@peebee There is definitely a difference in mechanism, but the outcome depends. I found a nice link explaining the issue. Together with some other background information:
So, apparently, S. cerevisiae makes these two enzymes always, without problems.
However, what you apparently have is that depending upon the strain, glucose is normally preferred (apparently especially with wine yeasts). And the more alcohol is formed and nutrition is depleted, the less yeast wants to ferment fructose. This can lead to a stalled fermentation.
a) Making sure that there is enough nutrition will probably help make it easier to ferment the remaining fructose
b) There should be no difference between sucrose and invert syrup. The presence of fructose could be a problem (or not) in both cases
c) And then there is the issue of selective evolutionary pressure: beers that were brewed with invert syrup will probably have lead to yeasts that have less problems with sucrose and fructose than beers that were brewed with malt only
d) The real test to check for differences between beers is to compare one brewed with added sucrose, and one brewed with maltose syrup. Not glucose, because that distorts the equation: the enzyme action should be there.
Code:
Yeast -> Invertase + sucrose -> Glucose
\ \-> Fructose
\-> Maltase + maltose -> Glucose x 2
So, apparently, S. cerevisiae makes these two enzymes always, without problems.
However, what you apparently have is that depending upon the strain, glucose is normally preferred (apparently especially with wine yeasts). And the more alcohol is formed and nutrition is depleted, the less yeast wants to ferment fructose. This can lead to a stalled fermentation.
a) Making sure that there is enough nutrition will probably help make it easier to ferment the remaining fructose
b) There should be no difference between sucrose and invert syrup. The presence of fructose could be a problem (or not) in both cases
c) And then there is the issue of selective evolutionary pressure: beers that were brewed with invert syrup will probably have lead to yeasts that have less problems with sucrose and fructose than beers that were brewed with malt only
d) The real test to check for differences between beers is to compare one brewed with added sucrose, and one brewed with maltose syrup. Not glucose, because that distorts the equation: the enzyme action should be there.