Thank you! I made many batches this summer & keep them in a soda stream bottle in the fridge. They're low ABV and the yeast make them fizzy, taste like a sweet soft drink
I've got all the ingredients, but instead of the short grain sticky rice I have thai sticky rice, and "glutinous black rice" from taiwan. will this turn out fine?
Yes you can mix the rice, and purple rice will work well. The flavor should be mostly sweet, with a little acidity, not too different from the regular type.
I tried making wine from a Gobindobhog rice, which is semi sticky short grain white rice from Bengal where I live. It tastes good, but there are little hard spots in the centre of the rice grains. Am I undercooking the rice? It absorbed over 3x weight of the dry grain while cooking and felt springy but soft, so I don't know what is going wrong. Please help, and thanks in advance!
Sounds like starch retrogradation to me. Think how rice tends to harden up in the fridge. If it didn't taste undercooked warm and only have hard spots cooled, you didn't undercook the rice. Hard refrigerated rice is still perfectly safe to consume. The amylopectin in sticky rice is what keeps sticky rice from hardening. In lieu of sticky rice, try use a little more yeast/fungi and start the rice in a warmer place. A kick start for glucose production early on can help prevent/reduce starch retrogradation later on.
@@workdaygourmet Thanks for the good advice. I'll try using more starter in the next batch, or maybe making a sort of sponge with rice flour before adding the cooked rice.
Theoretically you should be able to propagate the rhyzopus fungi like with any other mycelium. In practice it'd be closer to growing mushroom grain spawns than say, sourdough or yogurt. For reliability reasons, each batch is usually made with fresh new starters. Since the end product is often consumed without being pasteurized or boiled, it is worth being a little more careful than bread starters, which would be baked at high temperature. If you want to experiment with it, don't waste the bottle, the lees would have more starter in it. (the lees also make great marinade if you simply don't want to waste any)
To enjoy it sweet, I would keep it in the fridge and finish within a week. You can ferment longer to raise the ABV. Heat pasteurization will make it last longer, but also changes the taste, personally I prefer to just make a small portion and finish it quickly.
I’ve seen many videos on making rice wine but yours is the clearest and most scientific. Well done!
Thank you! I made many batches this summer & keep them in a soda stream bottle in the fridge. They're low ABV and the yeast make them fizzy, taste like a sweet soft drink
Perfect. Had been thinking about simplifying the production for a long while now.
If you do give this a try, would love to know how it goes!
Great video! The glucose part was really interesting.
Rice wines are surprisingly fruity! For something made out of grains, they're nothing like beer or vodka
I do love mango sticky rice.
I've got all the ingredients, but instead of the short grain sticky rice I have thai sticky rice, and "glutinous black rice" from taiwan. will this turn out fine?
ahh lol I just saw you made it with the purple rice too! does the flavor differ? can I mix the rices?
Yes you can mix the rice, and purple rice will work well. The flavor should be mostly sweet, with a little acidity, not too different from the regular type.
I tried making wine from a Gobindobhog rice, which is semi sticky short grain white rice from Bengal where I live. It tastes good, but there are little hard spots in the centre of the rice grains. Am I undercooking the rice? It absorbed over 3x weight of the dry grain while cooking and felt springy but soft, so I don't know what is going wrong.
Please help, and thanks in advance!
Sounds like starch retrogradation to me. Think how rice tends to harden up in the fridge. If it didn't taste undercooked warm and only have hard spots cooled, you didn't undercook the rice. Hard refrigerated rice is still perfectly safe to consume. The amylopectin in sticky rice is what keeps sticky rice from hardening. In lieu of sticky rice, try use a little more yeast/fungi and start the rice in a warmer place. A kick start for glucose production early on can help prevent/reduce starch retrogradation later on.
@@workdaygourmet Thanks for the good advice.
I'll try using more starter in the next batch, or maybe making a sort of sponge with rice flour before adding the cooked rice.
Could you save a bottle of your final product and then use it as a “starter “ for your next batch?
Theoretically you should be able to propagate the rhyzopus fungi like with any other mycelium. In practice it'd be closer to growing mushroom grain spawns than say, sourdough or yogurt. For reliability reasons, each batch is usually made with fresh new starters. Since the end product is often consumed without being pasteurized or boiled, it is worth being a little more careful than bread starters, which would be baked at high temperature. If you want to experiment with it, don't waste the bottle, the lees would have more starter in it. (the lees also make great marinade if you simply don't want to waste any)
How long this wine last?
To enjoy it sweet, I would keep it in the fridge and finish within a week. You can ferment longer to raise the ABV. Heat pasteurization will make it last longer, but also changes the taste, personally I prefer to just make a small portion and finish it quickly.
Make the videos short and to the point and you'll get more subscribers...promise 😅
This is great. Wonder if it's hard to get rice in prison?
If you can sneak in the yeast first, the rest is easy :P