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The Grain Bench
United States
Приєднався 29 чер 2021
The Grain Bench was created as a thought and quest. "Why can't the normal person create great specialty grain malts at home?" Well guess what? You can. With some simple understanding, a few simple tools, and a drive and passion to just make something good even better anyone can do this.
So join me as we learn, build, and grow our knowledge of the craft together. "Let's get busy"
Have a comment or recommendation? Shoot an email to kevin@grainbench.com
So join me as we learn, build, and grow our knowledge of the craft together. "Let's get busy"
Have a comment or recommendation? Shoot an email to kevin@grainbench.com
Rye Not
Rye Not attempts to explain the goopy mess from Beta Glucan that we all deal with when using rye.
Переглядів: 299
Відео
SmokeHouse Little Chief Product Review
Переглядів 10 тис.3 роки тому
This is a product review of both the SmokeHouse Products Little Chief Smoker and the Pellet Smoke Tube that you can use as a small home hobby guy to turn out some fabulous Smoked Beer or Whiskey. Note: I am not endorsed or compensated by either of these two companies. I just love the products and wanted to show you how easy this can be. Amazon Affiliate Links Note that I do get a perk or kickba...
Ancient Wheat Series - Final Episode
Переглядів 7 тис.3 роки тому
Ancient Wheat series. Hard Red Spring Wheat is the last segment of our ancient wheat series. This final episode has the breakdown of the HRS and a final comparison of all the other wheat in the previous segments. Follow along as we go through all of the ancient wheats, break them down, and explore just how to use them in a beer or whiskey. Bearded & Bored UA-cam Channel: ua-cam.com/users/Bearde...
Ancient Wheat Series - Khorasan
Переглядів 3,7 тис.3 роки тому
Ancient Wheat series. Khorasan is the third segment of our ancient wheat series. This is the Pharaohs or Prophets wheats. Follow along as we go through all of the ancient wheats, break them down, and explore just how to use them in a beer or whiskey. If you would like to see something special shoot me an email with any comments or recommendations you may have kevin@grainbench.com
Ancient Wheat Series - Emmer
Переглядів 1,6 тис.3 роки тому
Ancient Wheat series. Emmer is the second segment of our ancient wheat series. This is the Grand Daddy of all modern wheats. Follow along as we go through all of the ancient wheats, break them down, and explore just how to use them in a beer or whiskey. If you would like to see something special shoot me an email with any comments or recommendations you may have kevin@grainbench.com
Ancient Wheat Series - Einkhorn
Переглядів 9003 роки тому
Ancient Wheat series. Einkhorn is the first segment of our ancient wheat series. This is the Great Grand Daddy of all wheats. Follow along as we go through all of the ancient wheats, break them down, and explore just how to use them in a beer or whiskey. If you would like to see something special shoot me an email with any comments or recommendations you may have kevin@grainbench.com
Mesquite Smoked Grain
Переглядів 3 тис.3 роки тому
Mesquite Smoked Whiskey Grains. The Maiden voyage of the upgraded smoker that we just built. This video will provide you with the basics to smoking grain so that you can enjoy that smokey flavor in your beer or whiskey.
Grain Smoker Upgrade
Переглядів 3 тис.3 роки тому
Took some downtime I had and got my grain smoker upgrade completed. This is a very easy project that you can put as much or as little detail in to as you may want. There are many way to build one of these, however I tend to like the rack type aspect of mine for ease of use. I hope you enjoy and above all have fun with yours. Amazon Affiliate Links Note that I do get a perk or kickback from your...
Smoked Grains Sneak Peak
Переглядів 803 роки тому
Sneak peak at one part that arrived for our up and coming Smoked Grains series. This new adaption looks promising. Shop at Amazon using our affiliate links to help the channel out at no extra cost to you. As an affiliate the channel earns from qualified purchases. Pellet Smoker Tube amzn.to/3jXpywO
Egyptian Black Nile Barley Episode 2
Переглядів 2,9 тис.3 роки тому
Egyptian Black Nile Barley Episode 2
Malted Corn Varieties for the Hobby Distillers
Переглядів 5 тис.3 роки тому
Malted Corn Varieties for the Hobby Distillers
Dude....what happened to you? Check in please.
Khorasan is the province in modern iran.
Is this the same as kamut?
Yep
That is beautiful. 😊
Great video. What temperature is ideal for the kiln and how many hours would it take to drop moisture content from 40% to 4-5%
Wow! So excited to find this channel. Saw you mentioned by Bearded and Bored. Can't wait to see what other surprises you've got hidden here. I have not don't my own malting yet but have roasted unmalted corn. I also want to try malting my own rye. subbed.
Let us say no to anymore poisons, and be weary of GMO and ownership of grains.
Hear, hear! ✊
Great information on corn and how to use different types to achieve different flavors!
I love your history comments an corn comments.
I'm still trying to figure out why this wheat doesn't give me gluten issues. I developed gluten intolerance when I was 30 and this wheat species randomly popped up on a search. It was expensive, but I saw that others had little issue with it. I still can't eat processed wheat products in the USA but Khorasan doesn't give me any issues whatsoever. I'm not sure why and am still trying to figure it out.
It's 1. Moderns were breed for production, that means. A. They were typically grown low to not grow a bunch of straw. They were breed for production above nutrition. But all this means B. They're spraying more than just round up, cause they're so low to the field they get moldy that's anti fungals they have no disease or insect resistance. The profit margin on these fields that are packed so tightly together is so narrow that commercial producers can't afford to not spray and also: an entire eco system has sprung up in the heartland to exploit the highly specific system they set up for production value. That's bugs,fungus, weeds etcetera. And two sorry going on a disjointed rant. But all the proteins and amino acids and many beneficial things were breed out for convenience and to get a product to market quickly and efficiently
Want another example look how long some of the engines that were produced in cars in the '90s lasted versus what they're putting out today
I just found your channel from watching bearded and bored I can't wait to watch more of your stuff.
Definitely excited to learn about rye!
Love your content! Thank you!!
Recently discovered your channel from a comment you made on @StillIt! Love the info you are sharing. As a farm kid, I definitely understand the science behind the malting process, but never really thought about it outside of the garden seed starting. I also have spent most of my adult life in food services in some fashion, mostly cooking. Recipe development is kind of my specialty. I appreciate the detail you are sharing behind the flavors as well. I’m definitely anxious to jump into doing some malting myself. The smoke video is especially helpful right now, as I just had a friend who said he likes really harsh, smoky whiskey and hasn’t found his threshold yet. That’s the goal! Thanks again!!
Thank you for the awesome info! I’ve been in food service and spent many years developing flavors in food. I’ve wanted to take some of my food ideas and put them into some of my spirits. My ideas are spirits that have profiles that remind me of the character of some of the really important people in my life. I’ve made notes on what I want to taste in the spirit, and appreciate you going over these notes to help find the flavors I’m looking for!!
Is this the same as purple egyptian? Did you encounter mashing difficulties? I work at a distillery and we're going to make a 100% purple egyptian whiskey
I believe so. I didn't have too many issues with it. Of course not knowing how it would go, I used a step mash technique as I'd heard it could be a bit like a rye with the higher glucose content.
Amazing video! Can't wait to binge watch your videos! :)
Very cool! Looking good
This is a really underated channel .I have been trying to look up on UA-cam or ask others about the stuff in your videos for the past few months and I have only just found your channel . Can't remember who gave you a shout out the other day but hopefully you get some more love from people. My brain is starting to explode there's so many great home distilling channels and people on UA-cam and it's such a nice community,you all give different but key points I had no idea when I started distilling how far it could go or how far down the rabbit hole I would go 🤯 I feel like I have learned so much but in doing so I have learned how little I have learned 😂😅😔 Ok I'm being a pest again and commenting to give algorithm something else to take into account 🙄but ...... So nuts are basically big grains, it seems logical to me that walnuts (there's a few trees on the farm) should be able to be kinda boiled down to porridge and then the starch converted using malted grain of some sort like a normal mash .you might be the guy able to tell me why that's stupid and it won't work and why a wasted 4 hours cracking walnuts . I've got to go look at your smoking videos find out what temperature cold smoking is usually at , and what temperature I need to keep my grains below so the enzymes don't get damaged , excuse my rambling 🥃 chears
Just got myself some Aztec black popcorn and glass gem corn seeds last week can't wait for our next growing season to give them a go . Plant them in a few old concrete water troughs filled up with sheep 💩 I should be winning 😂 anyway just commenting to try and help with the algorithm , have a good one 🥃
Aztec black is a really good strong flavored corn. I've had some really good results with using it both malted and roasted. Haven't tried glass gem yet. Going to look at it as I've heard it's super sweet after being malted.
@@TheGrainBench very cool , I'll see how I go I might get some bloody butcher and rotate them each year . thanks for the extra info lol 🤣the more I learn the less I feel like I know , another tip for the tip section of my brewing diary
I love the concept of your channel.
I just found your channel and subscribed. I was wondering where hoby distillers could find some of these specialty grains? Thanks for the help.
I pick most of mine up in either local HEB or Whole foods stores or from a few really good suppliers on Amazon. Look up Be Still Farms or Palouse Brand on Amazon. Both are really good family owned small business that I have come to know quite well and would recommend with out a doubt.
@@TheGrainBench thank you for the reply. I'll check them out.
What's the difference between oats and barely ?.....I'm just getting into home brewing but in my part of NZ I can't get barley just whole oats
Barley is what we most think of when doing malts for sure. Oats usually are only an additional cereal added for mouth feel or softness. I've tried a few oat whiskey ferments with success but the amount you use is not over 50% due to its stickiness.
@@TheGrainBench thanks so much, lucky you told me I was just about to try 100% oats in a mash , 50/50 mix of malted and un malted . I'm slowly picking up tips like oats for mouth feel and softness 👍 I will have to stick to 50/50 mix of malted oats and un malted corn . I'm having no luck malting corn but oats seem to be working out ok
Very good video, very informative. Q - Do you let your smoked grains rest before using them, if so how long?
I do. Normally 12 hrs min covered before I vacuum seal them.
I am very interested in how you roast your malted corn. I malt and kiln all my own grains for brewing and corn is next on my list
I can shoot you a temp guide that I use. Depending on what flavor profile I'm going for I use different temps and durations. Basically if you already do Munich, Caramel, Chocolate, or Crystal then use same ranges you would use on a wheat or barley for that process. Just keep in mind that corn does tend to darken faster than a typical grain. So your times are a bit shorter. White, yellow, and most lighter varieties are close to what you are used to. Darker like a blue, black, or butcher you want to watch the times real close as they can go real fast. You almost have to time those by smell. Look for that jalapeño corn bread or fresh corn muffin smell then back it down some because your getting close. Bloody Butcher and Ruby Red will smell like jalapeño corn bread when it's about done due to the heavy starches and some residual sugars that occur during the malting process. Blue and Black will be sweet smelling like Honey corn muffins due to a higher anthocyanin levels which give it that berry sweet note. Yellow and white tend to remind me of making fresh corn tortillas or corn chips when they are about done with their roasting process. Let them air over night and vacuum seal them if not using them right away.
@@TheGrainBench I am malting yellow field corn right now, our neighbor gave me 120 pounds of it :) I also grew a bunch of bloody butcher this summer and I will be malting all of that next (maybe 15#) I use a kiln schedule from an old book that kiln masters at breweries used around 1890 (American Handy Book of the Brewing, Malting, and Auxiliary Trades) I always go for the lighter kilns such as what would be used for a pilsner. I start with a food dehydrator at 100 F and work my way to the "hottest" kiln at 185 F (for wheat and barley malts). I would love to see the temp guide you use as i can not find any guides on kilning corn. The book i use is free from the library of congress in pdf format.
I'll put a few temp guides up on here for you right after Thanksgiving. That BB you grew sounds awesome. I have actually seen the book you mentioned. It is a very good read. I got a lot of good info on how our forefathers used to do it. Really good. There is also a good reference blog by Brewing Beer the Hard way. Ton of info. You can find him on UA-cam. He has a link to his blog there in his channel description. He doesn't do much with corn but the temps and times are all good. On your yellow field corn I'd do exactly what you are describing. Keep the kiln temps low to retain the Diastatic Power of the Amylase. Take a look at my vid on the large air kiln. Easy build with a large cardboard box, a small space heater, and small desk fan from Walmart. Just stack some window screens in there with blocks or something to give room for Airflow and keep your temps below 140. Easy peasy. Take it to a pale or pilsner and you should be good to help that corn convert itself and make mashing easier. For the BB you can go higher to a caramel or chocolate for the flavor. No need to worry about the DP on it as it is an adjunct. If you take malted BB to a crystal or almost caramel you will pick up an iodine or metalic note that is really awesome. It lends itself to what we think of when drinking a non peated Scottish whisky. Really cool thing to get from corn.
Awesome video! For more of an earthy flavor in the mash would blue corn give you that? If I heard correctly haha
It sure would. Blue when roasted has that earthy note. Whether it's malted or not. Malting just enhances those flavors.
@@TheGrainBenchThank you! I'll have to try that, been on an all corn kick and am looking for more of an earthy profile. Yellow malt corn had some earthy flavor but not as strong as I had hoped. Maybe I'll do a malted blue corn with yellow ground corn as well...
You may also get some Bloody Butcher and add to the mix. It has a heavy earthy note that is almost like for lack of a better term bell pepper or jalapeños
@@TheGrainBench Yeah I might have to! So many options it makes my head spin,but i like experimenting haha Thank you sir!👍
My prediction is that this will be explosively delicious;-)
It is explosive alright. Note to self, when making high gravity mead listen to Bearded and Jesse about leaving head space. Chocolate covered walls are a pain to clean.
@TheGrainBench I had a similar incident with strawberry. Yup, that was fun to clean
This is AWESOME! Thanks so much for explaining this so well. I'm confident I can try this and not ruin my grain now. Great video!
Honestly the smoke tube was the key to easiness. It can be used in almost any box with a top and bottom vent to give you a crap ton of smoke. Use a normal cheap smoker and just use the Pellets. Easy peasy.
@@TheGrainBench Thanks brother!
Nice, I hadn't even thought about that!
I love these deep dives. Great video brother. Also, thanks for the shout out! I definitely have a few projects coming up with Grain Bench malts;-)
From what you have on your to do list on Patreon your YT viewers are going to be some real happy campers for sure. :)
Balcones 😉👍
Yep. You've seen that bottle before. I think it had a bow on it at one time. 😉
@@TheGrainBench 😁🥃🥃
Your videos are good brother. Just keep plugging away. I would suggest making the channel intro shorter (the bumber) or experiment with removing it all together, putting it in after the video introduction. Upgrading your microphone will help alot viewers seem to really appreciate better audio quality. I went through a few mics before finding a good one. I use the blue yeti mic. It sounds pretty good and it's and easily plug and play microphone. The shot of the grain was slowly paced visually. I love the information that you added with the audio. I think a good remedy would be to add a few more shots of grain or do a pan and zoom on the photo where it appears to be moving a bit. Keeping the visuals moving will help with watch retention on your videos. Over I think you are on the right track though. Don't give up and keep putting out content before you know it the channel will turn in to a monster. Stay awesome brother and thank you for the support of my channel. Feel free to reach out to me anytime you want. Instagram and Facebook are the best way to get ahold of me.
Awesome info. I've been struggling equipment vs content for a while trying to figure out what works and where the spend outweighs the means. Your tips help a lot.
😎👍
I think it turned out beautiful nice craftmanship Cheers!!
Nice! Looks like a pro build:-)
I have found that roasting Hard dent corn adds a fantastic flavor
It sure does. Yours looked fantastic.
Excellent series. A lot of information. 👍🏻
Thank you. It's a lot of work but also a lot of fun to do.
Loving the history lesson along with the technical malting. The flavors on this sound really interesting with lots of potential.
Nice work, brother. I love your malting classes;-)
That's so cool. I really need to start paying more attention to my surroundings;-)
I had "writers block" for a week prior to this trip. Lol.
Thank you for the education. very interesting.
Amazing artwork!
Thank you very much!
so cool
😎👍
So cool how the grain "moss" up. Fascinating that this wheat is so old!! The spicy notes almost compare to a rye. Love this content. Thank you!!
It does somewhat. Rye is an in your face grain where Emmer is a bit more subdued and subtle. Emmer sweetens more with roasting where Rye gets loud and wants to start a fight. :)
@@TheGrainBench thanks for the clarity. 🤯 love this discussion!
@@AgeWhiskey Any time. I love the history and differences. Like wood aging. There is so much more to it than just tossing spirits on Oak. When you dig in there is a whole broad eye opening world out there to be experienced and tried.
Hey, Dave. Check your agewhiskey email when you have some time. Sent you something.
@@TheGrainBench done. Thank you for thinking of me.
Very cool to see the detailed differences of all these grains and how they malt. Thanks, brother!
I didn't spend as much time on the Einkhorn as you will see on Emmer, Khorasan, and HRS. Those next few are way more available and far more worth the effort.
@@TheGrainBench It's all fascinating stuff:-)
I agree with Bearded. Love hearing about the history of grains. That's pretty amazing. Also, thanks for adding the tasting notes on malted and unmalted grains!
so cool i can taste it from here Cheets
Thanks Randy.
I like hearing about where your inspiration comes from, and all the process details. Great video, brother!
Thanks. Dad has always been an inspiration to me for sure. Glad you liked it.
So cool nice job looking forward to seeing it in action
Thanks Randy.
Dude, this is awesome!!! So much easier than I thought it'd be. Thanks for all the details:-)
It's pretty easy and there are a ton of ways to put one of these together. A box, a flu to cool it down, and a smoker. Easy peasy.
@@TheGrainBench Thanks for posting it:-)