Exam Focus
- Connect package age, temperature exposure, oxygen risk, light exposure, and draft-system performance to likely flavor outcomes.
- Set acceptance standards that account for beer style, package type, distribution history, and intended service date.
- Decide when to accept, quarantine, escalate, or reject beer based on evidence.
Quality-control frame
At the Advanced level, shipment inspection is a control point in a larger quality system. The receiving team should know the product's intended freshness window, verify date-code meaning, document exceptions, and preserve a clear chain of decisions. The goal is to prevent compromised beer from entering service.
Risk by package and style
Hoppy beer, low-alcohol beer, and delicately flavored lager often show age and heat damage quickly. Strong, sour, barrel-aged, or bottle-conditioned beers may tolerate or benefit from age, but package integrity and storage history still matter. Cans can dent, bottles can break or admit light, and kegs can arrive warm enough to create both flavor and draft-foam problems.
Temperature as a diagnostic clue
Temperature matters twice: it changes flavor over time and it affects dispense. Warm beer releases carbon dioxide rapidly and pours foamy, so a keg that arrives warm should be treated as both a freshness risk and a service-readiness risk.
Documentation and escalation
Record delivery date, product, lot or date code, measured or observed temperature, package defects, photos when useful, and supplier response. Consistent records distinguish one-off handling damage from recurring route, warehouse, or supplier problems.
Key Terms
- Quarantine
- Holding questionable beer out of sale until its condition can be confirmed.
- Lot traceability
- Using production or packaging codes to connect beer to a specific batch, package run, or supplier record.
- Foam breakout
- Rapid carbon dioxide release that can occur when beer is too warm, overcarbonated, agitated, or forced through an imbalanced draft system.