Gee-Dubya New Rye Whiskey (flavored sugarhead) 5 Gallon Batch (but your fermenter will need to be larger than 5 gallons):
- 3 lbs Rye (cooked 135°F-147°F for 30 minutes in 2 gallons water)
- 1.75 lbs Corn (cooked 180°F for 1 hour in 2 gallons water)
- 1/2 of an 8oz box of Gerber barley cereal
- 91/2 lbs of sugar
- 2 gallons boiling water (w/ goodly squirt of lemon juice to invert sugar)
- 3 Beanno tabs (dissolved in warm water and poured into fermenter at 100°F... roughly body temperature)
- Yeast nutrients (or not... the Gerber cereal has some nutrients)
- 2 tbs nutritional yeast (dead yeast that provide material for live yeast to use to multiply, plus some vitamins)
- 1 tsp of Epsom Salt
- 2 tbs Distillers yeast (or whatever you want to use)
Get the grains cooked and in buckets with lids.
Boil the water with lemon juice and dump it on the sugar in the fermenter. Mix to dissolve and re-incorporate oxygen.
Add the grain slurries from the buckets and the Gerber Barley cereal to the fermenter. Mix some more.
Add the yeast nutrients and the Epsom salt. Mix some more.
Check temperature and SG. Adjust SG reading for temperature. We're looking for 1.080.
If too low, add more sugar. If too high, add cool water. Re-check temperature & SG.
Put the dissolved Beanno in when the fermenter is at 100°F. Mix some more.
Get the temperature down to pitching temp (I'm thinking about 90°F for distillers yeast, check your yeast specifications).
Pitch the (room temperature) yeast on top of the mixture and leave it for 15 minutes.
Then lightly stir and aerate for 1 hour with aquarium air pump. At the end, you should have a decent cap forming.
Cap and airlock.
After fermentation ends, rack off & pot-still and see what you get.
You'll note that the liquids and solids added up to more than 5 gallons. When you separate out the grain solids from the wash, you should be left with ~5 gallons of fermented liquid.
I basically combined the Gerber babyfood recipe from Heeler with a grain wash. Uncle Jesse from HD stated there was no need to crack the rye grain since there wasn't a "real" hull on rye, but then he stated that "it wasn't a _bad_ thing to crack it". I chose not to crack it.
You don't
have to use the nutritional yeast or the Beanno. I have them and think they can't do any harm to the wash, only help it along. I'm getting ready to start this and will report back on my results following.