To beer or not to beer: does tapping beer cans prevent beer loss? A randomised controlled trial
Elizaveta Sopina, Irina E. Antonescu, Thomas Hansen, Torben Hoejland,, Morten M. Jensen, Simon V. Pedersen, Wade Thompson, Philipp Weber, Jamie O, Halloran, Melissa G. Beach, Ryan Pulleyblank, Elliot J. Brown

TL;DR
This randomized controlled trial investigated whether tapping beer cans before opening reduces beer loss, finding that tapping does not significantly prevent beer spillage regardless of whether the can was shaken or not.
Contribution
This study provides rigorous experimental evidence that tapping beer cans does not reduce beer loss, challenging common practice and suggesting waiting for bubbles to settle instead.
Findings
Tapping does not significantly reduce beer loss in shaken cans.
No significant difference in beer loss between tapped and untapped cans.
Waiting for bubbles to settle is recommended to prevent beer spillage.
Abstract
Objective: Preventing or minimising beer loss when opening a can of beer is socially and economically desirable. One theoretically grounded approach is tapping the can prior to opening, although this has never been rigorously evaluated. We aimed to evaluate the effect of tapping a can of beer on beer loss. Methods: Single centre parallel-group randomised controlled trial. 1031 cans of cans of beer of 330mL were randomised into one of four groups before the experiment: unshaken/untapped (n=256), unshaken/tapped (n=251), shaken/untapped (n=249), or shaken/tapped (n=244). The intervention was tapping the can of beer three times on its side with a single finger. We compared tapping versus non-tapping for cans that had been shaken for 2 minutes or were unshaken. Three teams weighed, tapped or did not tap, opened cans, absorbed any beer loss using paper towels, then re-weighed cans. The teams…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsFermentation and Sensory Analysis · Hops Chemistry and Applications · Horticultural and Viticultural Research
