Industry News       English French Dutch Spanish German Russian Italian Portuguese Portuguese Danish Greek Romanian Ukrainean Chinese Polish Korean
Logo Slogan_French


CASTLE MALTING NEWS in partnership with www.e-malt.com French
13 April, 2007



Barley news Australia: Promising new Victorian barley variety still undergoing commercial malting and pilot brewing trials

The Chairman of the Western Region Barley Council (WRBC) Steve Tilbrook said the promising new variety was still undergoing commercial malting and pilot brewing trials, and farmers should have no expectations at this stage, Seed Quest reported April 12.

Mr Tilbrook said Buloke’s grain yield was very competitive against Stirling, Hamelin, Gairdner and Baudin.

“In statewide variety evaluation trials conducted by the Department of Agriculture and Food over the four seasons of 2003 to 2006, it out yielded Baudin and Gairdner by six per cent, and Hamelin and Stirling by ten per cent. It also has a better over-all disease resistance package than the other four varieties,” Mr Tilbrook said.

“There is understandably strong interest in Buloke. However, Barley Australia is still carrying out commercial acceptance trials, and there are many decisions yet to be made. There should be no expectation that Buloke will be accredited as a malting barley, and no expectation that it will be received as a malting barley in Western Australia,” Mr Tilbrook said.

“Once trials are complete, the WRBC will review the results and their implications for WA,” he said.

“It will then be up to member companies such as the Grain Pool, Joe White Maltings and Kirin Australia to determine if Buloke is commercially received in WA as a malting barley.”

The Chairman of the Malting and Brewing Industry Barley Technical Committee Mark Goldsmith said that Buloke had so far only completed one year of commercial testing.

“Whilst the results are encouraging, there are still brewing quality issues to be overcome,” Dr Goldsmith said.

Joe White Maltings will run a small batch of Buloke grain through its plant at Forrestfield this year to obtain some local data on its malting performance in Western Australia.

JWM maltster Mark Hambly said this did not mean that Buloke would be received by the company.

“The batch is part of a testing regime to assist with decisions on what varieties might suit the markets the company produces malt for, domestically and internationally in south-east Asia,” Mr Hambly said.

For the 2007 season, the maximum grade that Buloke can be delivered into will be feed barley, unless production is contracted for further commercial evaluation.





Revenir



E-malt.com, the global information source for the brewing and malting industry professionals. The bi-weekly E-malt.com Newsletters feature latest industry news, statistics in graphs and tables, world barley and malt prices, and other relevant information. Click here to get full access to E-malt.com. If you are a Castle Malting client, you can get free access to E-malt.com website and publications. Contact us for more information at marketing@castlemalting.com .














Nous utilisons des cookies pour nous assurer que nous vous offrons la meilleure expérience sur notre site Web. Si vous continuez à utiliser ce site, nous supposerons que vous en êtes satisfait.     Ok     Non      Privacy Policy   





(libra 0.9902 sec.)