About this long:
I find images work better, meant to post this a while ago
I find images work better, meant to post this a while ago
Not sure what I'll do with them since I only malted about 2lbs...maybe roast them 2 weeks before the next brew and use as a specialty grain...or get some iodine and do a small decoction to see what happens...not sure- but hey, I'll be the guinea pig!
Just answered this question for myself. Raw buckwheat w/o the hull will sprout. Naturally hull on buckwheat will as well. I have 2 lbs hull on and 1 lb hull off in the oven right now. My first malting process underway!!! Clearly I have to develop a more efficient method than what I did this time but its nice to see that I can do it successfully. Trying sorghum and millet next.
Did you worry about the cyanide in the acropsires/rootlest at all?
I have malted a small test batch of quionoa, and that works pretty well. A couple things that I noticed when I did my experiment:
There are different kinds (colors) of qionoa with different qualities. I used the approach that the "Life's a Garden" author used and it worked pretty well. But the quinoa I used was a blend of the red and white quinoa, and they sprouted at different rates. Next time I will only use a single color.
The quinoa seemed take a while to sprout, not sure if that is a trait of the quinoa or if I had them in too cool of a place.
Quinoa is a pain in the butt to toast in the oven because they are so small. Using a screen may help with this, I used a sheet tray and a silpat.
Any suggestions on quick ways to remove the acrospire?
I just soaked 2lbs of quinoa that I bought from Costco overnight and the next day, it was already about 3/4 sprouted. I drained it and laid it out to dry until I could toast them in the oven later that evening.
Yeah, quinoa sprouts FAST. I like malting it at the same time as buckwheat or amaranth because there's enough of a lag so I can get quinoa in and out of the dehydrator before the next grain needs to go in.
The pillow case and dryer works. Just make sure the pillow case is tied tight and use the no heat setting.
Yeah, quinoa sprouts FAST. I like malting it at the same time as buckwheat or amaranth because there's enough of a lag so I can get quinoa in and out of the dehydrator before the next grain needs to go in.
The pillow case and dryer works. Just make sure the pillow case is tied tight and use the no heat setting.
I am confused by the speed at which you guys are malting quinoa. I am new to the GF malting process so please excuse the questions but from what I have read most believe malting is considered done when the shoot, not the root appears. With quinoa and most grains (except Buckwheat) the root appears first and it can take 2-3 days before the real shoot appears. It becomes a real pain to keep the grain bed cool because as it germinates, a lot of heat is produced and the roots also tend to get so long they start developing root balls that you have to keep separated. After two quinoa malting attempts I had one good malt (took 4 days) and one that I ended up tossing out (after 6 days) because I didn't rinse often enough and it molded and spoiled.
So when is quinoa considered fully modified and what is the best way to test it to make sure you are getting a full modification?
I too think there is confusion here
Yup, I was very mis-informed on the root/acrospire.
I toasted the quinoa last night and it looks/tastes/smells great (tastes just like barley malt). It reminds me most like "special B" barley malt or a high toast caramel.
I have a barley crusher but don't trust cleaning it. How else can I crush this stuff?
I too think there is confusion here, I've only malted barley but the quickest I've done is 7 days start to finish. The acrospire is the leaf not the root, in barley the root grows first and is appx. 3 times the length of the seed when the acrospire gets to full modification (75-100% length of the seed).
I'm curious about buckwheat, has anyone ever malted it? I've grown it and it seems like it would be easier to harvest/separate/store than barley or wheat, although I haven't grown any other gluten free grains.
FYI. Dont see your pics.My attempts at malting quinoa and ameranth do not look anything like like what I've seen of of the process for barley. If you look at the quinoa picture, what happens is the root unwraps from around the main portion of the grain and then that main part splits in half and begins developing into two leaves. So you can't really follow to same guidelines for barley to determin when to stop the malting process of these grains, not to mention the grains are so small that trying to split them open is difficult.
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FYI. Dont see your pics.
Ah that makes sense now. I noticed the same thing with quinoa splitting in half after a while. It appears that if you wait too long you end up with a bunch of real small grains (halved) that are almost impossible to separate from the dried root pieces. My last batch is still in the pillow case because I have no idea how to separate the grain fragments from the root fragments, (pretty much the same size and weight). It looks like it was already crushed. Would it hurt to mash with the roots mixed in with the grains? I assume I would get off flavors but not sure.
So there appears to be a stopping point between the root showing up and the grain splitting in half. Is there is a good way of testing the PPG of the resulting malted grain in order to tell where it is best to stop the malt process and kiln?
If I did a double/triple decoction would malting even be required? Just wondering if it would be easier to just decoct the whole thing than to mess with malting. When I brewed with barley I did all-grain fly sparge so never done decoction. Sounds like a lot of work.
. . . . If I did a double/triple decoction would malting even be required? Just wondering if it would be easier to just decoct the whole thing than to mess with malting. When I brewed with barley I did all-grain fly sparge so never done decoction. Sounds like a lot of work.
Alright, should be working now