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<item>
  <id>10573</id>
  <title>How Does a Beer Get Skunky?</title>
  <published_at>Wed May 16 14:46:00 -0700 2007</published_at>
  <link>http://www.chow.com/stories/10573</link>
  <pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2007 21:46:00 GMT</pubDate>
  <short_description>A different way to end up stinking drunk</short_description>
  <long_description>A different way to end up stinking drunk.</long_description>
  <img>http://www.chow.com/assets/2006/09/img_naggingquestion_240x240.jpg</img>
  <author>Nicole Solis</author>
  <category>
    <id>62</id>
    <name>Nagging Question</name>
  </category>
  <pages>
    <page>
      <page_number>1</page_number>
      <content>
        <![CDATA[<p><img src="/assets/2006/09/img_ico_q.gif" alt="" />How does a beer get skunky?</p>


	<p><img src="/assets/2006/09/img_ico_a.gif" alt="" />A skunked beer tastes like a skunk smells. It&#8217;s commonly thought that subjecting beer to variations in temperature will skunk it. However, skunkiness in beer is caused not by heat, but by light.</p>


	<p>Isohumulones, the bitter compounds in hops used in beer, are very sensitive to natural light (artificial light affects them, too, but not nearly as fast). &#8220;If light reaches them, they break down very quickly and react with traces of sulfur compounds in the beer,&#8221; says Charles Bamforth, chair of the Food Science and Technology Department at the <a href="http://foodscience.ucdavis.edu/">University of California–Davis</a> and a top researcher in brewing science. This process produces MBT (3-methyl-2-butene-1-thiol), which not only smells like skunk, it&#8217;s also chemically very similar to the noxious compound in a skunk&#8217;s spray. And it&#8217;s potent. Some people can detect MBT at concentrations as low as one-billionth of a gram in a 12-ounce beer.</p>


	<p>Cans offer the best protection against damaging light waves, and brown bottles rate a close second. &#8220;If you have really strong light for a very long time, then even in brown glass, the beer goes skunky,&#8221; says Bamforth. &#8220;But in a clear glass or a green glass, it&#8217;ll happen very, very quickly&#8221;&#8212;as in a matter of seconds, not hours. <a href="http://www.chow.com/stories/10103">Pilsners</a>, traditionally bottled in green glass, are very susceptible to skunking.</p>


	<p>Allowing chilled beer to get warm and then trying to chill it again still isn&#8217;t a good idea. Heat speeds up oxidation, and the beer begins to taste like cardboard. To preserve the flavors in your beer, always store it in a cool, dark place, like, say, your refrigerator.</p>]]>
      </content>
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