There are some weird documents in the Heineken archive in Amsterdam. Not just about alcohol-free beer, but also banana beer.
Heineken conducted a study into the production of banana beer. Looking into the feasibility of brewing traditional banana beer from Rwanda on a more industrial scale. This is an overview of the results.
On January 4, 1965, the Central Laboratory of the H.T.B. [Heineken Technisch Beheer] Directorate commissioned Gis to conduct a laboratory-scale study into the feasibility of producing "banana beer." The following aspects were investigated:
1. Banana ripening. This was examined on both Fijffes bananas purchased in the Netherlands and those received from Rwanda. Result: To achieve a sufficient yield of fermentable sugars, it is necessary to use ripe to overripe bananas. During ripening, the pH drops from approximately 5.8 to 5.1. The extract percentage by wet weight, excluding the peel, is approximately 20%. The peel weight represents approximately 50% of the total banana volume.
2. Preparing banana "wort." It is not possible to prepare banana "wort" with any yield without the use of pectolytic enzymes. The optimal conditions for a pure enzyme preparation and for two of the three commercially available preparations were investigated. The investigation of the effectiveness of the commercial preparations is not yet complete, but the definitive results are expected soon. It seems certain that this research will yield a useful protocol for experiments on a semi-technical scale.
3. Fermentation. Various fermentation organisms were tested side by side, including Heineken yeast, baker's yeast, yeast strains received from Rwanda, and mixtures of microorganisms isolated from locally produced banana beer. The research progressed slowly because the "beers" produced required an assessment of the Rwandan population, so each sample had to be sent to Gisenyi before new experiments could begin. This research will certainly take several more months. We do now have the analysis of a locally produced banana beer, which serves as a guideline for our production. However, an unresolved question is whether we should approximate this product as closely as possible in terms of appearance, taste, and aroma, or whether, for example, a lighter-colored and/or clearer product is preferable. Technically, a clearer product is preferable.
It will likely be possible to submit a proposal to Gis by the end of this year, which can serve as a model for semi-technical banana beer production.
A study into the possibility of producing a higher alcohol content product (banana wine) from bananas is scheduled for the winter of 1965/66. Such a project seems feasible at first glance.
Furthermore, the possibility has been raised. To produce concentrated banana juice and banana jelly. The technical merits of this are unclear.
Source: Document 834-925 held at the Gemeente Amsterdam Stadsarchief.
I wonder if this ever had any commercial results? Does banana beer still exist? And what on earth does it taste like? How was the traditional version prepared without the use of enzymes?
So many questions.


6 comments:
My understanding (from reading a Nuffield Foundation biology textbook) is that traditionally, they chewed the bananas and then spat them out, thereby incorporating diastase from saliva.
Wiki indicates the use of millet or sorghum(for wild yeast!?). Possible enzymatic use instead.
I live in Mexico where I've homebrewed my beers since 2012. Four years back, I started on wines as well, using kits. Meanwhile, doing my research and watching videos it is abundantly clear that done correctly (and it is piss easy) making your own home made banana wine can produce something impressive. Now though, thanks to this post, I've got double the motivation to go out and buy some over ripe bananas (maybe plantains too) - and turn out my own Banana Beer. Thanks Ron.
I grew up with banana beer pancakes being an occasional weekend breakfast but they weren't mad with banana beer, just pancakes that substituted commercial lager for other liquid and contained the household's supply of over ripe bananas chopped up in the batter. I actually liked it as a child well before I had any taste for beer (my parents were drinking awful American lagers).
This was in the Pacific Northwest, USA.
This is an interesting thread on it from quite a while back.
https://homebrewtalk.com/threads/banana-wine.33636/
One comment is that it benefits from aging to mellow out the hot alcohol taste, but there are several people saying it's pretty decent, kind of like wine with some banana aroma. A few people commented on having it in Africa and liking it.
The recipe includes raisins and white sugar with a lot of bananas, so I'm not sure how close it comes to the Heineken recipe.
It definitely exists and I believe it's now produced as a bottled commercial product. Eoghan Walsh wrote up a piece in Pellicle on seeking it out and trying it.
https://www.pelliclemag.com/home/2019/5/25/drinking-banana-beer-in-rwanda-an-inauthentic-search-for-authenticity-in-kigali
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