Or, don't open the lid for 5 weeks if you want rice wine that has truly finished fermenting and won't try to carbonate if stored in a sealed container...
Or, don't open the lid for 5 weeks if you want rice wine that has truly finished fermenting and won't try to carbonate if stored in a sealed container...
I think I need to let my next batch go for 5 weeks, 4 doesn't seem like enough
The liquid is close to the top and the rice mass is floating on 1/2" of pale cloudy liquid. I opened the lid just to smell it; it smells sweet, "ricey" alcoholic, and faintly of vanilla. I put the lid back, and gave is a "slosh" to release CO2 and drive out any air I let it.
Does anybody punch the cap down, or just leave it alone and the very top doesn't liquefy much? (or maybe it does and just doesn't look like it)
I'm gonna start another jar this weekend. I have 3 or 4 of these empty Aldi candy jars, might as well fill them up.
I am also going to try fermenting a gallon of sweetened sour apple juice using a yeast ball. The juice is pretty tart, so a little lacto might do it some good.
I just leave the cap. I do give the jars a few twists to stir up the rice though.
Well, after two weeks the entire rice mass has collapsed. Liquid all the way to the top now. (I assume this is a very good thing) I'm going to let it keep doing its thing; and I just started another jar.
The yeast ball that I put in a gallon of apple juice doesn't seem very happy. It has sunk to the bottom and fallen apart, and there's no airlock activity yet. Maybe I should have made a starter for that...
You didn't even crush up the yeast ball? I wondered how that would effect it. IMO more surface area = more fermentation.
I did smoosh it up after it sat on the bottom overnight without dissolving. :smack: (I thought it would float, then disintegrate in a couple of hours when the yeast woke up and smelled all that sugar)
The usual apologies if my question has already been covered; it's a long thread.
I'm wondering if cooking is a necessary part of the process. Has anyone tried just soaking sweet rice until it stops absorbing water, then pouring off the extra and adding crushed yeast balls?
add: I may have answered my own question. I just munched on a few grains of sweet rice, and they didn't taste the least bit sweet.
Thanks for the feedback. I have two pounds of rice soaking, and it would be a shame to waste it.Tried and failed miserably. Something about the cooking process allows the mold to convert the starches into sugar for the yeast to eat. I don't have the scientific explanation but I did try it without success.
Tried and failed miserably. Something about the cooking process allows the mold to convert the starches into sugar for the yeast to eat. I don't have the scientific explanation but I did try it without success.
Thanks for the feedback. I have two pounds of rice soaking, and it would be a shame to waste it.
Should still be ok to get rid of the water and cook as normal right?
No sign of life in the cider yet, even tho' I dosed it with a little yeast energizer last night and gave it a good shake. I'll probably have to repitch with a wine yeast.
I thought all yeasts would eat sucrose and dextrose, even if they couldn't handle the fructose, maltose, etc. Maybe this is too acid or something for whatever strain is in the yeast balls.
I started another jar of rice a couple of days ago; I soaked the rice (half Chinese sweet rice, half supermarket medium-grain rice) for about 5 minutes in warm water, then drained and rinsed it. Then cooked it (2 cups of dry rice, just over 2 cups of water) It seemed to work as well as soaking for an hour. The rice definitely soaked up some water during the soak -- the color or something changed -- but I don't know if it swelled. This is the way I'm going to keep doing it.A lot of people soak their rice first, I've done it both ways, just an extra step in my opinion.
Have you stolen any samples lately? I haven't had good results with rum-soaked oak in beer.
To the OP's credit, the batch last year was awesome according to the Chinese grad students and professors in my department. Just following those instructions gave a very legit product.
To scale this up a bit: I used a whole 15# bag of sushi rice for the latest batch and have been fermenting/conditioning it in a broken keg. I used a 2qt starter of rice with 16 yeastballs crushed up to produce a slurry that I could pour over all that rice to more evenly distribute the yeast to initiate fermentation. That much rice takes up about 3G of space in the keg. It's been going for two months now and I hope to package it soon for the office Xmas party in a few weeks. I've applied a lot of what I've learned about beer (starters, fermentation control, Starsan) since last year.
Filtration is going to be a beast. I want an unfiltered rice wine so I'm trying to build a bucket with a mesh to separate the wine from the 'lees'. Hopefully with the fermentation control at 75F and the starter most of the rice will be fermenting leaving less insolubles. I've also got a PVC rig to filter beer/wine through meshes or filters with CO2 pressure in 22oz batches.
Has anyone taken a shot at aging this stuff on oak? I'm considering bourbon barrel 'aging' a few bottles.
Seems like a decent batch, do you have pictures?
This is the very last of my previous 3L batch which was something like 1 or 1.5 years in the bottle:
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There's not much left and it does hold up over time even with all that headspace in 1L fliptop. The 'liquor' part of it will turn more yellow over time giving the mixing solids and liquor a more tan color over time.
Here's what I got from the 15# batch:
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Kind of interesting to see the easy of getting the liquor from the solids with the first gallon versus the last. It has been sitting at ~55F in the basement for 36hrs so far.
To give a range of the solids you end up with:
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I didn't chop the rice or anything but you'll get little bits, almost halves, of rice grains plus a fine particulate. This third bottle is where all the wringing out was dumped into.
Plan is to decant the liquor, sieve out the heavy particles with mesh screen, and add back a portion of the fine solids for body/sweetness. It might be enough to just use all of the first gallon plus the liquor from the 2nd and 3rd. So maybe 2G of final wine when all is said and done. 10 750mLs for something like $25.
The liquor is very fruity but slightly tart. My fermentation fridge has had a lot of sours in the past couple months - maybe there's some wildness going on but I'd attribute it to the better temperature control (continual 75F for two months) versus putting the quart jars over a heating vent in the old apartment during winter for the last batch.
If you're going to do a big batch like this I suggest using a keg. It's difficult to pour after siphoning what you can but the metal also helps disperse the heat faster. Really, I just wanted to ferment in this broken keg (stripped keg post). The other suggestion is to use a wider pot - if you have a taller pot the heat will build up in the rice at the bottom and scorch it. My first batch was called 'toasted rice wine' and it had a nice nuttiness to it. This time went a bit better but there was still some of that yellow, overly dry scabby rice at the bottom of the pot. You'll need a 6G pot to do 15# IIRC; my 4G pot took two runs to cook all the rice.
I pasteurized the last batch but somehow ended up with some very nasty gushers that took some time to vent from the flip-top. If that happens you can just pop the fliptop back on, wait for the foam to die, crack the fliptop again to vent until it also overflows, and repeat for a while. Didn't heat it hot or long enough or the temperature I measured wasn't representative of the whole batch. Do you need to pasteurize?