The genetic makeup of beer-brewing yeast plays an essential role in determining the flavor profile during production of beer. With functional copies of genes on the MAL locus, beer yeasts, namely Saccharomyces cerevisiae, can utilize maltose and maltotriose as their carbon source. The three genes in this locus are responsible for the regulation (MALx3), transport across membrane (MALx1), and breakdown of sugars (MALx2) in brewers’ wort. If a strain lacks a functional copy of any of these three genes, it cannot digest these alternative sugars. Alternatively, some strains have more than one MAL locus, but which loci are functional, remains unknown. Apart from previous studies that have investigated a handful of MAL alleles, the function of the genes in these duplicated loci (or paralogs) cannot be determined based on sequences alone. To address this problem, I experimentally tested the function of alleles from 1,011 natural isolates. I focused on MALx3 because the reference strain lacks a functional MALx3 allele, preventing its growth in maltose. Therefore, introduction of any functional MALx3 alleles should permit growth in maltose. To test this, I cloned ~250 MALx3 alleles from three different loci (MAL1, MAL3, MAL7) and transformed the reference strain to generate three yeast libraries. The library with the MALx3 gene of the MAL3 locus, or MAL33, successfully grew to saturation after ~2.5 days of incubation in 2% maltose, showing this approach can be used to determine the function of MAL33 alleles. Looking forward, I will use DNA barcodes to track the growth of alleles in maltose to pinpoint which are functional. With the MAL loci serving as a great candidate for understanding paralog differences, by identifying the functional paralogs, we can better understand the evolutionary history of MAL genes and what role these loci play in the brewery and across all natural isolates.