Yeah there is a bunch of good stuff in there for fermentation.Richard7 wrote:I'm not sure but the yeast seem to love it!jimdo64 wrote: Any idea what makes up the other 22?
All the stuff that makes for healthy cane fermentation is in the panela. I suspect the hot kettles do neutralize some nutritionally favorable material however? But certainly the panela provides a more robust environment compared to what we now get as Blackstrap that has been very efficiently rendered down to 50%. The Blackstrap available when Dunderhead was a young man is not really available unless you specify what would now be called a "distiller's molasses" it seems? And that product can get expensive for small time hobbyists.
The part I find interesting about todays molasses market is that the analysis (the 3 reports that I am starring at now) for three different grades, have a sucrose content that ranges (per product) of about a 10% variance/latitude (did I say that correctly?). Meaning the publicized potential sucrose content could theoretically be the same for all three grades of molasses. Even though the there is definitely a price difference from grade to grade........So how does a pro operator crunch his annual numbers to determine annual potential yield (and potential profit) with a product or series of products that can vary as much as 10% yield within the same product description?
Better yet, How does one explain to an investor that profits could be 10% more,,,,,,or 10% less?
Sorry for drifting.