°Lintner or
degrees Lintner is a unit used to measure the ability of a
malt to reduce
starch to
sugar, that is, its
diastatic power. While the measurement is applicable to any
amylase, in general it refers to the combined α-amylase and β-amylase used in
brewing. The term is also generalized to diastatic
malt extracts and separately-prepared brewing enzymes. The abbreviation
°L is official, but in brewing applications it may conflict with °L used for
degrees Lovibond.
JECFA, the Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives, defines the degree Lintner as follows:
- A malt has a diastatic power of 100 °L if 0.1cc of a clear 5% infusion of the malt, acting on 100cc of a 2% starch solution at 20°C for one hour, produces sufficient reducing sugars to reduce completely 5cc of Fehling's solution.
Note that the amylases used in brewing reach their peak efficiencies around 66 °C.
Evaluation of a malt or extract is usually done by the manufacturer rather than by the end-user; as a rule of thumb, the total grain bill of a mash should have a diastatic power of at least 40 °L in order to guarantee efficient conversion of all the starches in the mash to sugars.
The most-active barley malts currently available have a diastatic activity of up to 160 °Lintner.
In Europe, diastatic activity is often stated in Windisch-Kolbach units (°WK). These are related approximately to °Lintner by:
- .
100.0 °Lintner equals 3.014 × 10-7 katal or 18.08 enzyme units.
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