Count Vorlauf
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Summer is coming, which puts me in the mood for makkoli - a Korean rice-beer of sorts that I enjoyed while living there. Best served from a gourd or wooden bowl to accompany pajeon (a kind of savory crepe), on a wooden platform overlooking the rice paddies on sweltering moonlight night!
Ah, maybe I'm getting a little too nostalgic. The stuff is a sweet and sour milky white grog averaging around 6% ABV and is packaged in plastic bottles looking a lot like bleach. It's consumed as soon as possible after primary fermentation finishes, and is often too sour even for the locals, so they add sugar to take the edge off.
It is fermented using "nuruk", a yeast cake similar to koji but resulting from wild fermentation - hence the sour results. Nuruk generally consists of wheat flour that's been wetted then pressed into a cake, then allowed to incubate at around 30-40C.
Here's a rough recipe for the experiment, cribbed from this website. This is a first to me, so your results may vary. Hope to launch into this over the week and will keep you all posted. In the meantime, if anyone else has taken a swing at homebrewed makkoli, let me know how it went for you!
Ingredients:
4 cups polished short grain, or pearl, rice
3 cups "Nuruk" - available at Korean food stores.
Bottle of Korean soju (vodka in a pinch)
6 cups boiled and cooled water
Equipment:
Rice cooker
2 litre container converted into fermenter.
Process:
1. Wash the rice, then steam.
2. Sanitize your fermenter
3. Grind up the nuruk roughly, rinse with soju and remove liquid.
4. Cool the rice and put in your mini fermenter. Add 6 cups boiled and cooled water.
5. Once mixture has cooled to 25C add the nuruk. Mix evenly.
6. Ferment at 18-25C. Fermentation should finish after 3-4 days. If fermentation lags, pitch in some white wine or sake yeast.
7. Strain liquid into clean plastic bottles. Sweeten if necessary. Cook up some pajeon and enjoy!
Ah, maybe I'm getting a little too nostalgic. The stuff is a sweet and sour milky white grog averaging around 6% ABV and is packaged in plastic bottles looking a lot like bleach. It's consumed as soon as possible after primary fermentation finishes, and is often too sour even for the locals, so they add sugar to take the edge off.
It is fermented using "nuruk", a yeast cake similar to koji but resulting from wild fermentation - hence the sour results. Nuruk generally consists of wheat flour that's been wetted then pressed into a cake, then allowed to incubate at around 30-40C.
Here's a rough recipe for the experiment, cribbed from this website. This is a first to me, so your results may vary. Hope to launch into this over the week and will keep you all posted. In the meantime, if anyone else has taken a swing at homebrewed makkoli, let me know how it went for you!
Ingredients:
4 cups polished short grain, or pearl, rice
3 cups "Nuruk" - available at Korean food stores.
Bottle of Korean soju (vodka in a pinch)
6 cups boiled and cooled water
Equipment:
Rice cooker
2 litre container converted into fermenter.
Process:
1. Wash the rice, then steam.
2. Sanitize your fermenter
3. Grind up the nuruk roughly, rinse with soju and remove liquid.
4. Cool the rice and put in your mini fermenter. Add 6 cups boiled and cooled water.
5. Once mixture has cooled to 25C add the nuruk. Mix evenly.
6. Ferment at 18-25C. Fermentation should finish after 3-4 days. If fermentation lags, pitch in some white wine or sake yeast.
7. Strain liquid into clean plastic bottles. Sweeten if necessary. Cook up some pajeon and enjoy!