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How-To Make Sorghum the Old Fashioned Way
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- Опубликовано: 23 сен 2016
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My Grandpa cooked his last batch of sorghum in October of 1974. He used a different method than taking the vat off the fire. He had set of three or four vats that looked just like the one in this video, but they were stairstepped on a slope and he cooked it at different temps and the sorgham would flow between the vats through gates when it was time. It was a great thing for a young one to experience. His mill was ran by using his John Deere rear take off.
Wow im clinically depressed and no longer able to work. I seen this old boy and listened to him and something like gods love touched me hard! Goosebumps. I feel like finding my own outfit and giving it a go. Freaky how I feel now. Im gonna try it. Who knows maybe I found something that will save my life. Thankyou young at heart serious lovely man. Wish to meet you and take 📝 notes. I told my wife and she loves it!
How to grow sugar cane? I have a 5 acre farm in michigan with really lots of land. 2 acre garden to try.
I hope that the goofball puppet president we got now gives you a presidential medal of freedom. You really deserve it. Keep the dream alive brother!!! I love ya! Brother christos.🥰
My dad and his family made sorghum and molasses. They used an old olive press like a millstone pulled by a mule to get the juice out. Then they used the final product for sweeteners to make moonshine. Back then it was against the law to buy over 10 pound of sugar at a time. Because it was rationed during the war also to cut back on moonshine business.
If only everyone followed his two simple rules, the world would be a better place, especially if we learned many other old ways.☺️
I have my great grandfathers old molasses mill, I enjoyed your show.
Hang onto that!
Is it still operational?
Great video on this process
I want to learn this too for myself and help keep my southern heritage alive.
Please do! We need these traditions to stay live!
I witnessed this process as teenager years ago by some wonderful Mennonite families. Great folks and consider myself lucky to have the privilege to watch. Tim I love the show and what you personally bring to the table. Keep up the good work.
Thanks J!
..decades ago my mother and i worked in a kinfolks field. We had the option of $12.00 a day or 1 1/2 gallon of Sorghum. We got around 25 gallons that year and $50.00 each bonus. Not bad for missing a few days of school...
Ahhhh.....the good 'ol days....I spent my youth working in tobacco fields, and on a dairy farm....
I'm fascinated by sorghum and how much it could relate to our maple syrup of the north
My papa always had sorghum
table when I was a kid
Good manners ,character zeal, grit adds good flavor to the spice of life , sounds like you got the right raIsing , from people that care, about who had quality of life, based on God's word ,that adds good flavor to y'all's work, characters God honors this will bless what y'all do takes me back to my young days ,thanks for memories t love of country land people , this is what our men women fought and died for that we could live our lives to be free to labor replenish God's world ,with joy, peace righteousness leading the way ,the way is God's word ,thank you for this ! !
I did this as a kid with my family
We also had Added to Our Mill a Car Rear End Putting it Vertical with Gears and Chain to run it on a PTO off a Tractor. Wouldn't take Long to Grind enough Juice for a Batch that would Finish with usually around 14 Gallons of Finish Product Twice a day.
Those were the good old days!
Where was that? My great granddy had a syrup mill that sounds just like it. Salem, sc
now I want some sorghum and biscuits. mmmmmmmm. yummy
Dang tootin'!
Awesome place
People dont understand the kind of wirk that went into the stuff we take granted for today