If you're going to do a big batch like this I suggest using a :sly:
BIG MOUTH BUBBLERS ftw!
If you're going to do a big batch like this I suggest using a :sly:
BIG MOUTH BUBBLERS ftw!
Should still be ok to get rid of the water and cook as normal right?
I let the rice soak for more like 48 hours, because I got sidetracked. Then I cooked it in the water it had soaked in... wow. Talk about some gelatinous, sticky stuff; I think I could use it for furniture glue.
I cooled it to about 80 degrees, and that took forever even with the post setting in a sink of ice water. Then I powdered four rice balls, stirred them in as best I could, and glopped everything into a 1 gal decorative Ball jar.
After cooking, the four cups of rice made enough to fill the jar up to right below the shoulder; five cups would have been too much.
And if anyone remembers the bean pot I bought for a wine crock, there's a good reason I'm not using it: it has a batch of jasmine rice in it.![]()
It's been in steady use for that purpose ever since I bought it... works just fine. Someday I'll have to buy another one, to use for beans.I do remember the bean pot. How does it perform as a rice wine fermenter?
I'm on week three of a half rice half flaked barley one gallon batch it's had a nice white mold on top since about a week in but now it's getting darker and looking a little ugly. It still smells good is it safe to drink????
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Ok bottled my concoction it was 3cups rice and 1pound flaked barley (took water boiled for an hour with a total of 1/4ounce magnum and added flaked barley with 5min left) tasted it and it is rocket fuel. The rice sweetness is gone it tastes dry with a slight hop bitterness and no hop flavor or aroma (even though I did add some of the hops at the end of the boil) no barley or beer flavor at all actually kind of flavor neutral with a little bitterness, unless burning is a flavor cause it friggin burns. Gonna cold crash and rack and reassess right now not sure if I like it or hate it. Debating on throwing a couple whole hop cones (Sorachi Ace of course if LHBS has it) Pic is a 1.5L bottle.
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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.
I attempted a starter slurry like yours, for this last group, and It wouldn't get going. I am going to try again and try it further out, like five days maybe.
I wanted to use up my Viet yeast tabs that I had remaining (24), so I crushed them up with some nutrient and enegizer, two tablespoons of sugar and some rice. Three days out and it never started.
What's your definition of "never started"? How can you tell it never started? 3days is pretty short, too, to give up on them. You should wait longer to tell if saccharification is taking place.
I've also found the Vietnamese yeast tabs to not ferment as dry as the Chinese yeast balls do. The Vietnamese ones are apparently for making a sweet dessert, not wine. Both generally take 3-4 days before liquid starts to appear in the bottom of the vessel. I don't use airlocks on my batches, so can't speak to CO2 production, though.
So here is the Kraken soaked Heavy Oaked batch. Pulled this AM for fining over the T day weekend.
Initial impressions...nice color, nice Kraken/Oak flavor, not strong at the moment. I will give it a taste again next week, before pasturizing.
That looks a lot better than how I imagined it in my head. Nice color.
Day three of my second attempt at a starter...doesn't seem to be taking off. Gotta see this starter slurry you made. May I'll try Chinese yeast next time.
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So I think I saved the soured rice wine in the 15# batch.
Overall I mixed up 6L of the clear liquor, 2.5L of filtered solids/sediment slurry, and used 2 cups of generic non-sugar (Splenda) sweetener. This ratio was prepared on a 3 oz scale in a big graduated shot glass. A lot of sampling went on to get it right, not too sweet but enough to counter the sourness.
There really wasn't enough flavor going on - it didn't feel like rice wine. So I boiled a few fractions of an ounce of galangal and annato with a few threads of saffron in a ~1/2 cup of water. Then added this filtered spice water back and pasteurized the whole thing. It scorched the solids a little bit which is okay because that ends up adding a toasted flavor that went over well last time when it happened in the original batch of rice.
Out of the 15# batch I ended up with 11 750mL bottles and a pint-sized mason jar of wine.