How To Make Moonshine - UJSSM Style "Sour Mash" Sugar Wash Bourbon

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Still It

Still It

6 жыл бұрын

Today I am making moonshine!
Uncle Jesse's Sour Mash (UJSSM) is a multi generation sour mash recipe that will make a tasty "bourbon".
Step 2 in the process:
• How to make Moonshine ...
Still It Merch
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UJSM RECIPE
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CONSULT GIVEAWAY IS CLOSED

Пікірлер: 305
@unclejesse5463
@unclejesse5463 6 жыл бұрын
I'm Uncle Jesse and I approve of this video.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Uncle Jesse missing "s" and all? Haha. Thanks for the help!!!
@dannalbob
@dannalbob 6 жыл бұрын
Damn... We're in the presence of greatness!
@unclejesse5463
@unclejesse5463 6 жыл бұрын
Ha! Just an old time distiller who takes a lot of pleasure knowing that I've helped some folks learn to do this craft safely and properly.
@spikelove9533
@spikelove9533 5 жыл бұрын
I'm going to try doing UJSM but with a little variation I mashed my corn now I'll add a little new corn and back set. When I do my next batch. Im thinking I will skip over generations 1and 2 maybe even 3 and be right in the sweet spot. Its probably already been done but I haven't seen anyone talking about.
@spikelove9533
@spikelove9533 5 жыл бұрын
The second mash generation is fermenting very well it took 24 hours to start working very nicely. Vs 2 hours after doing a mash conversion. The whiskey was pretty dam good from the original mash I cant wait to see what the second generation comes out like. If it works out it will such a huge time saver. We will see next weekend when I still it
@Justicescales123
@Justicescales123 6 жыл бұрын
Love the fact that you identified that this really isn't a sour mash as your not converting the starch. Glad I found your channel.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Justicescales123 I try to keep things on the up and up haha. Although now I guess it IS a sour sugar head for the next gens etc. Gotta say I'm really REALLY happy with how this is going (up to gen 5 ferment now).
@larrybaker404
@larrybaker404 6 жыл бұрын
Love the idea of labels, great job
@BeerByTheNumbers
@BeerByTheNumbers 6 жыл бұрын
Looks like a great and really straight forward recipe, hoping it comes out great. Cheers!
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Beer By The Numbers thanks man! Will keep you posted, waiting does suck though! Haha
@kennethmay5624
@kennethmay5624 5 жыл бұрын
Started years ago making wine, then went to brewing with malt extrats, then learning all grain brewing. For last 6+ months have been reading and reading and reading about distilling and now last several months watching yours and a few other videos..just purchased my first baby "get into the hobby" still a Turbo 500...both with reflux and copper dome. There is so much to learn but going to try my first mash creation this week!
@StillIt
@StillIt 5 жыл бұрын
Awesome man, hope it goes really well! Pretty crazy how all those hobbies kinda just lead to each other eh!
@edwardsmithjr4813
@edwardsmithjr4813 2 жыл бұрын
I always wanted to do that. Recipe look pretty easy. Going to give her a shot. Give it a try here and Indiana
@countryboycharlie9793
@countryboycharlie9793 6 жыл бұрын
I make this most of the time, this is my white lighting my friends love it
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+charlie knight awesome.do you age some as well??
@denzilmoffat2011
@denzilmoffat2011 4 жыл бұрын
Please tell us more Charlie
@Winteryears
@Winteryears 4 жыл бұрын
Dude, I really like your style.
@StillIt
@StillIt 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks man :)
@Outerrythem
@Outerrythem 2 жыл бұрын
After completing generation 6 UJSSM, I experimented with adding other grains in with the backset. For generation 7, I took half the amount of backset that I would normally take and added it back to the corn/yeast. I then made a mash of oats, golden malt and medium peated malt, added to the corn/yeast and corn back set and fermented. The results were really pleasing - I highly recommend experimenting with adding additional grains. I am now onto my second multi grain mash utilising the back set from 7 - it's getting better and better. Straight out of the stripping runs, there is obviously more flavor and complexity.
@scottyweimuller6152
@scottyweimuller6152 6 жыл бұрын
Well there's no big issue putting to much sugar into the mash. I always put a extra kilo or so of sugar in when making a mash in my fast fermenter just so i don't have to stress out about the gravity being to low and so on . I always say its better to do to much than to little and sugar is pretty cheap if you buy the bulk 50 pound bags so its no problem other than it can become a little wasteful so don't worry about putting to much of anything in. I do have to say its been pretty cool watching you grow and learn along the way. Ive been distilling for close to 6 years now and its always good to watch other people and how they do it snd learn new tricks and ways for myself so thank you for posting your videos man its always good to see someone who's into distilling as much as I am. Keep up the good work and congrats on your latest ferment, people like you inspire me to try new techniques and keep going. Danke, Happy Distilling.
@loudercin
@loudercin 3 жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks
@erikpreston8976
@erikpreston8976 6 жыл бұрын
Great info for first time distillers such as myself. I will only ever distill water in my rig as I am in the USA, but I will probably re-watch these vids a few times for reference...while distilling my water...just cause it's cool information... ;) Keep on making these cool videos, we in the States love it!
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Erik Preston you will have he best water around haha. Cheers mate
@erikpreston8976
@erikpreston8976 6 жыл бұрын
Thanks brother for the info and support, I've subbed and am looking forward to learning with this channel...#respectscience MF'rs
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Erik Preston no danger dude :)
@BeardedBored
@BeardedBored 6 жыл бұрын
Cool! Really looking forward to seeing the sour mashing process and hear how the flavors change between each generation. You pick the best things to try out:-)>
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Bearded & Bored yeah me too dude! Interested to see the difference between gens too!
@carlbowman3366
@carlbowman3366 5 жыл бұрын
I use this recipe with a slight twist. I malt 3 lbs of corn to replace that much of the cracked corn. Also instead of baker yeast I use Lalvin IE1118 champagne yeast. Bakers yeast only goes to about 10% ABV while the champagne yeast goes up to 18%
@1FrenchConnection1
@1FrenchConnection1 6 жыл бұрын
I like the fridge idea! I personally used an aquarium heater 😜!
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Yup yup nice! I live in a place that that is fairly temperate. So in winter you need heat, in summer cooling. Having both in one is handy for that ;)
@anthonyking2540
@anthonyking2540 Жыл бұрын
78 degrees
@jonroberts6518
@jonroberts6518 2 ай бұрын
For grain I always use sweet feed aka horse feed. It has cracked corn,oats wheat and barley and molasses in it. Pretty good stuff.
@jeffbrislane5782
@jeffbrislane5782 4 жыл бұрын
I never knew that bourbon and budweiser had so much in common!
@jasonharper2601
@jasonharper2601 6 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU !!
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Jason Harper pleasure :)
@unclejesse5463
@unclejesse5463 6 жыл бұрын
You really don't have to worry too much about the excess sugar on a first run. Unless you are putting in far too much for your yeast to handle, and of course I don't do Turbo Yeast, I use simple baking yeast which can't handle too high a starting gravity. The first run is only to get feints and backset, so you didn't really screw anything up too badly.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Uncle Jesse thanks. I did overshoot by a decent amount, but I think once diluted down it was fairly close to the original recipe. This is just baker's yeast too :)
@redred3309
@redred3309 4 жыл бұрын
Hey otago Poly student here, any tips and tricks I should know?
@joshcasey8311
@joshcasey8311 6 жыл бұрын
i really dig the idea of sour mash and look forward to the upcoming generation of the mash. Im not a fan of corn based anything due mainly to the fact thats what i grew up with here in the south east US. Regardless, the old timers say not to use any sugar in the recipe at all. the yield will, of course, be less but the product a finer quality. There is a book perhaps you can get access to called "The Foxfire Book". there are several volumes in publication, but the one to look at is "Moonshining as an Art". It is very informative and a great insight as to the old ways of distilling.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Yeah fair enough Josh. Often goes like that with what you eat/drink in excess when you are younger eh? Yup hear you on that. This recipe is for people that are not ready (for whatever reason) to do a full mash and convert starch to sugar. In this case the only thing we are fermenting is the sugar. The corn may add a tiny bit of alcohol in the end, but its mostly just for flavour. Thanks for the suggestion on the book! Will have a look if I can get it on the kindle ;)
@joshcasey8311
@joshcasey8311 6 жыл бұрын
I have it on my Kindle. its a really in depth narrative and well worth the read. the whole series of books were written in the late 1960's by a group of remedial high school students. 9 bushels of corn - 1.5 malted and 7.5 cracked. i have had several paper copies over the years and enjoy the history of it. not to mention the fact that its titled an as art form. scotch - Irish immigrants from the north Georgia mountains. i could be partial to it because its my heritage? good info is good info regardless of location.
@countryboycharlie9793
@countryboycharlie9793 6 жыл бұрын
Yes with American oak, and proof it about 80proof taste great 👍
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+charlie knight nice thinking that's what I will do with most of this ;)
@douglassmith5228
@douglassmith5228 3 жыл бұрын
Started my 2 gen. Today. Now to wait
@kenbedley5758
@kenbedley5758 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for all your help Jesse. My question is what part of that do you save ourselves. The bottom part of your mask with the yeast. Or the bottom part of your mash after distilling
@Samandcocoa
@Samandcocoa 6 жыл бұрын
Really liked the vid this time. Great hat by the way. How about Svieks. Means cheers in Lithuanian. Love that recipe. I've tweaked it a little as everyone has. If you heat the corn then use some amylase to convert it. You can use a bit less sugar and you get a bit more flavor. Can't wait for you to do a queens run.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Thanks man! Yeah looking forward to it too! Hmmm dig that! Thanks for he suggestion! I had thought of doing just that. I was also thinking of mixing it up a bit with some barley / rye / rice / etc.
@Mr85plumb
@Mr85plumb 6 жыл бұрын
Hey man great video as usual. I make ujsm all the time I have 2 50 litre ferments on the go and I have lost count of the generation they are up to, i just change some corn out every 2nd generation. If you can get it try adding a tin of Saunders Liquid Malt per 25 litres of wash, tastes really good.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Awesome! Do you tend to drink it white? Or age it ? Interesting! I guess that would be a little like using malted barley?
@Mr85plumb
@Mr85plumb 6 жыл бұрын
I generally oak it with American Oak, although I usually keep a few bottles white as well.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Ah yup nice! Im thinking I will do the same.
@BigEdsGuns
@BigEdsGuns 6 жыл бұрын
Great video Jessie. Was wondering when you were going to brew up a batch of UJSSM. You might want to consider playing around with alpha and gluco amylase enzymes from pintoshine some day. The starch conversions are quite remarkable. Cheers!
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Awesome thanks Ed! I had thought about that, and have actually been keeping an eye out on where to get enzymes from. Will check them out!
@matubalfaisal2600
@matubalfaisal2600 2 жыл бұрын
@@StillIt I believe you just wasted your corn. Without enzymes. Starch won’t fermented. I believe you just fermented 25% of corn without enzymes to break starch to sugar.
@jacobbuxton3895
@jacobbuxton3895 Жыл бұрын
@@matubalfaisal2600 UJSSM mainly ferments the sugar, and cheats with the corn to take flavor. Corn changes color as spent, but is kept batch to batch with only the bad pieces scooped out
@madhupeddireddy
@madhupeddireddy 4 жыл бұрын
Hey Jesse, it's a great and useful video. I tried this mash, and I done first generation. I have a question to ask you. Can I use total liquid, which I used in first still to the second generation fermentation?
@larrybaker404
@larrybaker404 6 жыл бұрын
Still it thanks your in the big leagues
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+larry baker haha cheers man.
@mcfloyd910
@mcfloyd910 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video and recipe. Just starting out here, and been getting a lot of good info on youtube. I have two questions. Does the PH value matter on any kind of mash, or just certain ones. Also, is it ever a bad idea to filter your spirits; something like rum or brandy?
@nxtgenhelp8708
@nxtgenhelp8708 5 жыл бұрын
Hi Jesse Completely new to brewing and keen to learn. I’m so happy to find you on KZfaq. Real business: I have got a big 200 litre fermenter and boiler. Questions1 Can I just use sugar( which sugar is best) to start with and add molasses in the fermentation .
@StillIt
@StillIt 5 жыл бұрын
How's it mate, welcome! If you want to use molasses your heading towards rum. The ujssm is a cheap easy approximation for the American style corn whisky.
@silveraven1
@silveraven1 4 жыл бұрын
This is a great recipe and turns out great. Thanks. Question have you ever done this and then mashed the corn in bucket for and hour at 65C with cracked corn? It’s not malted so am I wasting my time? Would I get any conversation?
@brentb9823
@brentb9823 6 жыл бұрын
Is common bread yeast ok to use? Also what starting and finishing gravity are you aiming for?
@paytonbachinski9540
@paytonbachinski9540 3 жыл бұрын
The general rule for bakers yeast vs brewers yeast is that bakers yeast is designed to produce less alcohol and more CO2 for bread to rise. Brewers yeast will produce less CO2 and has a higher alcohol tolerance, yielding more ABV in theory if everything else is equal. Now because of how this UJSSM process works, as you move onto newer generations, even if you start with bread yeast, it should start evolving into a slightly more alcohol tolerant strain. No idea how fast the yeast change, but given enough generations you may find your yeast is fermenting to a higher alcohol concentration before settling down, dying off, or producing off flavors.
@zacharycase584
@zacharycase584 4 жыл бұрын
I did 5lb crack corn, 2lb 2 row malted barley and 7lb table sugar, to your knowledge, will it have any adverse effect on the mash?
@thecaitiff
@thecaitiff 6 жыл бұрын
I'm not in this for the contest, but I've got an idea for the whisky name. Sugar Mill Whisky, for the milled grain and sugar additions that make up the recipe. Thanks for making the videos, I'm always excited to get the notifications. Again, I am not entering the contest (I spend way too much time on the HD or AD forums and not enough in the shed as it is), just like the content.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Hahaha fair enough man! Nice I dig that!
@spikelove9533
@spikelove9533 5 жыл бұрын
I wonder what recycling the yeast dose? If it conditions the yeast over time or changes the flavors any? I would think that if the yeast are constantly in some alchohol because of reuseing them it would start to be more alcohol tolerant? I also wonder if over time it absorbs some of the mash flavors giving your wash a different flavor each generation?
@tjans1979
@tjans1979 3 жыл бұрын
Jesse getting back into this and I've learned a lot more about the difference between a pot still and a reflux still. For making ujssm we want a pot still to keep the flavor. however what kind of an effect does it have to run stripping runs and then run one Spirit run at the end. Isn't that kind of akin to double distilling? Will that cause considerable flavor loss?
@oilpond
@oilpond 4 жыл бұрын
I have allways used frozen corn and God its lush😜
@StillIt
@StillIt 4 жыл бұрын
I have yet to use frozen / fresh sweet corn. I will need to give it a nudge some time.
@Rubberduck-tx2bh
@Rubberduck-tx2bh 4 жыл бұрын
For us non-metric heathen, the "regular" recipe UOM is at 2:07. :-)
@leewood8913
@leewood8913 6 жыл бұрын
hi really enjoying all of your videos only been doing this myself for a few months started out with the turbos #Crap been doing the tpw's for the last few months with nice results now i really want to start the ujssm but near where I live in the UK I only can find natural mixed poultry corn doesn't say anything on the bag I Googled the company and looked and it says it's 50%CORN AND50%Wheat will this be okay can any one give me some advice as I could order kibbled corn but will have to wait and the mixed is a 20kg bag and at £7 is half the price?
@jimbrady5655
@jimbrady5655 3 жыл бұрын
I was wondering im on my 4 th generation do I have to add yeast it's bubbling really good
@ShotgunLlama
@ShotgunLlama 2 жыл бұрын
Any thoughts on making a sugar wash that includes some koji rice or fermented rice (cooked rice + nuruk or jiuqu) to get some of that rice wine flavor without going all rice?
@Waltz505
@Waltz505 5 жыл бұрын
To try this with the original 5 gallons of water would a 6 gallon fermentor work or would I need to convert?
@daveserota7571
@daveserota7571 5 жыл бұрын
I am hopping to do my first run in several weeks when I get my 20l still. What would be the best recipe to start will, corn meal and amylase or just white sugar??
@StillIt
@StillIt 5 жыл бұрын
Depends what you mean by best I guess. Easiest? Most foolproof? Most simple? And are you pot stilling or refluxing? I would go something like UJSSM if you want "whisky" and birdwatchers if you are refluxing though :)
@justonschmidtke1921
@justonschmidtke1921 4 жыл бұрын
Dude! I'm not sure what to do. Please help when you can. I have my gen 1 UJSSM rolling well, so much so that it is at 1.000 fg (1.068 sg) after 4 days. It's my first time using DADY and it is still bubbling on the regular. Do I let it go or just siphon off etc to prep gen 2? Used the recipe listed in this video. Thanks for any help
@tjans1979
@tjans1979 5 жыл бұрын
I know output can vary greatly but I'm curious in general how much volume you got from your stripping runs of UJSSM, and also how much final product you get from each 5 gallon wash.
@StillIt
@StillIt 5 жыл бұрын
Hows it mate. I can't really remember for each 5gal, mostly because I treated it like one big batch. But on an average across most of the stuff, I do my stripping runs normally come out at about 30-35% ABV. Final volume is all over the place. But generally about 45-65% in terms of volume of the spirit run.
@jackpotgaming420
@jackpotgaming420 3 жыл бұрын
My still is running at 90 proof but I have to go someplace and was wondering if I can shut it down and start it back up in the morning
@michaelclarke249
@michaelclarke249 3 жыл бұрын
What’s the best yeast to use for UJSSM to start off with it’s my first time stilling
@silveraven1
@silveraven1 4 жыл бұрын
Can you just use regular bread yeast? Or do you have use a still spirits whisky yeast or DADY. I’ve also heard that turbo yeast isn’t the best- fast by you get off flavors?
@kasperkasper4394
@kasperkasper4394 Жыл бұрын
Hello Jessie. I've made this recipe and when it was done fermenting it smells like white wine. Its the first run. So its not even sour mash yet. Have you had til happen to you before and you know why? Could it be the turbo yeast i've used that gives that white wine taste and smell?
2 жыл бұрын
hey tell me for 25L of mash at 15/20% abv what quantity of good moonshine can i get, i did it many many times on my 10 liters still and i did 25 liters of mash each time but i didn't pactice for a couple of years and next month i'll made my personnal apple brandy recipe, since my still is 10 liters (with a thumper) so i distill the 25L in 3/4 times and i pour all the first in the second distillation with second part of mash and the same at the last distillation part of the mash, how many quantity of good product do you think i'm gonna have?
@icontrol9971
@icontrol9971 6 жыл бұрын
Thanks for inspiring me to try this on my own, I scaled down the recipe to 7.5 liters of water, 1.3kg corn sugar, 1.3kg scratch corn and 5.7g of yeast or 2 gallons water, 2.8 lbs corn sugar, 2.8 lbs cracked corn and .2 ounces of yeast ( wanted to make a smaller batch as I have never distilled before ). My batch is currently in a 3 gallon glass carboy fermenting away but I failed to think about how I would replace the spent corn for my next generation, im thinking about leaving the corn in for 2 generations as i have no idea how I would remove the spent corn, what are your thoughts ? also roughly how much drinkable product do you think I will have after a run ?
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Hows it mate! Awesome, I am totally starting to understand why this is such a popular "beginner" recipe. Its solid and easy as heck! So have at it man. So after the fermentation clears up you syphon off the top. You will end up with corn + yeast + some wash in the bottom (hard to get it all out, and you don't want to leave the yeasties high and dry). At this stage just scoop out some corn off the top. Aim to grab the stuff on top, it will likely be kind of grey. Different people sugest differing amounts of corn to replace. But honestly you probably dont need to move much (if any) between gen 1-2.
@prophetkevin
@prophetkevin 4 жыл бұрын
looking forward to learning this craft. not a hobby. that would be golf. 1st ever sugar mash i hope next week but may try this as 1st batch. how long does the backwash keep for the next generation. sounds similar to amish bread and its starter passed around. now.. Pick me.. quickly
@Angelmeat
@Angelmeat 3 жыл бұрын
Can you use other grains than corn for this kinda mash? Can you use barley malt?
@distillingdynamicssouthafr5232
@distillingdynamicssouthafr5232 4 жыл бұрын
Please make a fruit wash and distilled series
@StillIt
@StillIt 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah I need to do that!
@mattjohnson9226
@mattjohnson9226 3 жыл бұрын
1 week in on my first ujssm( fizzing away nice action) thank you for your time... just got my amylase any help on a good corn recipe would be appreciated more then you know team!!! Lolo ( good shit ) I can’t find the video that you show how to sparge with the tea bag tec!!
@cabji
@cabji 4 жыл бұрын
what sort of yield do you get from the UJSSM recipe? what i mean is if you did say, 5 generations, @ 25L for a ferment, how much whiskey at approx 40% do you end up with at the end of the 5 generations? also, is a stripping run just a hot and fast run of the still to distill the alcohol off, not worrying about the flavour? the first generation distillation is a stripping run, but what about the 2nd, 3rd etc? i watched the 5th gen video where Jesse makes all the cuts in the jars on the table. what's the difference when doing this distillation? do you run the still a lot slower for this? i know most brewers don't like to work by temperatures, but what sort of temperature ranges does the cut run span?
@RDCCLSALE
@RDCCLSALE 4 жыл бұрын
Great Videos! But You didn't show how you start your yeast or what ratio water/yeast, thanks!
@agujiltayri8745
@agujiltayri8745 4 жыл бұрын
hi jesse! in this recipe i noticed that you didn’t use nutritious salt for yeast. I am a beginner in distillation. In my country (Algeria) I can only find baker's yeast, yeast for distillation such as tubo or wine or beer yeast are not found on the market. to make this recipe i have to use baker's yeast. in this case I have to add the nutritive salt for the yeast, the vitamins and adjust the pH with citric acid. should i do the same for each generation? please answer me to start my preparation. big thanks.
@bowsmythe
@bowsmythe 6 жыл бұрын
so as for the calculation on adding too much sugar. all that would've done is given you a higher ABV right? as long as your yeast could handle it.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Correct. But as you say it would have stressed the yeast more. Seeing as the point of this gen is to set the foundation for the rest...... figgered I would try to "fix" it. Perhaps a little anal of me.....but eh haha
@jpledger89
@jpledger89 6 жыл бұрын
I'd love to get some help on the enzymes for my cracked corn. I have an amylase enzyme powder, but I can't seem to find if I have the right stuff or not. I've done 1 run so far, which turned out okay, by my ABV seems low. I've read lots about two part amylase enzyme liquids. And I'm just overwhelmed and confused. Great video! as always, super helpful.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Good on you for rocking a full mash dude. Honestly I have not used packaged enzymes before, always just malted barley. What is your recipe man? Starting gravity? And yeah I understand that. Its a pretty big topic, with a bunch of fairly serious science involved haha.
@jpledger89
@jpledger89 6 жыл бұрын
My first time I just used 6 pounds(2.7kg I think?) corn meal, 6 pounds cracked corn. Boiled the hell out of it for an hour. When it cooled to 160F(71C I think?) I added some enzyme, then added more 30 minutes later at 150F(65C), then added more 30 minutes later at 140F(60C), and finally added my champagne yeast. Unfortunately I didn't check my starting gravity(I didn't know I was supposed to. oops!) I just finished my second run and this time cheated with the sugar. 5 pounds corn meal, 5 pounds cracked corn. Boiled it the same and added enzyme the same, but added 8 pounds of sugar after the last bit of enzyme. As for the starting gravity, I got multiple readings! If I did it right, 1.038 before the sugar and 1.100 after the sugar.
@jasonjeffers3929
@jasonjeffers3929 4 жыл бұрын
If your prof Is low use more sugar and use distiller yeast
@marshallkirksey2619
@marshallkirksey2619 2 жыл бұрын
Hey I am a beginner and I'm trying to learn how to recognize my foreshots heads hearts and Tails how do you know when you get to the end of your Tales or how do you know when you coming out of your four shots
@user-ef4ld7tg1b
@user-ef4ld7tg1b 7 ай бұрын
After yeast finish working, how Many days can I wait to run it. How long will it be good for?
@anratse
@anratse 6 жыл бұрын
I'm liking the video's a lot. I've read a bunch on the forums, but seeing stuff is a welcome extra layer. When you say people feel the quality is best at around gen 5 or 7, does it just stay good then or do next generations get worse flavor? Thanks for making these!
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Sean how's it going man. I am yet to get there my self. But from what I know of brewing and yeast, and what I have heard. You will get to a point where you will need to refresh the yeast. As I understand it the back set can just keep being used though.
@anratse
@anratse 6 жыл бұрын
So you're saying keep the backset at that point, just add fresh yeast? Thanks, I'll be sure and try that when I get that far. I've just bought a keg, you've inspired me to build a ccvm. Making neutral in a pot just is no fun. How about you try some Odin's Easy Gin next? Keep up the great videos!
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Sean yeah I have to get to that point yet. But eventually you will need some more yeast. Cool man, exciting!
@Matt-xq1gb
@Matt-xq1gb 6 жыл бұрын
I'd love a consult on how to get started. I've watched videos, read blog posts but my biggest hurdle seems to be where to start. I'm looking to use electric heating and there are options out there, but I'm just not sure what to get to start out.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
I can understand that! Its a pretty big leap getting started, there is so much to take into account. Especially when you are not sure what you dont know etc haha. He could help you out with that for sure!!
@oilpond
@oilpond 4 жыл бұрын
Two years into the future matt matt so howd yah go bro?
@markcermele9197
@markcermele9197 9 ай бұрын
How many 5,15,20 gallon bucket would you suggest for sour mash, 3 generations. Mix,mash,, ferment, cook, mash, mix, cook. This takes several days, many runs. I wouldn't want to come up short. Mark
@krispycrittersonthegrill3611
@krispycrittersonthegrill3611 4 жыл бұрын
Hey Jesse what type of yeast did you use. cheers
@blunt4841
@blunt4841 6 жыл бұрын
Could one use LME instead of sugar and attain something more flavoursome?
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
I sent no reason why not!
@1FrenchConnection1
@1FrenchConnection1 6 жыл бұрын
Got it! The Abyss
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+1FrenchConnection1 huh......that would make for a sweet lable too. Will keep that in mind. Perhaps for a rum?
@paullloyd7370
@paullloyd7370 6 жыл бұрын
Where did you get the corn. I've thought about going to farmlands but I'm collecting 1kg sweet corn bags for now.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Yeah I went to farmlands. "kibbled maize". I had wondered what the difference between using a feed corn and a sweet corn would be.
@peecuntny
@peecuntny 3 жыл бұрын
Guys... I finished my first distillation of the first batch - not yet a sour mash. It tastes good but the smell is strange, it smells like a boiled egg... is it expected smell? Is there any chance to get rid of it?
@brianennis5714
@brianennis5714 4 жыл бұрын
What is the most economical still to make or buy?
@StillIt
@StillIt 4 жыл бұрын
I mean it depends what you mean by economical. Least amount of energy to cost? Just plain cheapest? Generally the answer is the absolute biggest continuous still you can afford. (if we are talking in $$)
@gs.7894
@gs.7894 3 жыл бұрын
In our country its hard to find cracked , flacked corn or malted wheat. Here we can get raw wheat and corn straight from fields. Can you explain how to use raw corn.
@tonyswan6834
@tonyswan6834 3 жыл бұрын
Can you distil this thru a Turbo 500 still???
@chancekiki8488
@chancekiki8488 6 жыл бұрын
What if you did this UJSSM and every time you do a new generation you add another type of yeast. This would be interesting bc each yeast adds its own flavor.
@cmdrcrimbo
@cmdrcrimbo 6 жыл бұрын
Im a brewer and new to distilling so please be kind but why dont u use alpha amylase to convert the corn starch to sugars also?
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+Chris Bradley how's it mate! You totally could! The point of this recipe is to be super easy on people not used to mashing. So for someone from a AG brewing background you could skip this one and go to a ag recipe.
@matthewgalbraith1243
@matthewgalbraith1243 2 жыл бұрын
Is it OK to use Turbo Yeast fir this recipe?
@callumtaggart9392
@callumtaggart9392 6 жыл бұрын
Will the corn really add much flavour if not mashed? i feel an experiment coming on. Try one with mashed corn. I feel like its a waste of fermentables
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Yup will definitely add the favour. Much the same as steeped grains for a partial mash beer. Would they add more or less if the starch was converted. . . . . Im not so sure of haha. I hear you on the fermentables though. Keep in mind the idea behind UJSSM is to be super easy for people not ready to jump into conversions. Will be doing that some time soon though as well :)
@countryboycharlie9793
@countryboycharlie9793 6 жыл бұрын
White lighting about 💯 proof
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+charlie knight .....will keep some like this as well though
@spikelove9533
@spikelove9533 5 жыл бұрын
I have a question my first generation was a mash I added sugar till I got to 15% ABV it fermented down to 1.002 but from the second generation on it's been fermenting down to way below zero. I take away a large tea tumbler of grain add the same new and 25% back set. I put in 8 lbs of unrefined sugar my starting gravity is 1.113 I'm just wondering why I'm getting so dry so I can keep doing that on purpose lol
@StillIt
@StillIt 5 жыл бұрын
Wow, 1.113 thats pretty big! So the only thing that's different between me he two really is that it's a second generation? And you are re-using the yeast at the bottom? Yeast will often be a little hungrier (or thirstier I guess) after a few generations. They will literally evolve to suit the medium they are in. They also have a much larger cell count now. It could be that.
@spikelove9533
@spikelove9533 5 жыл бұрын
@@StillIt yes I'm just adding backset water sugar and a lil fresh grain no new yeast I kinda suspected something like that this yeast is kinda born into alcohol so it has a higher tolerance. Thanks for your thoughts This last generation was simply amazing! Proofed it down from 169 from the still to 100 and its deceptively smooth. I'm super happy with this recipe
@StillIt
@StillIt 5 жыл бұрын
Awesome! Glad it's working out!
@elektrobear2027
@elektrobear2027 3 жыл бұрын
Did you ever try the cornflakes mash?
@mattpearce4313
@mattpearce4313 3 жыл бұрын
What is the point in the cracked corn? When there is no amylase present, the corn adds no sugars. Is it purely for flavour?
@jbaker4900
@jbaker4900 4 жыл бұрын
What's is the generation- the backset or the remaining unspent corn? How many generations can you go before starting over with a sweet run?
@StillIt
@StillIt 4 жыл бұрын
People refer to it as a generation, just the whole thing. The iteration. Personally I would say the limiting factor would be the yeast. Eventually they will evolve in a way that is not great for your final product. If you notice a sub par fermentation you would want to start again with a fresh pitch of yeast. But could carry on using everything else.
@DUMPTHETRUCK
@DUMPTHETRUCK 5 жыл бұрын
If you add a half pound of 6 row barley or a spoon of amylase enzyme it will ferment those corn sugars
@StillIt
@StillIt 5 жыл бұрын
It wont do a whole lot at that temp. The point of UJSSM is to skip the mash and make things super simple :)
@umvelho1494
@umvelho1494 Жыл бұрын
Can you help me ? I have a 175 L fermenter, what would be the measurement for the recipe?
@umvelho1494
@umvelho1494 Жыл бұрын
175 L is 7x more than 25 L. 4.2 x 7 = 29.4 kg cracked corn 4.2x 7 = 29.4 kg sugar 25 x 7 = 150g of yeast. is correct ?
@FinenDine
@FinenDine 6 жыл бұрын
My questions are about aging/oxidation. Should I top up barrels that lose their Angels share with neutral? Or a new batch? Also is there a way to test for the types of alcohols in a solution? I'm aware of the Lucas test, however that will only tell you the presence of primary secondary or tertiary alcohols. I want to know the specific concentrations of say acetone, ethyl alcohol, butyl alcohol, Etc in the heads, hearts, and tales of a specific batch.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+FinenDine hows it man. The big boys don't. They just leave it. Not too sure what other home distillers are doing. My gut says just take the loss. Yeah that is a tricky one man. Unless you have access to some serious lab equipment(GC spectro etc) I'm not to sure what you could do. If you come up with something make sure you let me know!!
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
+FinenDine forgot to mention too, you actually want a certain amount of oxidisation (unlike most beer!) For aged spirits. Or so I am lead to believe.
@FinenDine
@FinenDine 6 жыл бұрын
Still It proper! Thanks man. I should probably have enough to age over that Imperial Stout staves within a couple weeks so we compare notes when the time comes. I'll keep looking but I'm suspecting that you're right. Talked to one of my biochem buddies and he mentioned a couple things but said it would be easier to send to a lab. It's more about the theory and understanding what's in various Mash's for me than actually trying to choose things to rerun.
@asimplelifeinthephilippine1465
@asimplelifeinthephilippine1465 3 жыл бұрын
Are you hitting 150 to 180 or better alcohol.
@brayantellez9313
@brayantellez9313 2 жыл бұрын
Do you cap it when its in fridge?
@jeffcotton526
@jeffcotton526 4 жыл бұрын
Why aren't you mashing the corn? To get the starch to sugar conversion? No conversion takes place during a ferment.
@robstjw
@robstjw 5 жыл бұрын
Hey, Jesse! Re: initial first gen readings for this. Spike Love may have a good answer for this also. I just made my fist gen mash last night. I came out with an initial of 1.072 (after taking temp reading into account). This seems low to me. Is this pretty consistent with what you all are getting?
@StillIt
@StillIt 5 жыл бұрын
Sorry its been a while since I have made this one. So I cant really remember the exact numbers. But that is right around 10% abv. Sounds about right to me. I prefer not to go much larger than that.
@robstjw
@robstjw 5 жыл бұрын
What!!?? You don’t have a photographic memory?! Or write down every single detail of your mashes!!?😂😁 Good deal. Makes me feel better. It ended up dropping all the way down to .99. So I feel I’m doing ok, then. Thanks, Jessie! Cheers!
@jerryatkins8235
@jerryatkins8235 2 жыл бұрын
Have you ever use corn syrup?
@MrLibbyloulou
@MrLibbyloulou 3 жыл бұрын
Are these American/NZ gallons and not UK? thanks......
@MrPeardog
@MrPeardog 5 жыл бұрын
Dumb Question...maybe.. I have 3 Run Ripped of UJSSM and an in the process of doing my fouth. I assume that is a sweet spot and want to stop after 4. I will have approx 5 US Gallons of "low wines" ready for a final run. Do I combine all the product for that final slow run? Do I add some distilled water to it before running it? I have a smallish (max run about 7 gallon) still? Thanks for any comments or assistance..
@StillIt
@StillIt 5 жыл бұрын
Yeah I had the same thoughts.
@StillIt
@StillIt 5 жыл бұрын
End of the day it's up to you. If you add it all together and the 4th is much better you are basically watering it down with the others.....I guess that's why a lot of people don't strip it. They just run it. I stepped up to a larger size so I could strip it all as gen 5.
@MrPeardog
@MrPeardog 5 жыл бұрын
Still It So really it's the Backset that's the think that makes it "better". So you really just made a large 5th gen? What did you do with your initial stripping runs?
@FinsleysCustomCarAudio
@FinsleysCustomCarAudio 6 жыл бұрын
Try this... This is for 1 gallon. Can easily be up scaled up. 2 Cups Cracked Corn With A 32oz Bottle Of Corn Syrup Added. Add 20 Grams Yeast. Let The Foam Do It’s Thing & Calm Then Top The Rest With Spring Water. Ferment 10 Days. Produces a pint of 130-140 Proof Shine. Taste So Good... I cut that back to 80-90 proof and age on oak. It’s my favorite:~)
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
huh interesting you are using corn syrup. Unfortunitly not that cheap here :(
@cintiasanchez8981
@cintiasanchez8981 5 жыл бұрын
Kdks
@jamesjennings9438
@jamesjennings9438 4 жыл бұрын
Anyone ever add any other grains to this mash? Rye? Barley?
@stangodbey4789
@stangodbey4789 2 жыл бұрын
Do you have a video on malting corn?
@StillIt
@StillIt 2 жыл бұрын
I do not. I have yet to try it. Bearded dose though :)
@stangodbey4789
@stangodbey4789 2 жыл бұрын
@@StillIt thank you
@shaknit
@shaknit Жыл бұрын
Try it with invert sugar.
@gregdonley6114
@gregdonley6114 6 жыл бұрын
Not a 100% sure but... you can add your spent grain from this ferment to the next fresh batch and then you got your sour mash.
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Yep so this way is kinda letting the bugs (in this case likely lacto) Do the souring.
@derrickjohnston7181
@derrickjohnston7181 6 жыл бұрын
I like to let the mAsh go sour 15 to 24 hrs start the sugar fermentation then pitch the mash and yest.Plus it's so much better if you break down the starch to sugar..
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
As in bacteria sour? Yup will be doing all converted batches soon ;)
@derrickjohnston7181
@derrickjohnston7181 6 жыл бұрын
Yes cause not drinking as beer.. making distiller's beer....
@StillIt
@StillIt 6 жыл бұрын
Cool, there are plenty of sour beers out there too 😉
@Ect4health
@Ect4health Жыл бұрын
So I have 1.5 questions. 1. Why is the corn cracked? 2. If surface area of corn is the factor- why wouldn’t you use polenta?
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