malt

Jun. 16th, 2022 12:58 pm
asakiyume: (shaft of light)
[personal profile] asakiyume
This entry repeats some of the stuff I said about brewing chicha in this entry, but consider this the revised, improved, and expanded version ;-)

In the rhyme "this is the house that jack built," there are these lines:

This is the malt that lay in the house that Jack built.
This is the rat that ate the malt
That lay in the house that Jack built.
(etc.)

The picture always is of a sack. For example...


(Source: New York Public Library Digital Collections)

I never actually knew what malt was.

Fast-forward to my project with my tutee to make El Salvadoran chicha. The first step involved sprouting corn--keeping it warm and moist so it would put out a root and a little shoot... at which point, so my tutee told me (receiving instructions from her mother), we were supposed to wash the corn and... take off the root and the shoot. Well then WHY are we growing them? I wondered.

The answer is that when the corn starts sprouting, it makes an enzyme that turns starch into sugar, and we want this in the brewing process. I discovered this after my first attempt at getting the corn to sprout resulted in a moldy mess. I searched "sprouted corn brewing" on the interwebs and discovered this fact... and that sprouted grain is called malt. And that it keeps. So after you have sprouted it and taken the root and shoot off (this feels so cruel--poor corn just wants to make a corn plant, and you're stymying it), you can put it in a sack in your attic to feed a rat ... or for future brewing.

(Photo I sent to my tutee, in distress about my mold problem. You can see all the white roots, but also the strong yellow shoots, e.g. in the kernel directly above the red circle)

concerned about mold

Take two was more successful. (This photo is earlier in the sprouting process--showing just roots, no shoots)

roots developing


After washing, derooting, and desprouting the corn, you put it in a big old container with a tight lid and feed it water and--if you're making El Salvadoran chicha--panela (sugarcane juice that's been boiled down and thickened) each day. And for the first three days, you throw the liquid away each new day, but from the fourth day on you keep it and keep adding to it: more water, more panela, and, for flavor, you put in the rind of a pineapple.

during the first three days
brewing prior to pineapple rind

from the fourth day
fermenting w/pineapple rind

I decanted on day six or seven. It is only very mildly alcoholic--it would have gotten more alcoholic if I let it sit--but it did have a yeasty bite and a definite flavor of the panela and pineapple, very rich and sweet. I have NO IDEA if it tasted right, and how's this for humor: my tutee is very strict about no drugs, no alcohol, so she had never had it, so she wasn't sure if it was either. But her roommate is also from El Salvador and promised us it tasted just right. Maybe she was just humoring us? But maybe it really was right! La chicha salvadoreña de Lorena, mamá de S, my tutee :-)

finished chicha

total produced
total chicha

The moldy malt I dumped into the compost bin, and it flourished:

corn sprouting in compost

I've transplanted it and now have some good-looking corn plants. In my experience, corn never does well with me--I get tiny ears with a couple of weird monster kernels and nothing else, but maybe this year will be different! We'll see.

Date: 2022-06-16 08:04 pm (UTC)
pameladean: (Default)
From: [personal profile] pameladean
This is so cool! Though I admit that my favorite parts are the picture of the rat apparently trying to read upside-down print, and the corn happily sprouting in the compost.

I've had fine luck with sweet corn but very bad luck with raccoons. It comes to much the same thing in the end.

P.

Date: 2022-06-21 10:13 pm (UTC)
pameladean: (Default)
From: [personal profile] pameladean
(very belated response, but time is behaving oddly for me right now)

Yes, the rat's little hands! OMG.

I love that about compost too. Mostly I have gotten vast, sprawling cherry tomato plants with very nice sweet tomatoes on them, but once or twice I got volunteer phlox, white-eyed pink sports of Phlox David as far as I can tell (Phlox David has white flowers) and a couple of times an amazing net of black nightshade.

P.

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