Don't be silly! What would be the point of a dead catfish in your ferment!nerdybrewer wrote: Live?
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Don't be silly! What would be the point of a dead catfish in your ferment!nerdybrewer wrote: Live?
Shit. I'm crying here.Badmotivator wrote:Don't be silly! What would be the point of a dead catfish in your ferment!nerdybrewer wrote: Live?
Oh yes, I have done the Panela smoked salmon...GrassHopper wrote:Might be on to sumpthin' here.......Panela catfish. Panela smoked salmon. Panela shrimp. Hell with the booze.
I'm pretty sure I've run across that article, but I'll look it up again. Thanks.NZChris wrote:You can buy the starters for them as cheese culture, I have them in my freezer. Did you read the Bryan Davis article, Hot & Dirty? I don't know if it is still available on the net.
I have, and I will again.Snackson wrote:Well, I finished a strip the other night and added 3 gallons fresh dunder to fermenter, added in 3 gallons of wash from last batch that I couldn't get below 1.015, covered it and continued cleaning up the garage and still after the strip. Whoops, forgot to mix in the new panela and water and left it. After I was all done out there, I went inside, showered and got ready for bed.
Well, last night I opened it up and there's a good lacto on it. Options. Mix the panela and sugar in with huge yeast bomb to ferment out, drain and boil and then mix it up, or just toss it in a bucket for the dunder pit.
Right now leaning towards boiling it up and then using it. Have any of you used live dunder off the bat?
Don't worry,Snackson wrote:Thing is, after this ferment gets stripped, I am planning on mixing low wines from first two 20 gallon strips with the strip of this for a nice long spirit run through a couple of plates and the hearts are going into a 5 gallon barrel. Don't know if 1/3 being from a funky run will affect the flavor too much. I'm sure it'll be fine, just don't want to wait a year and regret using the funky one.
No guarantee, I'm afraid. But if you pounded the hell out of the cane and soaked it in a low-ABV (under 6%) and low-sugar dunder, and kept it warm (near 90F) and when you checked it later it smelled a bit pukey or like a funky locker room, then you got something good.lowpull wrote:I hate to jump in as a newbie on an established thread. But would a chunk of fresh sugarcane have the wild bacteria on it to Jumpstart a dunderpit?
Badmotivator wrote:When I have a healthy bread sourdough starter I take a couple of ounces of it and smear it really thin on some saran wrap. It dries overnight into a real thin cracker-like material. I crumble this up and put it in a bag in the freezer, and this is my backup starter. When I mess up my regular starter by ignoring it too long I start over by rehydrating my backup. The re-hydrated backup can be back up to full strength in three days.
I promise there's a point coming up here, folks. Bear with me.
Would it be possible to dry out some live muck to a powder? That could be used as an inoculator for the next guy's muck hole? I know that some of the bugs are anaerobes, but would they all just die if dried?
I'm going to try it. I have a dehydrator and an active muck hole. I'll dry some muck, scrape the powder into a sterile panela wash, put it on the stir plate and watch what happens.
EDIT: I slopped some stinky SCOBY on the plate. Dehydrating at 90 deg F.
There are references that talk about that technique long before 2010.Bushman wrote: when you strip the first run then the next fermentation you add the stripping run and run it as a spirit run.
Probably, as a member asked me to add it to the Glossary, I hadn't heard the term so while researching it Odin was my first reference. I guess the technique is more widely used in Europe than here. I had not used the technique before either adding fients to the next batch or saving up my fients for an all fients run which is different than running a stripping run adding it to the next run or doing a series of stripping runs and then a spirit run.LWTCS wrote:There are references that talk about that technique long before 2010.Bushman wrote: when you strip the first run then the next fermentation you add the stripping run and run it as a spirit run.
Always good to find a bit more about how things got started, I know Punkin has had some great ideas like his triple walled Liebig named the Punkindenser.LWTCS wrote:Not a big deal really.
My first recollection was an old post where Punkin asked about it. As I recall he didn't get a conclusive answer so he ran it to see what the results would be.
He was suitably impressed with the results enough to recommend as a way to keep the proof elevated while ensuring flavor forward.