Malt and hops give beer its "beer" flavor. its why hard cider doesn't taste just like beer but has the same kind of alcohol in it.
there are things like oatmeal (flaked oats) barley flour, corn grits, or Bulgar wheat that can be used as adjuncts.
I'd look for less refined or stranger sources for your ferment-ables, your beer will taste better
iambeer said:According to my research, it points to something called the Crabtree effect; something what happens in high concentrations of glucose will cause yeast to stop growing and instead they will turn their attention to producing ethanol. But apparently, if the gravity is low enough, this shouldn't be a problem. Still searching for more information.
iambeer said:Should be a very simple experiment: scrape yeast into 1.030 of granulated sugar and water, wait a week and upscale it to DME starter. If yeast doesn't react then one person here is right. I would still like to see a serious document about it though. Also, based on the folk wisdom that maltose is better for starter, then brown rice sugar is far more cost effective for a starter. Right?
iambeer said:I guess this is another thing I have to try first hand. I'm not sure if I agree with the rumor that training yeast to simple sugar is making them fat and lazy.
MetalMatt said:A pound of light DME costs what, 5 bucks?
emjay said:I buy it by the 50lb bag for much cheaper.
bottlebomber said:How do you keep that kind of quantity fresh and dry?
grem135 said:Am I missing something? You pour your starter into your wort DME yeast and all dont you? So why won't that DME be beer?
Some people crash the starter and decant most of the liquid - depending on the style of beer, hops, etc. Also starters that are unhopped will often go sour - so something else starts growing in there. Decanting helps reduce the amount of other bugs that can be transferred to your wort.