Humans are not the only mammals with a taste for fermented barley. Farmers have long fed cattle the spent grain leftover at the end of the brewing process. The dark, mushy beer by-product is considered a cheap and nutritious supplement to a cow’s regular corn-based diet.

Illinois State Department of Agriculture researcher Justin Rickard ’04, M.S. ’08, is putting a local twist on this age-old technique. He is partnering with Normal’s Destihl Brewery on an ongoing research project to determine whether the craft brewer’s grain could be an economical and dependable option for Central Illinois farmers.

Riley Parmenter measures out the cattle’s rations into a 15-gallon catch bin. He and master’s student David James ’15 mixed the experimental feed every five days during the pilot study, adding 30 percent of the spent grain to the regular corn diet. Destihl ships out about 24,000 pounds of spent grain weekly. Parmenter, who is set to graduate with a master’s in fresh meat science in May, is writing his thesis and working on publishing papers based on the research. He plans to get a doctorate and eventually work in management in the meat or livestock production industries.
Riley Parmenter measures out the cattle’s rations into a 15-gallon catch bin. He and master’s student David James ’15 mixed the experimental feed every five days during the pilot study, adding 30 percent of the spent grain to the regular corn diet. Destihl ships out about 24,000 pounds of spent grain weekly. Parmenter, who is set to graduate with a master’s in fresh meat science in May, is writing his thesis and working on publishing papers based on the research. He plans to get a doctorate and eventually work in management in the meat or livestock production industries.

“People have been feeding spent grain since they have been brewing product. Not as much information exists on spent grain from microbreweries,” said Rickard, Ph.D., an assistant professor in animal and meat science. “And that is one of the things we wanted to look into. When you work with a smaller brewery, you are not getting the same type of grains from the same type of beer every day. You are getting a composite load of everything they produced that week.”

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Rickard is also studying whether the spent grain could be a cost-effective and quality replacement for other ingredients incorporated into a finishing cattle ration.

Breweries typically give away the spent grain to farmers as an alternative to paying for it to be dumped in a landfill. Destihl has been supplying nearby Ropp dairy farm with spent grains since opening its first brewpub in 2007, said Matt Potts, Destihl’s CEO, founder, and brewmaster. However, after the addition of a production brewery in 2013, Destihl needed another place to ship its spent grain due to increased volume, he said. So, the following spring, Destihl began giving the product to Rickard, and he began experimenting with it on his cattle at his Heyworth farm.

“I had expressed to the professor my ‘theory’ that craft brewers’ spent grains had potentially better feed value than macro-brewer spent grains given the latter’s greater use of adjuncts in their beers, like corn and rice,” said Potts, who grew up on a farm near Williamsfield. “Craft brewers generally use all or mostly barley along with some wheat, oats, and rye, and I theorized that our grains had a higher protein content and greater feed value as a result. Of course, I had no way to study or prove this, which is where Professor Rickard has taken over and then some.”

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In December 2015, Rickard and graduate student Riley Parmenter ’14 launched a pilot study on the grain using 24 cattle—an even split of heifers and steers—on the University Farm at Lexington.

Over the course of 140 days, half of the cattle were fed a mixture of the corn diet and the brewer’s grain, while the other half, the control group, were given the corn diet only. The study was conducted during the cattle’s final months before they were transported for slaughter to a packinghouse.

“The cattle grew well on the product,” Rickard said. “We didn’t see on the surface any major differences in terms of quality and grade. We have a couple more things to analyze yet.”

The researchers spent last fall analyzing the results from the pilot study and preparing to start a larger-scale study to see if the earlier results could be replicated with 60 cattle.

One thought on “Beer: What’s good for cattle

  1. rita kohn says:

    hello Red Birds of Normal, Illinois–thank you for posting this report. I look forward to learning results of the larger study. Though I now live in Indianapolis, with its shared abundance of spent-grains fed farm animals and spent-grains for growing crops, this is the first study seeking to prove the nutritional effects of smart re-use. Destihl’s amazing beers have taken home medals from Indiana State Fair Brewers’ Cup competitions.Please stay connected with rkohn@nuvo.net; I write the craft beer column–find it at nuvo.net

  2. Jose Pernia says:

    hope to hear from the results soon….good luck and congratulations!!!! greeting from spain , in http://www.lpernia.com we love brewers spent grains