Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
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- Windy City
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Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
I have been wanting to make a malted corn bourbon for quite some time but really did not want to go down the rabbit hole of malting the grain myself.
Thanks to this forum I found CNC Malt https://cncmalt.com/product/cnc-malted-corn/
Brendan Carroll is the owner and has been a great guy to deal with.
I ordered 4- 55 pound bags of malted bloody butcher. I chewed the grain raw (being that it was malted there were no worries of breaking teeth) it has a great nutty and malt flavor and aroma.
This is my large batch mash recipe
Heat 300liters water to 190f
Add 170 pounds of malted bloody butcher milled to flour
Add 500ml of SeBrew HT
set mixer at 40
Hold at 190f for 3 hours
Add 60 liters of water
Crash temperature to 145f
Add 130 grams of gypsum
Add 130 grams of citric acid
Add 500 grams calcium carbonate
Add 60 pounds malted white wheat milled to flour
Add 13 pounds Cara 45 milled to flour
add 260 ml SebSuper
Hold at 145 f for 3 hours
Crash to 72 f
Add .5 oz Fermcap S
Add 290 grams US-05 sprinkled on top with mixer set at 15, once hydrated turned mixer back to 40 and aerated with air stone for 1 hour.
Set fermentation temperature to 72 f
It fermented out in about 4 days
S.G. 1.082 PH 5.6
F.G. 1.001 PH 4.0
I broke it up into several one and done runs distilled on the grain and ran through two bubble cap plates.
The malt, nuttiness and carmel really came through. I saved a little in the white just to get some varied opinions on it from my family members. The flavor is distinct and different than normal corn but quite delicious.
It was really great in the white and I will do this one again. I filled a new 10 gal Barrel Mill barrel and now am going to have to wait two to three years to truly enjoy the fruits of my labor
Thanks to this forum I found CNC Malt https://cncmalt.com/product/cnc-malted-corn/
Brendan Carroll is the owner and has been a great guy to deal with.
I ordered 4- 55 pound bags of malted bloody butcher. I chewed the grain raw (being that it was malted there were no worries of breaking teeth) it has a great nutty and malt flavor and aroma.
This is my large batch mash recipe
Heat 300liters water to 190f
Add 170 pounds of malted bloody butcher milled to flour
Add 500ml of SeBrew HT
set mixer at 40
Hold at 190f for 3 hours
Add 60 liters of water
Crash temperature to 145f
Add 130 grams of gypsum
Add 130 grams of citric acid
Add 500 grams calcium carbonate
Add 60 pounds malted white wheat milled to flour
Add 13 pounds Cara 45 milled to flour
add 260 ml SebSuper
Hold at 145 f for 3 hours
Crash to 72 f
Add .5 oz Fermcap S
Add 290 grams US-05 sprinkled on top with mixer set at 15, once hydrated turned mixer back to 40 and aerated with air stone for 1 hour.
Set fermentation temperature to 72 f
It fermented out in about 4 days
S.G. 1.082 PH 5.6
F.G. 1.001 PH 4.0
I broke it up into several one and done runs distilled on the grain and ran through two bubble cap plates.
The malt, nuttiness and carmel really came through. I saved a little in the white just to get some varied opinions on it from my family members. The flavor is distinct and different than normal corn but quite delicious.
It was really great in the white and I will do this one again. I filled a new 10 gal Barrel Mill barrel and now am going to have to wait two to three years to truly enjoy the fruits of my labor
The liver is evil and must be punished
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
- jonnys_spirit
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Sounds yummy! Bookmarked for Malted Bloody Butcher and Argentina Orange. Look forward to seeing what you think as it ages.
Cheers!
-j
Cheers!
-j
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i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
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i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Very nice. I bet that will be fine drop.
Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Did you have to hold the temperature of the corn at 190 deg for 3 hours, It's malted so shouldn't it be treated the same as the rest of your malts? I don't know anything about those enzymes you used but if everything is malted do you need them? I'm interested in hearing how it ends up because there isn't much here on corn that isn't yellow corn so keep us updated.
- Windy City
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
This is my normal mash protocol for bourbon.larsend wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 6:48 pm Did you have to hold the temperature of the corn at 190 deg for 3 hours, It's malted so shouldn't it be treated the same as the rest of your malts? I don't know anything about those enzymes you used but if everything is malted do you need them? I'm interested in hearing how it ends up because there isn't much here on corn that isn't yellow corn so keep us updated.
I hold my corn, oats, millet etc at 190 f for three hours as that is the temp range for gelatinizing for those grains and the three hour cook is what I have come up with over time and research. It works very well for me so if it isn’t broke I am not fixing it.
The Sebrew HT
https://www.enzymeinnovation.com/craft- ... uefaction/
This enzyme works great at high temp for breaking down grains like corn and helps immensely with liquifaction. I highly recommend it and wouldn’t do a big (or any) corn bill without it .
As far as the corn being malted, I had done a bunch of research about malted corn conversion and came to the conclusion it could be done at lower temperature without high temperature enzymes but efficiency suffered. I already buy my enzymes in bulk and my equipment allows me to hold a mash at whatever temperature without scorching for however long I want.
As far as using the SebSuper at 145f even though I am using malted wheat it just insures I will get complete conversion.
I am willing to spend a little extra money on enzymes and a little extra time mashing to insure good conversion and subsequently a good clean ferment
The liver is evil and must be punished
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
I don't understand the logic in paying the extra for malted if you aren't using it as a malt. If you are setup to deal with raw corn why not just buy the raw corn from CNC malt? https://cncmalt.com/product/raw-corn/
Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Flavour is my guess. Malting changes flavour quite a lot..
- Windy City
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
That is exactly why I used malted corn and the flavor that came out in the finish was fantastic and I will do this one again
I make quite a few bourbon’s and like to experiment. Mostly I use plain old corn meal but recently I did a bourbon using frozen sweet corn also this recipe with malted bloody butcher and next I am going to make one with malted Argentina Orange corn. After that I will probably make a four corn bourbon with all my leftovers from above
With imagination, good processes, the knowledge gained from this forum and practice you can make something fantastic that you normally could not buy.
The liver is evil and must be punished
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
- Saltbush Bill
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
What is the flavor difference between malted and unmalted bloody butcher corn? I have never tasted any corn malted and unmalted side by side.
Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Me neither but gunna have go malting some.
- Stonecutter
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Salty done laid it out. Just stick your nose in it and find outSaltbush Bill wrote: ↑Fri Oct 15, 2021 12:58 amAnyone that doubts that only need grind two identical grains, malted and unmalted , then stick your nose in for a smell .......the difference is hardly subtle.
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Side by side? Hell, ya could taste them a couple days and a year apart and discover that corn malt isn’t nothing like corn! My corn malt whiskeys have run the gamut from funky barn grass to sweet caramel magic. But all among, quite different from my more traditional bourbons.
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- Windy City
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
I have never tasted unmalted bloody butcher
I talked to Brendan at CNC Malting he said the malted was sweeter and of course had a good malt flavor, I said to him that I thought it also had a nutty flavor to it of which he agreed.
I haven’t done the Argentina Orange yet ( I haven’t even opened the bags) but he tells me it has rum notes. Hoping to run it next weekend.
The liver is evil and must be punished
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
- still_stirrin
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Well, I have yet to malt my own corn (farm raised by my family). But I have malted our wheat. In fact, I just finished malting a bushel (roughly 50 lb), and the grains smell and taste different between raw (unmalted) and malted. While they both taste like “flour”, or bread-like, the malted wheat has a sweeter taste. In addition, it is somewhat softer too, making it much easier to mill.Saltbush Bill wrote: ↑Fri Oct 15, 2021 12:58 amAnyone that doubts that only need grind two identical grains, malted and unmalted , then stick your nose in for a smell .......the difference is hardly subtle.
And better yet, when I brewed a beer with the malt, the ferment started quickly and fermented strong with a thick, rich meringue-like krausen, nice and white. It fermented fast too, getting to the latent ferment in about 24-30 hours.
So, if at all possible, I recommend using malted grains even though you can brew with unmalted grains and enzymes. The malted grains will have a nice flavor, different from the unmalted grains. I won’t say it has more flavor, just that it is a better flavor. And malting helps develop enzymes too, making the mash more effective too.
Next on my agenda is to try to malt some of our (field) corn.
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Had to try this and made my first batch of bloody butcher bourbon. I'm sold. Definitively has a sweeter smell and taste. Added some oats to mine. Not sure if I can wait for it to age. At least half will be gone, but I'll just have to make more.
- Windy City
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Did you use malted bloody butcher?
The liver is evil and must be punished
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
I did. From CNCMalt. A little pricey to ship but a nice treat every once in awhile
- rubberduck71
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Did ya make a sugarhead from spent grains? I've read that suggestion here on HD as a mechanism to help keep your paws off the A/G stuff until it ages properly.
I've got 4 buckets of Irish whiskey (40% Golden Promise/40% unmalted barley/10% corn meal/10% toasted oats) finishing up on some Angel Yeast that will become a sugarhead.
Duck
I've got 4 buckets of Irish whiskey (40% Golden Promise/40% unmalted barley/10% corn meal/10% toasted oats) finishing up on some Angel Yeast that will become a sugarhead.
Duck
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
No, but that's a great idea! That Irish whiskey recipe is looking like my next new one though(thanks). Been getting a little burned out of bourbon.
- Windy City
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
That’s awesome
Glad you were happy with it
The liver is evil and must be punished
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
Ok, been stewing over the sugar head scenario a bit. A couple of questions came to mind ( professing my ignorance here): 1. Would you use corn sugar with the spent malted corn? 2. How long would you steep the sugar-corn mash to pull the best flavor? I'm somewhat excessive with my corn, cooking at least 3 hours to extract all I can
Thanks.
Patrick
Thanks.
Patrick
- Windy City
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Re: Malted Bloody Butcher Bourbon
I haven’t done one of these in years but check out Jimbo’s gumball head section of this recipe
https://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtop ... 14&t=39617
https://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtop ... 14&t=39617
The liver is evil and must be punished
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975
Cranky"s spoon feeding for new and novice distillers
http://homedistiller.org/forum/viewtopi ... 15&t=52975