure

Practice

Developing Brand Recognition – True to Brand

Getting Formal

Data Collection Forms

Data Collection

Flavor Standards/Off-Flavors

Goal Setting

Conclusion

Chapter 14 – Microbiology

Concerns of Brewers

Ingredients

Environment

Sterilization

Aseptic Technique

Traditional Plating Culture

Choosing the Right Media

Building Confidence in Your Results

Plating Methods

I Have Growth on My Plates! What's Next?

Yeast Identification

Bacteria Identification

Document Results

Next Steps

Advanced Methods

Bringing PCR Into Your Brewery

Chapter 15 - Packaging Quality

Receiving Packaging Materials

Fill Height

Closures

Can Seam Measurements

How to Measure Can Seams

Sampling Plan

Bottle Seals

Secondary Tests

Date Coding

Container Lot Tracking

Labeling

Chapter 16 - Carbon Dioxide

Henery's Law

Units

Where it is Measured

How is it Measured

Where to Measure

Troubleshooting

Chapter 17 - Dissolved Oxygen

Where to Measure

Sampling Plan

Troubleshooting

Chapter 18 - Alcohol

How to Measure

Where to Measure

Sampling Plan

Troubleshooting

Chapter 19 – Titrations

Preparing for a Titration

Titration of a Strong Acid with a Strong Base

How to Measure

Where to Measure

Troubleshooting

What is it used for?

Chapter 20 – Spectrophotometry

Principles of Measurement

How to Measure

Where to Measure

Chapter 21 – Turbidity

Units

How to Measure

Where to Measure

Part IV – Getting To Work

What Every Brewery Should Measure and Document

Chapter 22 – Setting Up Your Brewery Lab

One Goal, Different Approaches

The Retro Fit Approach

The Collector Approach

The Build Out Approach

Budgeting

Lab Safety

Chapter 23 – Introduction to Analysis

Variables

Plan-Do-Study-Act Cycle

Conclusion

Chapter 24 – Data Collection

Accuracy and Precision

Sources of Error

Mean, Normal Distribution, and Standard Deviation

Normal Distribution of Data

Chapter 25 – Data Organization and Analysis

Developing Brew Logs

Analyze Your Data

Getting Data on the Spreadsheet

Charting Best Practices

Moving Range Chart

Chapter 26 – Plan-Do-Study-Act Cycle

PDSA Example Case Study

Setting Product Specifications

Chapter 27 - Continuous Improvement

Where do I Start?

Continuous Improvement in Your Future

Chapter 28 – Conclusion

Final Words of Advice

Appendix A – Basic Good Manufacturing Process Example

Appendix B – GMP Audit Checklists

Appendix C – Food Safety Plan Templates

Appendix D – Recall Planning and Procedure

Appendix E – How to Write an SOP

Appendix F – SOP Example – Equalibriated Package Dissolved Oxygen Samples

Appendix G – How to Use a Hydrometer

Appendix H – ASBC pH Fishbone XXb

Appendix I – SOP Forward Pipetting Technique

Appendix J - SOP_Forward_Pipetting_Technique

Quality Labs for Small Brewers: Building a

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A Paperback / softback by Merritt Waldron

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    View other formats and editions of Quality Labs for Small Brewers: Building a by Merritt Waldron

    Publisher: Brewers Publications
    Publication Date: 03/08/2020
    ISBN13: 9781938469633, 978-1938469633
    ISBN10: 1938469631

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Quality assurance and quality control (QA/QC) is both a system and a state of mind. In Quality Labs for Small Brewers, author Merritt Waldron walks you step-by-step through the process of establishing and writing a quality program for your brewery. Your quality policy should align with your company values and inculcate a quality-first culture throughout your brewery. Building an effective quality program will empower staff to directly influence the consistent production of safe, quality beer from grain to glass.

    A good quality program has many moving parts but it is underpinned by good manufacturing practice (GMP) and food safety requirements. GMP covers every aspect of a brewery's operation, not just how personnel comport themselves, but how goods in are handled and stored, how beer is held in the warehouse, and how equipment, plant, and the grounds are maintained. Learn how to set standards and critical control points, and how to effectively monitor your process so that any deviation is quickly addressed.

    Discover how policies, procedures, and specifications can help ensure quality throughout every process. Involve your staff in establishing standard operating procedures, corrective actions, and improvements. Learn how to effectively delegate responsibility and also ensure that management is armed with the information they need to ultimately make what may be some tough decisions. If the worst happens, understand that being able to make a tough call and having a robust recall procedure in place means you can move quickly to rectify matters, which helps your brewery retain the confidence of your customers and distributors.

    Brewers will see results through the application of GMP and food safety prerequisite programs. Your quality manual laying out standard operating procedures, product specifications, and corrective action plans will give your staff the confidence to implement your quality program. With these programs in place, the author then takes you through each area of your brewery operation and breaks down how key parameters are measured and analyzed at critical control points. Sampling plans are outlined for monitoring density, temperature, pH, yeast viability and growth, alcohol, carbonation, dissolved oxygen, titratable acidity, fill height, and packaging integrity. Explore setting up an effective sensory panel, even a small one, that will help ensure each beer remains true-to-brand. Waldron outlines building your brewery laboratory and looks at how to implement an in-house microbiology program. Throughout this, the focus is on scaling your efforts to the size of your operation and always being ready to expand your quality program as your brewery grows. The author makes it clear that no brewery is too small to implement QA/QC and discusses pragmatic solutions to building out your capabilities.

    Beyond taking meaningful, accurate measurements, the author also explores how to analyze data. Learn some basics of statistics and data organization and how to apply these techniques to continuously monitor processes and spot when corrective action is needed. These routines will help pinpoint any risks or areas of improvement and ensure that only quality beer reaches the customer, time after time.



    Table of Contents

    Table of Contents


    Introduction

    About the book

    What I assume about the reader

    What's this Quality Control Thing About Anyway?

    Quality Control

    Quality Assurance

    Quality System

    The Structure

    Part I – Building a Solid Foundation

    Chapter 1 – Food Safety Modernization Act

    Introduction

    Food Safety Terms

    What FSMA Means for Craft Brewers

    What if My Facility is a Brewpub?

    How Do I comply?

    Chapter 2 - Good Manufacturing Practices

    What are Good Manufacturing Practices?

    GMPs vs. SSOPs

    Familiarize Ourselves with GMP Requirements

    Personnel

    Plants and Grounds

    Sanitary Operations

    Sanitary Facilities and Controls

    Equipment and Utensils

    Warehousing and Distribution

    Holding and Distribution of Human Food By-Products

    Defect Action Limits

    Culture of Food Safety and Quality First

    Writing a GMP Manual

    Next Steps, Auditing

    Chapter 3 – Food Safety Program

    Common Food Safety Hazards Around the Brewery

    Physical Hazards

    Chemical Hazards

    Biological Hazards

    Control Points and General Control Methods

    Assemble Your GMP/Food Safety Team

    Put it in Writing

    Monitoring Principles

    Critical Control Limits

    Recall Planning

    General notes About Your Recall

    Recall Plan in Seven Steps

    Things to Add to Your Food Safety Program

    Chapter 4 – Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs)

    Writing an SOP

    Supporting Components

    Using a Template

    Implementation, Training, and Upkeep

    Chapter 5 - Cleaning and Sanitation

    Cleaning

    Sanitation

    Application Variables

    Part II – Starting Your Quality Program

    Chapter 6 – Starting Your Quality Program

    Planning Your Program

    Safety

    Identifying Quality Control Points

    Sampling Plan

    Pulling it all Together

    Chapter 7 - Writing a Quality Manual

    Quality Policy

    Quality Governance and Management

    Standard Procedures

    Specifications of Finished Products

    Consumer and In-house Complaints

    Corrective Action Plan

    Master Sanitation Schedule

    Good Laboratory Practices

    Calibration Plan

    Conclusion

    Part III - Measurement

    Chapter 8 - Weight, Volume, Concentration, and Dilution Equations

    Basic Volume Calculations

    Area

    Volume

    Volume and Temperature Relationship

    Volume, Density, and Weight

    Problem Solving by Dimensional Analysis and Unit Conversions

    Making a Standard Solution

    Serial Dilution

    Mixing Equation

    Scaling

    Chapter 9 – Density

    Specific Gravity and Plato

    Where to measure

    Sampling Plan

    Troubleshooting

    Chapter 10 – Temperature

    Temperature Scales

    How to Measure

    Where to Measure

    Sampling Plan

    Troubleshooting

    Chapter 11 – pH

    pH: A Closer Look

    Hydrogen Ion Sources

    Buffers

    How to Measure

    Where to Measure

    Sampling Plan

    Troubleshooting

    Chapter 12 – Yeast

    Yeast Management

    How to Measure

    Microscope Basics

    Getting to Know Your Hemocytometer

    Viability & Methylene Blue

    Limitations and Counting Rules

    Serial Dilution

    ASBC Yeast-3

    Craft Brewers Quick Method

    Pitch Rate

    Where to Measure

    Sampling Plan

    Troubleshooting

    Chapter 13 – Sensory

    What is Sensory Analysis

    Sensory Program

    What We Measure

    Practice

    Developing Brand Recognition – True to Brand

    Getting Formal

    Data Collection Forms

    Data Collection

    Flavor Standards/Off-Flavors

    Goal Setting

    Conclusion

    Chapter 14 – Microbiology

    Concerns of Brewers

    Ingredients

    Environment

    Sterilization

    Aseptic Technique

    Traditional Plating Culture

    Choosing the Right Media

    Building Confidence in Your Results

    Plating Methods

    I Have Growth on My Plates! What's Next?

    Yeast Identification

    Bacteria Identification

    Document Results

    Next Steps

    Advanced Methods

    Bringing PCR Into Your Brewery

    Chapter 15 - Packaging Quality

    Receiving Packaging Materials

    Fill Height

    Closures

    Can Seam Measurements

    How to Measure Can Seams

    Sampling Plan

    Bottle Seals

    Secondary Tests

    Date Coding

    Container Lot Tracking

    Labeling

    Chapter 16 - Carbon Dioxide

    Henery's Law

    Units

    Where it is Measured

    How is it Measured

    Where to Measure

    Troubleshooting

    Chapter 17 - Dissolved Oxygen

    Where to Measure

    Sampling Plan

    Troubleshooting

    Chapter 18 - Alcohol

    How to Measure

    Where to Measure

    Sampling Plan

    Troubleshooting

    Chapter 19 – Titrations

    Preparing for a Titration

    Titration of a Strong Acid with a Strong Base

    How to Measure

    Where to Measure

    Troubleshooting

    What is it used for?

    Chapter 20 – Spectrophotometry

    Principles of Measurement

    How to Measure

    Where to Measure

    Chapter 21 – Turbidity

    Units

    How to Measure

    Where to Measure

    Part IV – Getting To Work

    What Every Brewery Should Measure and Document

    Chapter 22 – Setting Up Your Brewery Lab

    One Goal, Different Approaches

    The Retro Fit Approach

    The Collector Approach

    The Build Out Approach

    Budgeting

    Lab Safety

    Chapter 23 – Introduction to Analysis

    Variables

    Plan-Do-Study-Act Cycle

    Conclusion

    Chapter 24 – Data Collection

    Accuracy and Precision

    Sources of Error

    Mean, Normal Distribution, and Standard Deviation

    Normal Distribution of Data

    Chapter 25 – Data Organization and Analysis

    Developing Brew Logs

    Analyze Your Data

    Getting Data on the Spreadsheet

    Charting Best Practices

    Moving Range Chart

    Chapter 26 – Plan-Do-Study-Act Cycle

    PDSA Example Case Study

    Setting Product Specifications

    Chapter 27 - Continuous Improvement

    Where do I Start?

    Continuous Improvement in Your Future

    Chapter 28 – Conclusion

    Final Words of Advice

    Appendix A – Basic Good Manufacturing Process Example

    Appendix B – GMP Audit Checklists

    Appendix C – Food Safety Plan Templates

    Appendix D – Recall Planning and Procedure

    Appendix E – How to Write an SOP

    Appendix F – SOP Example – Equalibriated Package Dissolved Oxygen Samples

    Appendix G – How to Use a Hydrometer

    Appendix H – ASBC pH Fishbone XXb

    Appendix I – SOP Forward Pipetting Technique

    Appendix J - SOP_Forward_Pipetting_Technique

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