You have no items in your download list.Login to save your download list.

 
Tell someone you know about this article.

Banana Beer

Banana Beer

Technical Briefs and Manuals:


 

This is a text-only version of the Technical  Brief. For the full version, with illustrations, please download the free PDF document. To read the PDF, you will need the current version of Adobe Acrobat reader, which can be downloaded free from Adobe's website.

 

Introduction


Banana beer is a weak alcoholic beverage that is popular throughout Africa. It is made by fermenting bananas with a cereal flour (often sorghum flour).  It is sweet and slightly hazy with a shelf life of several days under correct storage conditions.  The processing method and ratio of ingredients used varies widely from country to country and with personal taste.  In Kenya, banana beer, made from sorghum or millet flour, is known as urwaga. In Uganda, banana beer is known as lubisi.  This technical brief describes one traditional method, and suggests ways in which the hygiene and safety of the product can be improved.

Ingredients
Ripe bananas
Boiled water
Roast ground cereal

 

 

Raw material preparation

Only ripe bananas (Musa species) should be used to make the beer as these have a high sugar content, which is necessary for the fermentation. Over-ripe bananas should not be used as they may spoil the flavour of the beer.  Unripe bananas should be left to ripen before they can be used.  Ripening can be speeded up by warming the fruit.  During the rainy season, unripe bananas can be left to ripen laid on a hurdle over the fire where the cooking is done.  During the dry season bananas can be ripened by making a pit in the ground, covering the sides of the pit with green banana leaves, packing the bananas into the pit and then covering them with banana leaves and earth. On one side of the pit a little ditch should be dug for a fire so that warmth and smoke can enter the pit. This takes about six days.

The bananas should then be peeled.  If the peels cannot be removed by hand the bananas are not sufficiently ripe and should be left for longer.

 

 

Processing

The first step is the preparation of the banana juice.  It is important to obtain a high yield of clear banana juice that is not spoiled by browning or contaminated by spoilage micro-organisms. Ensure that the vessels used for pulping the banana and extracting the juice are clean before use.

Knead the bananas until they are soft and pulpy.  Use a stiff grass to help knead and squash the banana pulp and to extract the juice.  The pulp residue will remain in the grass.  Pour off the extracted juice into a large clean bucket or similar container.  This banana juice is non-alcoholic and can be diluted and drunk at this stage if desired.

Add clean boiled water to the extracted juice (one volume of water for three volumes of banana juice).  It is necessary to dilute the banana juice so that the concentration of soluble solids is low enough for the yeast to ferment the juice.   Grind the cereal (sorghum or millet) and lightly roast it over an open fire.  Add the roast cereal (1 part cereal to 12 parts juice) to the diluted banana juice.  Cover the bucket with a clean lid and leave in a warm place to ferment for 18 to 24 hours. The ground cereal improves the colour and flavour of the beer.

After fermentation the beer is filtered through a sterilised cotton cloth.

 

 

Packaging and storage

Packaging is usually only required to keep the product for its relatively short shelf life.  Clean glass or plastic bottles should be used.  The product should be kept in a cool place away from direct sunlight.

 

 

Hygiene and quality assurance

Banana beer is made from raw material that does not undergo any heating or cooking at any stage of the process.  The banana pulp is an excellent substrate for microbial growth – both of the desirable yeasts and the non-desirable spoilage bacteria.  The fermentation is brought about by natural yeasts that are present on the banana. Heating or boiling the raw material would kill these natural yeasts and spoil the traditional flavour of the beer.  It is essential that strict attention is paid to cleanliness of the equipment and processing area and to personal hygiene to avoid contamination of the beer with other bacteria that may form acid rather than alcohol.

It is best to sterilise the equipment prior to use with boiling water.  Chlorinated water can be used to clean the equipment, but this is not recommended as the chlorine can affect the fermentation.  

Flow diagram

Raw materials  Ripe bananas
|
Peel    Peel by hand
|
Remove residue  Use grass to knead or squeeze out the juice.  The residue will remain
|
Mix with water  The water: banana juice ratio should be 1:3
|
Mix with cereal flour Mix with ground and roasted cereals to local taste.  For  sorghum the ratio should be 1:12
|
Ferment   In plastic container.  Leave to ferment for 18 to 24 hours.  
|
Filter    Through cotton cloth
|
Pack    In one-litre plastic bottles with cork stoppers or equivalent
|
Store  

 

 

Improved method for banana beer

The process can be made more hygienic and the quality of product improved by following a typical method for making a fermented beverage. This involves the preparation of a wort (which is a boiled starter substrate), addition of a commercial source of yeast, fermentation under controlled conditions (time and temperature) followed by pasteurisation to stop the fermentation. The product made by this improved method will have a different taste and appearance to the ‘live’ beer produced by the traditional method.  The improved beer can be bottled and stored and will be consistent from one batch to the next.

 

 

Equipment required

Beer making does not require any specialist equipment.  All equipment used should be of food-grade and should be thoroughly cleaned before use.
 Knives
 Filter bags (cotton cloth)
 Fermentation vessel (plastic bucket)

 

 

General suppliers of brewing equipment

Note: This is a selective list of suppliers and does not imply endorsement by Practical Action.

 

Youngs Home Brew - Wholesale suppliers of brewing equipment
Cross Street, Bradley
Bilston, West Midlands
WV14 8DL.
United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)1902 353352
Fax: +44 (0)1902 354852
Email: enquiries@youngshomebrew.co.uk
Website: http://www.youngshomebrew.co.uk/

EasyBrew
4 Enterprise Park
86 Parsonage Barn Lane
Ringwood
Hampshire
BH24 1PZ
United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)1425 479972
Fax: +44 (0)1425 479972
Email: info@easybrew.co.uk
Website: www.easybrew.co.uk

Brew it Yourself
Unit 4 Parkside, Potters Way
Temple Farm, Southend on Sea
Essex, SS2 5SJ
United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)1702 614422
Email: orders@esuasion.co.uk  
Website: http://www.brew-it-yourself.co.uk/

 

References and further reading

 

 

Useful organisations and contacts

C.T.A
P.O.Box 380
6700 AJ Wageningen
The Netherlands
Tel: +31 (0) 317 467100
Fax: +31(0)317 460 067
E-mail: cta@cta.nl
Website: http://www.agricta.org/
Portail Agritrade: http://agritrade.cta.int/

C. T. A. - Centre Technique de Coopération Agricole et Rurale ACP-EU (The Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation ACP-EU) was established in 1983 between the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) states and the European Union Member States. Inhabitants of the ACP countries who are subscribers to the Publication Distribution Service can apply for Agromisa Agrodoks (English, French & Portuguese versions), free of charge, from the CTA.   Subscriptions are open to individuals and institutions involved in agriculture and rural development. For an application form please write to the above address.

 

FAO
Viale delle Terme di Caracalla
00153 Rome, Italy
Tel: (+39) 06 57051
Fax: (+39) 06 570 53152
E-mail: FAO-HQ@fao.org
Website: http://www.fao.org/

 

Useful internet sites

Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Purdue University
http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/morton/banana.html

Bioversity International:  Bananas - processing and marketing. http://bananas.bioversityinternational.org/content/view/70/100/lang,en/

 

This document was produced by Dr. S Azam Ali for Practical Action in March 2008. Dr. S Azam-Ali is a consultant in food processing and nutrition with over 15 years experience of working with small-scale processors in developing countries. 

Practical Action
The Schumacher Centre for Technology and Development
Bourton-on-Dunsmore
Rugby
Warwickshire
CV23 9QZ
United Kingdom

Tel: +44 (0)1926 634400
Fax: +44 (0)1926 634401

infoserv@practicalaction.org.uk
www.PracticalAction.org

Current Reviews: 1

This article was added to our catalogue on Thursday 21 September, 2006.