About a month since I put my first koji in rum. The color started to change slightly.
Showing posts with label Coping with failure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coping with failure. Show all posts
Tuesday, 20 November 2012
Tuesday, 6 November 2012
Sakekasu
All is not lost however. I was left with quite a bit of lees ("sakekasu" in Japanese).
It is another versatile ingredient.
It can be made into a cake, mixed into a bread, used for pickling vegetables, fish and meat. Japanese vegans use it when they want to add creamy, cheesy flavour into their western style dishes. Hence, pasta sakekasu tomato sauce, sakekasu quiches etc. etc.
The tastier the sake is, the better tasting its lees is, but there is no shop selling the thing, so my own sake is the only option.
To begin with, I start with something more simple-- sakekasu soy sauce.
Sakekasu: Soy Sauce= 1:1
I use it as if it is just a normal bottled of soy sauce when I am cooking stir fry. Half the sodium, tastes better. I think I can keep it in a fridge for up to about a month, though it has never really lasted that long.
Ages ago, sakekasu was 'the alcohol of common people' as the lees is much cheaper but still pretty alcoholic. It must have been particularly so in those days before the machine wringing out every drop of sake out of it.
There is a particularly memorable joke people told during the Edo period (1603-1868) introduced in Drinking Japan
The friends of one nortoriously penniless drunkard ask: "How much did you drink?" He replies "Half a kilogram". (p.14)
Well, I don't think my sakekasu is good enough to eat on its own, but it does seem to make good enough a sauce.
Monday, 5 November 2012
Doburoku
There were two different types of sake brewing in my kitchen in the last week. One is largely following the recipe of Yoichi Yamada. The other is an amazake with yeast chucked in.
Two days ago, when I tasted them, Yamada recipe one tasted rather nice. I thought I should filter and bottle the day after but was too busy to do so on the next day. Only today, I filtered them.
LESSON: NEVER WAIT TO BOTTLE YOUR BREW IF YOU FEEL THE BREW IS AT THE RIGHT POINT.
Lovely sweetness has disappeared and the acidity that was behind the sweetness is now overpowering. Very disappointed.
Two days ago, when I tasted them, Yamada recipe one tasted rather nice. I thought I should filter and bottle the day after but was too busy to do so on the next day. Only today, I filtered them.
LESSON: NEVER WAIT TO BOTTLE YOUR BREW IF YOU FEEL THE BREW IS AT THE RIGHT POINT.
Lovely sweetness has disappeared and the acidity that was behind the sweetness is now overpowering. Very disappointed.
Wednesday, 31 October 2012
Coping with Failure 2
The last post was about my third attempt at making koji. Now, what happened to my second failure?
Before talking about my second koji, here is what I tried to do with my second attempt.
First, I tried to use my little rice cooker rather than steaming my rice. Following Mr Yamada's recipe, I thought I would be able to prepare dry enough rice by using less water in a rice cooker. Then, instead of wrapping the rice in a clean tea towel, I have directly put it into a plastic container and wrapped the container with towel to keep it warm. My first attempt failed as there was not enough moisture, so this time, I went for a lot of moisture in a full swing.
The result was koji mixed rice too soggy to become a proper dried koji. If anything, it smelled and tasted like very condensed amazake, slightly sour.
After 3 days of gazing and marveling at this, I decided to mix the whole thing with hot water and keep it warm overnight. The result was amazake alright, which also means that my clumsy attempt at koji making did not, at least, develop wrong sort of mould on my rice. The books tell me if I am not sure if my koji is alright, take some and make amazake. If I can make sweet amazake, without strange smell or taste, I have something edible there.
OK. I do have amazake alright. Now the question is if I would put any yeast in this hot, sweet concoction.
It is not at all like the refinement of proper sake, but I do taste something akin to junmai sake (pure rice sake) in this failure no.2 amazake.
Before talking about my second koji, here is what I tried to do with my second attempt.
First, I tried to use my little rice cooker rather than steaming my rice. Following Mr Yamada's recipe, I thought I would be able to prepare dry enough rice by using less water in a rice cooker. Then, instead of wrapping the rice in a clean tea towel, I have directly put it into a plastic container and wrapped the container with towel to keep it warm. My first attempt failed as there was not enough moisture, so this time, I went for a lot of moisture in a full swing.
The result was koji mixed rice too soggy to become a proper dried koji. If anything, it smelled and tasted like very condensed amazake, slightly sour.
After 3 days of gazing and marveling at this, I decided to mix the whole thing with hot water and keep it warm overnight. The result was amazake alright, which also means that my clumsy attempt at koji making did not, at least, develop wrong sort of mould on my rice. The books tell me if I am not sure if my koji is alright, take some and make amazake. If I can make sweet amazake, without strange smell or taste, I have something edible there.
OK. I do have amazake alright. Now the question is if I would put any yeast in this hot, sweet concoction.
It is not at all like the refinement of proper sake, but I do taste something akin to junmai sake (pure rice sake) in this failure no.2 amazake.
Thursday, 25 October 2012
Coping with failure
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