Folks around here, grew and made a lot of sorghum molasses.
I'm sure some of it was fermented

https://hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/afcm/syrup.html
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A truck garden is just a regular family garden. After canning, freezing, or drying everything we needed for winter, we'd take it and sell it off the bed of the truck. The town folk would pay good money for fresh farm produce at the markets. So folks started calling it a truck garden because of that.Corsaire wrote:What's a truck garden?
SS,still_stirrin wrote:Both sorghum crops are grown for cattle feed around here. The tall variety is called, “Atlas” because it grows so tall, up to 8 feet. It is harvested with a foraging cutter, chopped up and blown into the silo. It is harvested in the late summer when the crop is green before going to seed when the stalks will dry. It is a juicy stalk, similar to sugar cane and the juice is delicious. We would chew on a piece of the stalk when filling silo.
The other crop, milo is grown for the seed which is high in protein. It is cut (with a combine) in the fall after the stalk has dried. It is a major cash crop here and common to the farms here. In fact, my family farm grows milo although our dairy was sold 45 years ago. But my cousins still operate a dairy and they feed milo supplemented with silage and alfalfa. They also grow corn for grain while some farmers raise corn for silage too.
Anyway, the milo seed is slightly bitter when harvested. I received a couple of bushels when we cut this fall. I use it in my 5 grain bourbon, Special K, named for my dad who passed from Alzheimers 4 years ago. The milo imparts a spicy flavor, very similar to rye but slightly different. When combined with family produced wheat and corn, it makes a complex and well balanced tasting bourbon. In fact I just ran 10 gallons of Special K low wines yesterday and it’s getting ready for making cuts today.
Atlas was common around here when I was young and we had the dairy, but now farmers prefer to grow cash crops in lieu of feed crops because the costs to produce are so expensive. And feeds are so specifically formulated with high energy grains and roughage that Atlas has been phased out. I guess corn silage is its replacement on dairy farms around here now.
Growing up in the “bread basket” has its advantages, although we still have to work long days to make a living at it. But my freezers are full of the benefits of the labor. And my liquor cabinet too.
ss
That's a crying shame. Breaks my heart to see farms sold to be subdivided. Even worse when the government takes it.SassyFrass wrote: ↑SS,
That farm is now under water with the reservoir they built about 30 years ago.
SF