Malt is the main ingredient of beer - it takes as much as 200 grams of malt to make a liter of beer. The other ingredients are water, hops (two grams per liter of beer), and yeast (one centiliter per liter of beer).
The malt provides:
Depending on the malting process, different types of malt exist: Pale, Pilsen, Vienna, Munich, Caramel, Peated, Diastatic, Roasted, Black, etc.
Color is one of the differentiating factors. Colored malts are used for amber and dark beers, while pale malt is used in “Pilsen”- type beers.
Other types of malts exist, with production stages that can differ significantly. Peated malt (or whisky malt) imparts a particular taste (phenol) and is made by passing peat smoke through the kiln. Roasted malt is made using a process similar to coffee roasting.
A good malt must conform to the brewer’s specifications and the relative importance placed by each customer on the following three types of factors:

Barley, throughout history the most widespread cereal grain, seems to have first been grown in Turkestan, Ethiopia, Tibet, Nepal, and China. Archeological excavations 100 km from Cairo, in Egypt, have shown that barley was grown as early as 5,000 years ago.

Several hundred varieties of malting barley exist around the world, suited to local conditions.
Brewing-type winter barleys (two-row/six-row) are grown mainly in Western Europe (GB/F), with a French preference for producing six-row winter malting barleys.

Malt is a natural food product that results from the transformation of a cereal grain. Barley is the grain most used today, but wheat can also be used for making "white" beers. Malt is the main ingredient used in brewing beer, along with water, hops, and yeast.
Working together: Malteurop also puts that philosophy into practice with its own suppliers, seed producers-breeders, storage operators, and carriers. For in fact all of them make important contributions to the proper operation of the barley value chain, in particular as regards traceability and food safety.
Malteurop, a group of international size and geographical scope, can provide consulting and engineering services in contexts where the stakes are high for its customers, backed by: