Quality Assurance in the Brewpub
Even without the latest lab equipment for quality control, you can still focus on quality assurance—the proactive side—and do the work correctly in the first place.
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Breweries should strive to improve their processes and expand the scope of their quality program as production increases. The best quality programs have robust preventive maintenance plans. Scheduled maintenance will result in higher quality processes and reduced down-time. Maintenance will also help prevent some potential food safety hazards.
Even without the latest lab equipment for quality control, you can still focus on quality assurance—the proactive side—and do the work correctly in the first place.
To learn about how some Old World breweries have implemented best practices in QC/QA, we spoke with Peter Romeis of Institute Romeis, a major beverage analytics lab.
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