I just bottled the gallon of crabapple wine that i fermented with a yeast ball. The previous batch made with champagne yeast still had a little sweetness to it; it couldn't ferment out the last little bit of sugar (I think because the ABV was so high) This is totally dry.
I saved the lees. If I can clean it up, it might be good for brewing barleywines and double imperial whatevers.
I just bottled the gallon of crabapple wine that i fermented with a yeast ball. The previous batch made with champagne yeast still had a little sweetness to it; it couldn't ferment out the last little bit of sugar (I think because the ABV was so high) This is totally dry.
I saved the lees. If I can clean it up, it might be good for brewing barleywines and double imperial whatevers.
Any thoughts about using this in conjunction with a wine yeast to do the same thing? With rice, or corn?View attachment 249032
Any thoughts about using this in conjunction with a wine yeast to do the same thing? With rice, or corn?View attachment 249032
The wort-rice experiment is fermenting. There are *strong* alcohol heat vapors coming off the fermenter, and no hint of sweetness like the normal rice batches.
Just tasted some of my way-too-tart-and-chalky RYR batch, which I bulk pasteurized and bottled with oxy-block beer caps in amber bottles. It settled out completely so there's a thick layer of sediment at the bottom. The top is almost perfectly clear and tastes *awesome*.
So if you think your batch isn't very good, pasteurize it, bottle it, and age it for a bit. You might be pleasantly surprised! ^_^
Brilliant idea. I'm very curious about how this will turn out.
Always good advice. I had to adjust the amount of RYR a few times to avoid the chalky texture you experienced. Unfortunately, I never gave it a chance and tossed it. Live and learn.
On a side note, I need to get back into making this and other brews. I'm dealing with personal crap for a few months and it's really getting in the way of what I used to call my "normal" routine. OK, rant over.![]()
I was making ramen and didn't have Mirin or Sake so I used this rice wine. Worked great.
http://abc7.com/traffic/ramen-noodles-scattered-all-over-nc-highway-after-crash/484714/I was making ramen and didn't have Mirin or Sake so I used this rice wine. Worked great.
As I'm I, Jason I hope all is well, we've been drinking without youBrilliant idea. I'm very curious about how this will turn out.
Always good advice. I had to adjust the amount of RYR a few times to avoid the chalky texture you experienced. Unfortunately, I never gave it a chance and tossed it. Live and learn.
On a side note, I need to get back into making this and other brews. I'm dealing with personal crap for a few months and it's really getting in the way of what I used to call my "normal" routine. OK, rant over.![]()
I see no reason this won't work,I use wort,beer in my breads and food all the time. Waste not want not, why use water when you can flavorI'm trying an experiment where I use second-run sparge wort to cook the rice in, then I'll proceed as usual. I'll post results.
I see no reason this won't work,I use wort,beer in my breads and food all the time. Waste not want not, why use water when you can flavor![]()
I was making ramen and didn't have Mirin or Sake so I used this rice wine. Worked great.
Question -
Has anyone tested effect of bottling early (earlier than 3 weeks)?
Is the result less volume, less alcohol, higher sugar, worse flavor, none?
How about the opposite - effects of waiting 4 weeks, 5 weeks more?
I'm going away this weekend and Saturday is 21 days exact - I'd like to bottle tonight, but not if it won't be "right".
I had my first (ever) dumper with my crock of rice wine...the cheesecloth fell in when the elastic broke and I got a good vinegar mother layer.
I knew from the smell it was wrong and the bile taste confirmed it.
I use about 6 ounces of vinegar a year, so this all went down the drain.
At least it was inexpensive.
I think you need to use more vinegar![]()