How do you all prep your glutenous rice? I am 1 for 3 with this stuff, I think due to inconsistencies making the rice.
Undercooked rice and lack of oxygen seem to be the most common causes of souring.
How do you all prep your glutenous rice? I am 1 for 3 with this stuff, I think due to inconsistencies making the rice.
Sounds like you did everything perfectly. And, it looks great. Please let us know how it turns out.So I stumbled across this thread, and figured it sounds like something to try.
I found my supplies at the Dragon Star Supermarket, in Brooklyn Park, MN.
I started my first batch last night. I went with ~3 cups of glutonous sweet rice, weighed out at 1.5 pounds. Rinsed the rice with cold water until it was running clear, about 3 minutes. Then put the strainer in a bowl and filled it with cold water to soak the rice for 30 minutes. Rinsed the rice again, and let it drain for 5 minutes before placing into my steamer bowl. You can see the Oster steamer I have in the background. I put 3 cups water on the rice and filled the steam chamber with water also. I turned the steamer on and steamed for 30 minutes. It was cooked well. Still a bit firm in the center.
Took a large cookie sheet and put a big piece of aluminum foil on the cookie sheet, and sprayed it with starsan. I dumped the rice onto the foil and spread it out in an even layer. Covered it with a sheet of muslin that was soaked, and wrung out, of starsan. It covered it perfectly. I then put it on a bakers cooling rack, in the garage. December, Minnesota, 20 degrees outside, perfect.
I let it cool for 30 minutes and prepared 3 yeast balls in my spice coffee ginder. I sprinkled the yeast over the top of the rice. Put on nitrile gloves and sprayed my hands with starsan and grabbed handfuls of the rice and placed it in my glass cookie jar. Then covered the opening with the sanitized muslin cloth and put the lid on the jar. I tucked it into my closet, which is 68 - 70 degrees, and covered it with a black cloth.
Here is what it looked like ......
View attachment 549745
I don't trust the mold that grew on top of my rice. It's white and fuzzy with a lot of green spots. Can anybody tell me if this is anything like what grows on the rice in these kinds of wine?
Thanks for the reply.
I just ordered some ARL and RYR off Ebay.
Here was the RYR I bought.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Red-Yeast-...e=STRK:MEBIDX:IT&_trksid=p2060353.m2749.l2649
This was the ARL I bought.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Angel-Rice...e=STRK:MEBIDX:IT&_trksid=p2060353.m2749.l2649
Hope this helps.
How do you do that?Hi guys I m new here I m from near China boundaries but in india. Thing is that we too make rice ale, wine or whatever it is. I just wanna suggest you not to throw away the left fermented rice u can make vodka like thing
Stuff is pretty much always dated by manufacture date here in China, though I'd have to see the package to tell you for sure.Also, is the date on ARL packaging the manufactured on date, or best by date? I still had plenty from last year chilling in the back of my fridge, noticed it was dated January 2017.
Stuff is pretty much always dated by manufacture date here in China, though I'd have to see the package to tell you for sure.
I always soak my Jasmin rice overnight, then rinse till clear water come through. Steam, cool then mix powdered yeast bell in. Never had a bad batch yet. Finishes nice and sweet.
Side question: anybody else have it carbonate in the bottle? I've had 2 batches, that we're harvested at 29 days, carbonate. It was a somewhat pleasant surprise.