No liquification of the rice at all? No liquid mixed with the rice you can see on the sides of the jar?
What kind of temperature are you at?
I went to the local asian market. I asked the lady behind the counter if they carry yeast balls. She looked at me as if I were speaking some unfamiliar dialect. So I explained it is used to ferment rice into wine. Suddenly her eyes lit up and she declared "You need yeas baus"she laughed as she realized what she had just said was what I originally asked for. She repeated "ah yeas baus"
Went to the asian market and the staff there had the same as everyone here reported...they never heard of dried yeast balls. Found this in the cold food section. No mention of yeast but the bag says rice cake and the ingredients say rice, salt and ethyl alcohol. Anyone else have experience with this or know if it'll work?
I agree. Looks like snack food.Pretty sure that's a snack food there. The yeast balls I found were mixed in between the bags of flour, salt and sugars. I circled the local store twice before finding them.
Rice wine, but yeah. I had the same reaction to the sake making process. It just seemed like way more work then I was willing to go to.I had just bought the book, Brewing Sake by William Auld less than a week ago and was disappointed by the enormous number of steps in the process as you build up the size, so figured it was $19.95 lost and no Sake.
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But finding this great thread while I was doing my normal perusing of the HBT boards, I could hardly get to sleep thinking of heading out and looking for the proper yeast or kobi/koji.
I was happy to find it here not too far away in Portland OR and picked up 3 bags of it. Each bag has 10 balls in it, all for $1.85 (per bag). I wish brewing yeast was this cheap!
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Anyways, I boiled 5 cups of glutonous 'sweet' rice (what a glob) and added 4 balls of yeast after it cooled. I placed in a jar that looks familiar on this board and look forward to some nice sake in about 3 weeks.
Thanks for all the information on here, I'm happy to be adding sake to the list of fermented beverages I make.
I likely will be getting some Thai Jasmine and getting a batch of that started as I think this will be pretty popular.
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Just bottled mine tonight. Amazing! Really good, great sweetness, but boy is it potent. I can see how you would get really messed up on this stuff.
Ready to do a second batch, this time with Jasmine rice. All I had last time was cheap calrose stuff from the supermarket.
So I just finished some of this up and the taste is great. Very sweet. Better than I anticipated. The only thing I didn't care for was the texture of it. Is there a way to take some of the chalkiness out of it?
What about oxidation? I've been treating mine like all other beer/wine, trying to minimize oxygen contact.I would imagine letting it cold crash and separate would take care of that but it will also effect flavor. Maybe try filtering a few times through doubled up cheesecloth or paint strainer or coffee filter
Awesome pictures.
Thanks!
I forgot to mention that, despite the low yield, the taste is great! Very sweet, very strong, but very good. I can only imagine what adding fruit flavors to it will do.