Mr. No-Tip
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 26/9/11
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I think I know the answer to my question is a no, but want to be sure. I'm not missing something.
I am looking to make some different interpretations Peruvian Chicha (corn based spit beer) for a South American night coming up in a few months. One of the interpretations will be to make a version as close to the original as possible, but without chewing on the corn (the amalayse in spit converts the corn there).
I am going to malt some corn, but I won't have enough for the full batch. I am planning to use flaked maize for the bulk and wanting to avoid any malted barley.
So if I understand things right....the flaking, like a cereal mash has gelatinised the corn and made the starches available to be converted, but it doesn't convert anything at that point. The corn itself still has no diastatic power, even after cerael mashing or flaking?
So were I to mash this in isolation, what would i get? 0.0 hydro reading? A hydro reading that shows gravity, but gravity caused by starches, not sugars and that yeast would leave behind?
Another alternative is to use a dry enzyme...looking into that.
I am looking to make some different interpretations Peruvian Chicha (corn based spit beer) for a South American night coming up in a few months. One of the interpretations will be to make a version as close to the original as possible, but without chewing on the corn (the amalayse in spit converts the corn there).
I am going to malt some corn, but I won't have enough for the full batch. I am planning to use flaked maize for the bulk and wanting to avoid any malted barley.
So if I understand things right....the flaking, like a cereal mash has gelatinised the corn and made the starches available to be converted, but it doesn't convert anything at that point. The corn itself still has no diastatic power, even after cerael mashing or flaking?
So were I to mash this in isolation, what would i get? 0.0 hydro reading? A hydro reading that shows gravity, but gravity caused by starches, not sugars and that yeast would leave behind?
Another alternative is to use a dry enzyme...looking into that.