The bourbon I made was 17 lbs cracked corn, 5 lbs red wheat malt and 3 lbs 6 row fermented with US-05 ale yeast. Its a wheated bourbon style, like Makers Mark, Van Winkle and some others that use wheat instead of rye. I love the flavor of red wheat malt in a whiskey, I also make a single malt with it, 100% Red wheat malt, but thats another topic and another recipe I posted elsewhere here on HD.
So instead of dumping that pile of squeezed out spent grain in the compost like I usually do I decided to try my first sugar head. Ever, after 17 years of stillin. haha. I know I do shit backasswards. I cooked up 16 lbs of sugar with 2 gallons backset and 10 gallons water. Cooled and poured over the grain bed. With all the yeast embedded in the grain, it started up in no time. And fermented fast. It went from 1.061 to 1.000 in 4 days. Tonight I squeezed out 11 gallons from the grain. The wash is freakin delicious. Cidery from all the sugar, but still very corn flavored and sweet. A question for you folk who do sugarheads. Is that normal, sweet tasting, even at 1.000? Im used to AG washes being very sour. This stuff is tasty and drinkable as is, I strained out 3/4 pint and enjoyed every drop of it.
Tomorrow I'll do a double run on it and post up results. Then let you know how it goes after aging on charred JD staves. I have a good feeling I just doubled my drinkin likker from these Bourbon AG batches.
![Very Happy :ebiggrin:](./images/smilies/icon_e_biggrin.gif)