BEER MADE FROM DISCARDED BREAD LAUNCHED.

The London based Hackney Brewery, together with a food waste charity
called Feedback, have launched a pale ale made from surplus loaves of
bread.
The new beer is called Toast, and the idea behind it
is to deal with some of the vast quantities of bread wasted each day
and promote the importance of cutting down on wasted food.
Toast ale is made from surplus bread. The bread would have been thrown
to waste had it not been used in the brewery process. It is estimated in
the U.K. alone some 24 million slices of bread are thrown away each
day. Of all the items of food discarded by homes and restaurants, bread
comes top.
The process of making the beer involves slicing the bread, mashing it,
toasting it and then brewing it with malted barley, hops and yeast. According to the food critic of The Daily Telegraph,
the beer has a distinctive taste, with caramel notes balancing out the
bitter hops. The product has a malty taste, along the lines of amber
ales.
The idea for the ale was that of environmental campaigner and founder of a group called Feedback — Tristram Stuart, who contacted the Hackney Brewery, located in North London.
Speaking with The Guardian
about the project, Stuart said: “Tackling the global issue of food
waste has taken me all over the world. We hope to eventually put
ourselves out of business. The day there’s no waste bread is the day
Toast ale can no longer exist.”
Jon Swain from Hackney Brewery enthuses: "We absolutely jumped at the chance to join Feedback's fight against food waste.”
He added: “The important thing for us, as brewers, was to create a beer
that tasted good and stood up against other craft beers. We worked hard
to brew a beer that wasn't just a fad but something that people could
enjoy time after time and would have a significant impact."
Each standard bottle
of Toast (330 milliliters) is made from one slice of bread.
All profits
go to Feedback, for the group to campaign on issues of food waste. The
cost is £3 ($5) per bottle.
Over the long term the project hopes it will fold, due to a lack of
availability of discarded bread, indicating the campaign has been a
success. A laudable idea, but there could be some way to go before this
ideal is achieved.
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