Can you grow Koji without a spore starter (with Sandor Katz)

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2 Guys & A Cooler

2 Guys & A Cooler

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 346
@EvilSoul000
@EvilSoul000 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the vids... F ucking finally some real informative about Koji damn it WENT people's ask about what is Koji they literally want to KNOW what is Koji and NOT something that use 'Koji Starter' and thank GOD here someone actually explains clearly what Koji is THANK YOU...
@Gerrysan
@Gerrysan 4 жыл бұрын
Very interesting, I worked with Koji rice 30 years ago making miso and Amazake. That was in Holland. I am now in Argentina making Sourdough, Sauerkraut and just started making Tempeh, I have bee looking into doing some KOJI work again. This might just get me up and running. Excellent information. Stay safe.
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
Nice. Thanks for the comment!!
@Gerrysan
@Gerrysan 4 жыл бұрын
@Allister Santoro Hola, maybe it is possible to get it here. They ,make Organic Miso. When the quarantine settles down I will see if they will sell some. facebook.com/organicosasaki/
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@Gerrysan
@Gerrysan 3 жыл бұрын
@@jayzz2451 very interesting Thanks
@yourdad8818
@yourdad8818 11 ай бұрын
​@jayzz2451 hello can you help me bhai?
@djfromdaback
@djfromdaback 5 жыл бұрын
Amazing content! Cheers from Denmark!
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
@neekr3052
@neekr3052 3 жыл бұрын
This was a great video, thank you. I still haven't been able to find answers to this particular question though and I was wondering whether you might be able to help? Once you've made koji, either with a koji spore starter or your own homegrown koji spores, can you then keep some of that koji to use a starter for you next batch of koji? and if this is possible, what is the process in storing the koji, do you need to dry it or just freeze it? How would you go about doing that?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 3 жыл бұрын
If your koji is fresh you can propagate it with more koji rice. The best way though is to produce spores and save the spores. I dry then refrigerate my koji rice as freezing isn't recommended
@asadnawaz563
@asadnawaz563 Жыл бұрын
Can koji be made from other millets like sorghum or pearl mille??
@Nomamegoogle
@Nomamegoogle 4 жыл бұрын
So the koji was already on the corn bundle? Your video is one of the most informative. Thanks! Man i don't have sanitized de rice flour.... I hope that this doesn't goes wrong. Tomorrow i will see if it will be alright.
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
Yes. The koji is already on the corn husk... It's been a couple days. How did your koji turn out?
@Nomamegoogle
@Nomamegoogle 4 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler i think that my "seed" was to week. It didn't grow to much. I'm trying into corn starch now.
@Nomamegoogle
@Nomamegoogle 4 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler Hey I have a look right now and it formed beautiful under the dried rice of the surface. Underneath is a beautiful mold with a lot of spores! I will save half and make another grow to have a nice formation. I found out the i put to much rice in the first attempt. I will try to grow with pure corn starch flour. Thank you. I will give you more reports!!!
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@pambennett8967
@pambennett8967 4 жыл бұрын
Do you have to dry the Koji rice before making miso with it?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
Nope. You can make it with fresh koji rice. You'll want to dry the rice if you plan on storing it for longer than 2-3 weeks
@pambennett8967
@pambennett8967 4 жыл бұрын
2 Guys & A Cooler thank you!
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@itaigoldman156
@itaigoldman156 4 жыл бұрын
Awesome video! I'm an amateur mycologist and besides a few modifications on sterile procedure and proper isolation I'm totally going to follow this. Great work!
@_The_God_King_
@_The_God_King_ 2 жыл бұрын
what modifications did you make specifically?
@darealpoopster
@darealpoopster 2 жыл бұрын
@@_The_God_King_ a few
@MrMcGillicuddy
@MrMcGillicuddy 2 жыл бұрын
Since you are a mycologist I thought maybe you could answer my question I asked that wasn't answered about storing the starter without a fridge. I'm assuming mold would die if you dehydrated it like a dried yeast culture. Is this true? or could you low temp dehydrate the koji mold starter and not need to store in fridge?
@thomasedible7419
@thomasedible7419 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrMcGillicuddy normally Koji starters are dried. Low Tek if you let your culture sporulate (see color) and low temp dry the grain, you can store it without a fridge.
@MrMcGillicuddy
@MrMcGillicuddy 2 жыл бұрын
@@thomasedible7419 awesome. thanks
@chaitanya298
@chaitanya298 4 жыл бұрын
That was really amazing. I am very impressed with the research and time you put into learning about the koji origin. Also u have taken it a step further and showed us the results practically. Great video from you :)
@nousdefions9600
@nousdefions9600 5 жыл бұрын
Very helpful, especially for places where there's absolutely no access to koji, or if there is, it's ridiculously expensive.
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
@andiarrohnds5163
@andiarrohnds5163 4 жыл бұрын
what places lack koji?
@SMNACTUALLY
@SMNACTUALLY 3 жыл бұрын
@@andiarrohnds5163 probably North Korea
@wumbology3109
@wumbology3109 3 жыл бұрын
@@andiarrohnds5163 my country lol, Indonesia. I tried to cobvert cassava starch to alcohol using koji and yeast.
@isabelcosta2383
@isabelcosta2383 3 жыл бұрын
Brasil, I barely found it and they're charging a thousand bucks
@raphaelmunoz2545
@raphaelmunoz2545 4 жыл бұрын
Amazing video. So, if I understood correctly, if you do the same thing with the black mold you will isolate Rhizopus Oligosporus and thus get Tempeh starter?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
that is correct :)
@jonathanberry9502
@jonathanberry9502 4 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler Couldn't you also end up with toxic black mold though? I assume that is a different mold (but also black)?
@MirrimBlackfox
@MirrimBlackfox 2 жыл бұрын
@@jonathanberry9502 Technically possible, but the Rhizopus oligosporus is a co-habitant with koji so if you are getting koji (fluffy white sweet scented) then the black mold growing with it is almost certainly Ro. Like they said here most of the *really* toxic molds are brightly colored, black mold is generally an irritant at worst.
@jacobmiedema797
@jacobmiedema797 8 ай бұрын
I left some rice in the fridge in a container for a long time. It is now covered with green spores. I have used some spores to make koji rice. Trust it will work.
@jerrymantik5477
@jerrymantik5477 4 жыл бұрын
I loved your experimenting with koji without starter...😍✍️🙏
@usamaalhaj80
@usamaalhaj80 4 жыл бұрын
Hi How are you? I should tell you.. Now I understand why you once asked me whether the smell of koji spores is like a packet of flowers The smell of koji spoers that I showed you is exactly like packet of flowers. It's really wonderful
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
Yes, yes, yes congratulations! What a wonderful accomplishment. I can't wait to hear about all the things you will make with Koji,
@XxXx-kx7lo
@XxXx-kx7lo Жыл бұрын
Hey, what the different between aspergillus oryzae and aspergillus flavus?
@foodiedesi8193
@foodiedesi8193 3 жыл бұрын
i wonder why u didnt add ash in the cooked rice ..By sprinkling wood ash on the surface of steamed rice and leaving it at room temperature, the surface of the rice will become alkaline. Aspergillus Oryzae is unique in that it can live in alkalinity where other fungi would die. In addition to weeding out other funguses, wood ash contains potassium and phosphorus, which act as nutrition and actually aid the growth of Aspergillus Oryzae. Once the spores have sprouted, the sprouted spores and grains can be separated by using a sieve. These sprouts can now be used as seed-koji (moyashi).
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 3 жыл бұрын
LOL. When I did this experiment I wasn't aware of the ash trick. I have since read a very interesting study on the subject. Would have made this a lot easier :)
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it.. Thats my favourite pickle too add fresh onions and green chillies to that and eating with rice and adding ghee taste like heaven.
@bally127
@bally127 3 жыл бұрын
@@jayzz2451 what is hit mortar
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
@@bally127 Mean just crack Gooseberry with mortar(or Stone) and add turmeric powder, keep it for 3-4 days in winter 4-7days.
@suprememasteroftheuniverse
@suprememasteroftheuniverse 2 жыл бұрын
Why are looking for aspergillus oryzae on corn husks when they live on, surprise, rice?
@pbsleuze1359
@pbsleuze1359 Жыл бұрын
I found some similar looking green mold growing on old rice of mine recently. I remembered this video so I was a bit excited I might have A. oryzae, but then I took a look at it under a microscope, and while I am not a microbiologist or anything, it was *definitely* not any Aspergillus species and looked to me like a Penicillium species...! Unfortunately it doesn't seem as easy as I had hoped lol
@BlackMambo5
@BlackMambo5 3 ай бұрын
It's like Koji RNG loot-box IRL. 🤣
@tersta1
@tersta1 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I wanted to know. Thanks.
3 жыл бұрын
Gotta say, I got here after exploring a bit of "The Art of Fermentation", and this video is spectacular. Very thorough and clean approach, keeping us up to date on all the details. Really loved it, thanks man!
@zecadeguchi2344
@zecadeguchi2344 Жыл бұрын
I believe that the amount of Aspergillus oryzae fungus inoculated into rice may interfere with the growth of other fungi, as they all compete for the same food. Thanks for sharing your experiments!
@LinkEX
@LinkEX 3 жыл бұрын
3:20 Koji without starter: By using a Corn Husk. (Sandor had 50% success rate personally.) His recommendation: Use a starter _if_ aren't familiar with the taste and smell yet. (Otherwise it's hard to tell if you succeeded.)
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@paulaj7682
@paulaj7682 5 жыл бұрын
Extremely interesting video. I've never heard of Koji. You always manage to impart just the right balance of explanation and demonstration. You have a great style and must be a natural teacher.
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
Hi Paula. Thanks for such a nice comment!! Koji is such a fascinating fungus that's used heavily in Eastern Cultures. I am almost finished with my Japanese Sake project and Koji was the most critical ingredient in making it. Talk about interesting. Thank you for watching and commenting!!
@AyalaK1
@AyalaK1 3 жыл бұрын
Tried it and got some koji (I can tell from the smell it is koji)! I kept it in the incubator and only WHITE spores appeared on the koji rice- not green spores... Do you have any idea why? And what is the rice powder you grind the spores with- is it rice flour or grinded raw rice?
@Sk0oBz
@Sk0oBz 3 жыл бұрын
There are varieties of koji that produce white spore, I think it might be used with sake or something. I have used purchased rice flour and rice grains ground up in a coffee grinder, it's the same.
@7ele5crivente
@7ele5crivente 3 жыл бұрын
Now that you have your koji, how do you store it? How long does it survives on a shelf?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 3 жыл бұрын
in a closed bag (zip lock) in the refrigerator. I've had mine for a year now...
@MrMcGillicuddy
@MrMcGillicuddy 2 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler can you dehydrate it on low heat and store it as a culture starter instead of storing in fridge?
@dobiebloke9311
@dobiebloke9311 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrMcGillicuddy - Have you found out since you asked this, is it possible?
@MrMcGillicuddy
@MrMcGillicuddy 2 жыл бұрын
@@dobiebloke9311 using my own logic I think you could but not positive. I've got so many ideas on self sustaining systems of food production, saving seeds, wild yeast for beer, wine and vinegar etc. You can dry yeast but not sure about fungus. Since koji is a mold I'm not sure if it's possible. Hardly anyone seems to want to practice this art anymore though so it's difficult to find clear information. the best way would be to learn different languages and go visit peasant farmers in countries that still rely on wild cultures of all kinds.
@dobiebloke9311
@dobiebloke9311 2 жыл бұрын
​@@MrMcGillicuddy - I've always found that the fermentation of thought is best allowed by not knowing a thing, in the sense that being humble of what is supposedly known, as it might not be true, is worth both knowing and forgetting. Point being; if you don't know much, you don't have much to defend, so your mind is free to explore the inobvious, the unexpected, and as I consider it to be, that steaming pile of creativity that you just stepped in (or out of). You know, those mushy, stinky piles of hopes and dream pies that we all awake to, with great shame. To the point, tho, there is so much about Koji and fermentations that I don't know, that having thought I knew it all, I now realize there are other layers to the onion.
@batangmagsasaka5120
@batangmagsasaka5120 3 жыл бұрын
Good evening. Where can I buy some spore samples? 🥰
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 3 жыл бұрын
This is where I buy mine: www.gemcultures.com/soy_cultures.htm
@ilghazi
@ilghazi 4 жыл бұрын
Hello! I just got a 20 oz container of dry koji rice, can I use this as a base for making more koji rice? For example, could I soak/steam rice as one would do to make koji rice, but instead of adding koji kin, I blend the dry koji rice I already have and innoculate my steamed rice with it?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
In my experience I haven't been able to get it to work very well, but it really depends on how fresh the koji rice is. If its super fresh you can do it and it should go to spore.. If you try it let me know how it works out..
@marmaladepie2722
@marmaladepie2722 4 жыл бұрын
CYRUS T - I THINK YOU CAN WHICH IS WHAT'S CALLED AS 2ND FERMENTATION?
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@brian48williams
@brian48williams 5 жыл бұрын
this is a killer video, I pretty much love anything fermented or to do with fungus. You should look into huitlacoche aka corn smut next.
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
What!!!!! huitlacoche is ridiculous!! I tried to see where I could buy some spores but I didn't find any. Have you grown it or tried it? It looks awesome and a little scary!! I'm going to ask a few farmers that I know this weekend to see if they have that fungus growing on their farms!! Totally crazy! Thanks for letting me know about that...
@brian48williams
@brian48williams 5 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler I just found out about it a week ago. You van buy it on amazon
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
I saw that as well. I'd rather grow it if I could... If I can't grow it I'll order some and make a freezer meal with it or something..
@brian48williams
@brian48williams 5 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler I'd say find a local farmer that has some and contaminate the soil of your sweet corn,,you may get lucky...lol, you may even find a way to cultivate it, as you can see it sells for a pretty penny.
@nonadvanced
@nonadvanced 4 жыл бұрын
It is indeed a killer video, doing this can kill you. "Wild" koji is totally unsafe and contains potent carcinogens.
@ShawnGreyling
@ShawnGreyling 18 күн бұрын
I need to attempt this because nobody sells this ish in South Africa and nobody exports to us.
@linknero1
@linknero1 5 жыл бұрын
this is the video I've been waiting for!!!!!!!, really thanks!!!!!!!!!!!!, so bad it's a bit dangerous, by the way, what can happen to you if you eat that other mushroom? I'll try it anyway :P
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
That's a great question. I was wondering the same thing.
@nonadvanced
@nonadvanced 4 жыл бұрын
What can happen to you is you die. Toxic aspergillus is indistinguishable from koji (even by lab testing) and produces one of the most potent carcinogens known. Please do not follow the instructions in this video.
@jimlarsen6782
@jimlarsen6782 4 жыл бұрын
Not a mushroom. Its a fungi. Different branches of the family. Fungi is my enemy when growing oyster mushroom mycelium.
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@HUMANIST-Frequency
@HUMANIST-Frequency 15 күн бұрын
Very informative, thanks! Could the red spores be monascus purpureus?
@monicam1634
@monicam1634 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I follow your instructions and i got it! I have a rice vinegar going and tamari going and of course amazake...very happy with results . I did start my tamari april 26 ...so will take longer to the final product by so far it is going well. Amazake was delicious...I will start second very soon. And vinegar will be ready in few weeks
@K1ZomN14
@K1ZomN14 Ай бұрын
Sir, I am a bit notice mention it about tempe. I am from Indonesia and making tempe are more easy in here. But in Indonesia we had another ferment food like tape singkong (ferment casava), tape ketan (ferment glutinouse rice), tauco (ferment soybeans but different from tempe and it's come from cina long time ago) I am wondering, is that the bacteria of Koji are similar to bacteria from tape ketan (ferment glutinous rice) or it's different??
@Hals-Ueber-Kopf
@Hals-Ueber-Kopf 6 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot for sharing this profound information, very helpful. I'm planning to get myself additionally into microscopy, so I can be sure at a maximum but to intoxicate myself or others 👍 Especially the hint about colours is great 😉😉
@andrewdunton6304
@andrewdunton6304 2 жыл бұрын
This could easily be a. flavus or a. parasiticus which is very toxic. They all 3 look almost identical and even some labs cannot detect the subtle differences they are so close in appearance. They share 95% of the same genetics. This is dangerous do not try this at home. I love and respect with this man is attempting for the science i just think he should have his cultures lab verified. Thank you for this video but please update us if you can on the safety of this specimen?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 2 жыл бұрын
This koji was lab tested and is oryzae. But I agree. People should not do this at home with out the technical expertise of being able to identify and verify that what they are growing is indeed a. Oryzae.
@andrewdunton6304
@andrewdunton6304 2 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler Wow it was pure? Thats amazing I would have thought it to take some agar work to get a pure isolate like that. Amazing work I am deeply impressed. I learned a lot from this. Thank you for clarifying that!
@patrickryanagapito502
@patrickryanagapito502 2 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler Aspergillus Oryzae has white-green color. "But what is that red mold? [Is it Monascus?]"
@yousifucv
@yousifucv 6 күн бұрын
Should you have steamed the corn husks? Or is that where the molds will come from?
@pjmvdbroek
@pjmvdbroek 4 ай бұрын
Yellow green Aspergilli can produce aflatoxins. Despite the fact that a koji fermentation is generally too short for large amounts of toxin, home brew without proper control is silly
@franceschukwukere209
@franceschukwukere209 2 жыл бұрын
Phew! I give up on my effort to make miso. Where I live, we have soybeans and I desired to make miso but cannot, because there're no kojis.
@drastickog
@drastickog 4 жыл бұрын
Love it. I'm so down this koji rabbit hole and this is just so damn fascinating!
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
It is a wild world of Koji. I'm currently growing it on coffee to see what happens to the flavor of the coffee. Talk about interesting!!
@aloveofsurf
@aloveofsurf 2 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler please tell us your results.
@mohankumar-me4sn
@mohankumar-me4sn 4 жыл бұрын
Great, excellent, fanstastic, super perseverance, brother you are good.
@elietedarce1266
@elietedarce1266 11 ай бұрын
Is these koji harvested from wild, corn, better to breakup protein or break starchs?
@gadefox
@gadefox Жыл бұрын
Is there any difference between the A. oryzae and flavus spores?
@wewenang5167
@wewenang5167 9 ай бұрын
WE HAVE KOI I INDONESIA AND MALAYSIA ALSO...WE CALL IT RAGI, YOU CAN FIND IT CHEAP.
@blessedchild5746
@blessedchild5746 3 жыл бұрын
Eric you are best coach / teacher on koji starter . I followed your instructions .My first trial was a little success but the 2nd one was successful God bless you
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 3 жыл бұрын
That's excellent to hear!!! Congratulations!
@saratugarba3394
@saratugarba3394 3 ай бұрын
Thank you Sir for these helpful tips.
@abdelhalimbenbouzid5935
@abdelhalimbenbouzid5935 Жыл бұрын
what kind of rhizopus is the black spore
@celsoalejandromorales6452
@celsoalejandromorales6452 7 ай бұрын
Excelent video, very esporadyc😅
@thediydaddy2649
@thediydaddy2649 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful koji! What did you use it for?😅
@lorisjd
@lorisjd 2 жыл бұрын
can you buy fermentation chambers???
@fernandogold
@fernandogold 4 ай бұрын
mycotoxins are very proud of u!
@jonathanvillanueva1293
@jonathanvillanueva1293 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing this, Erick! I have done this for the first time and my results were apparently fine. Green spores over the rice in the final both batches. It's just that the smell is kinda weird, like humid and bitter, just a little bit sweet. I have made a first batch with the spores and the smell is the same, but the rice is getting white and green just in small parts. What does that mean? Greetings from México!
@BrunoAAntunes
@BrunoAAntunes 3 жыл бұрын
Any news on that? I'm planning to try it but I'm a bit scared about getting toxic mold
@angelmonteagudo650
@angelmonteagudo650 2 жыл бұрын
Toxic Aspergillus, probably
@casucasualidad
@casucasualidad 4 жыл бұрын
Hi! Now that Koji Alchemy is out, I have a question, Can you keep reproducing the spores to extend infinite number of times or it may decade ?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure. so far mine are strong. I've been propagating them for over 2 years.
@casucasualidad
@casucasualidad 4 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler How do you keep it or preserved while you're not using it?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
@@casucasualidad I just keep the spores in the fridge in a small ziplock bag.
@casucasualidad
@casucasualidad 4 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler Thank you!
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@janndinugroho
@janndinugroho 3 жыл бұрын
why using corn husks sir?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 3 жыл бұрын
Corn husks naturally carry the spores a. Oryza.
@bachong8771
@bachong8771 Жыл бұрын
Can j use red rice Koji starter
@rayyanali4471
@rayyanali4471 Жыл бұрын
Green spores can also be trichoderma
@buhvenclarissuinyuy
@buhvenclarissuinyuy 2 ай бұрын
Very nice explanation
5 ай бұрын
Thank you!!!
@rev.jonathanwint6038
@rev.jonathanwint6038 3 жыл бұрын
I had so MANY doubts! And I was Blown Away by how Great this Video was! Thank You!
@adibasiddiqui4387
@adibasiddiqui4387 5 ай бұрын
can we make natto with this ?!
@exxzz13
@exxzz13 6 ай бұрын
Это видео поставило точку. Спасибо
@tizio.qualunque
@tizio.qualunque 2 жыл бұрын
To make koji rice, can I use miso instead of aspergillus starter?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 2 жыл бұрын
yes
@tashimi76
@tashimi76 4 жыл бұрын
If you grow koji from a starter couldn't you then reuse some of that koji rice to make more (and lessen your chances of other moulds being a problem)? Surely this is a sustainable process otherwise how would the sake/soy sauce/etc masters continue to propagate their kojis? If so how much do you think you'd need? And couldn't you do the same thing with Shio Koji, or would the presence of the salt cause problems?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
Hey Tashimi76, Once you start growing koji you can continue to propagate it as long as you have spores. So having koji rice isn't sufficient. It's like the seeds for fresh koji.
@Sk0oBz
@Sk0oBz 3 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler I have propagated koji from purchased dehydrated koji rice. I have also recently taken that purchased, dehydrated koji rice from my chest freezer (after more than 1 year), the freezer has even gone through at least one event of unplanned defrosting, for an uncertain length of time; I then blended a small amount of that koji rice in a coffee grinder and combined with more rice flour, then dispersed over steamed rice grains (after sufficient cooling), then incubated. Worked well :)
@tigertoxins584
@tigertoxins584 4 жыл бұрын
I love that I was going to leave a comment of praise but I was beaten to it. Excellent video, very helpful resource for anyone learning about koji.
@nothinghere1996
@nothinghere1996 5 ай бұрын
very excellent. just what I was looking for. who'd have guessed corn husk. amazing. ❤
@m.taylor
@m.taylor 2 жыл бұрын
They get aspergillus oryzae from rice straw from the rice fields in Asia.
@YouyuanLiu-u8m
@YouyuanLiu-u8m 9 күн бұрын
honestly speaking, all rice fields in Asia are sprayed by glyphaste
@danimaravi89
@danimaravi89 5 жыл бұрын
Great great video! It's such a pleasure listening to Sandon. Your channel rocks! Keep it up! 🥰
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
Thank You. I agree. Sandor is a wealth of information!!
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@ozdoits
@ozdoits 2 жыл бұрын
☺️🙏🌟Epic!!!
@bunnygirl8482
@bunnygirl8482 Жыл бұрын
Perfect. This was actually what I've been looking for. I couldn't find Koji for my homemade sakē. Hope this works.
@albertobeto5362
@albertobeto5362 3 жыл бұрын
Hi. To prepare miso, can we replace the kitchen salt for light version (50% of potassium chloride and 50% of sodium chloride) ? Do potassium chloride also preserve foods like sodium chloride? What I mean is: What is the lowest sodium misso possible to do on home?
@Emprendeconsabor
@Emprendeconsabor Жыл бұрын
Recently I got Aspergillus from Japanese Miso. When I got that green color I ran to my laptop looking for more information how to be sure it is aspergillus, thanks a lot for this content! Now I can continue with my project
@usamaalhaj80
@usamaalhaj80 4 жыл бұрын
Hello About 1hour left for 72 hours to finish and I think the spoers should be dried and I would ask you about the perfect heat for drying. By the way yesterday I checked the batch and I only saw white fluff
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
Hi Usama. I would say that you can dry it at 29-30C for a few days. I placed it on a counter in my kitchen (at 30F) low humidity. It was dry enough for me to pulse in a spice grinder. then I placed it in a bag and placed in the freezer.
@usamaalhaj80
@usamaalhaj80 4 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler Thanks
@t3rex72
@t3rex72 2 жыл бұрын
can it be dehydrated for storage?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 2 жыл бұрын
Sort of. You'll want to dry it at 80f ish (not so much air flow over the top). I dry mine on top of my dehydrator till it's dried, then I freeze it.
@蔡慈心-d9e
@蔡慈心-d9e 6 ай бұрын
👍
@Apollo440
@Apollo440 Жыл бұрын
That is very nice. Informative and with all possible precautions voiced. Definitely worth trying.
@mollychin2032
@mollychin2032 4 жыл бұрын
Im super excited after 48 hours to find all my 6 bundles of wrapped koji were full of spores and bluish . There isnt any bright colors spores at all. Ill try to upload the photo , Tq very much for your awesome video.
@YOUENJOYLIFE
@YOUENJOYLIFE Жыл бұрын
great video, I am making some Koji now and drying it to collect spores, but I am curious, is this safe, do you have to worry at all about breathing in the spores?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler Жыл бұрын
I've been making this for several years now and I take the precaution (just like I do with all fungus) to try and not breath it in, but koji doesn't sporulate as aggressively as other fungus. I remember a grow that we did many years ago with an oyster mushroom called the Pheonix Oyster (pleurotus pulmonarius) and as soon as it started sporulating it created the most beautiful mold spores floating around the room they were growing in. It literately looked like a snowstorm. At that time, I was a bit on the careless side and because of those spores I developed a funny little cough that took several weeks to go away😅. So, the lesson I learned from that experience was to treat all fungus the same and be cautious as to inhaling it. A few days ago, my son and I were applying a mycorrhizal fungus to the roots of our dragon fruit, and we had this very conversation. I hope that helps.
@YOUENJOYLIFE
@YOUENJOYLIFE Жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler thank you, great insight. My only other question is I noticed when doing this process a lot of the spores fly away, especially when blending, are there still plenty when I collect? It looks really green as far as the blended mixture, but I just wanted to confirm.
@ThorS.W
@ThorS.W 4 жыл бұрын
That was a useful tips thanks s a lot
@evvie01
@evvie01 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. This is the first time I watched one of your videos, I love Sandor Katz and I have his book on Wild Fermentation. But the biggest reason I am thankful for this video is the identification of undesirable or dangerous molds. I am currently trying to gather Indigenous Microorganisms (IMO's) for Korean Natural Farming, I have failed 3 times now with my rice being contaminated with the red mold you were dealing with in your Koji. It comes out looking like it was made with strawberries where someone had picked out the berries and left the stain. The curious part is that they were spaced apart an inch or so throughout the batch, almost like it was done on purpose. I was wondering if the contaminant came in the rice or was it from my atmosphere? I didn't hear if you said the name of it, but I am curious.
@alexguzman2090
@alexguzman2090 3 жыл бұрын
how much does the koji starter cost and the shipping in higuchi moyaschi to Colombia
@daretsuki6988
@daretsuki6988 3 жыл бұрын
I'm starting making koji from starter very soon, after hopefully a success I will also try this method. That's brilliant.
@estefaniasiluan1220
@estefaniasiluan1220 4 жыл бұрын
Hello! Amazing video. One question. Is it posible tp dry and save the koji you grow to use in the future? Basically in the same way you create a sourdough starter.
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. That's the best way to propagate it. Just make sure the koji has sporulated (green spores). This will be your seeds for more koji :)
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@gbsk12
@gbsk12 3 жыл бұрын
Does he have a video on making his incubation chamber with the temperature and humidity controls?
@ivymok6688
@ivymok6688 5 жыл бұрын
I was convinced to make koji at home. I watched your video and a few other rice koji making videos. I tried twice. I think I failed both times. The first time I rushed to start and only soaked the rice (Calrose medium) for 5 hours, drained for 15 minutes. Then I steamed the rice in my toaster with steaming feature. The rice looked pretty dry after one hour so I steamed for longer. I invested in a bread proofer just hoping it would be less work for me monitoring the humidity and temperature. I only wrapped the rice in 2 layers of cheesecloth and did not put a piece of Sara wrap on top. I set the bread proofer to 93'F. It took about 24 hours for the rice to reach 105'F for the first time. I unwrapped it and the rice was dry (did not clump up at all) and I saw only very little mold growing. I mixed it up and cooled it down to 95'F and wrapped it up again. After that the temp got up to 105'F fairly quickly, like every 3 hours. I had to cool it down so many times. The rice never got to the point clumping up at all. I figured I should start a new batch just because I didn't do it right to start with. And by the way, the rice smelled like activated yeast, not chestnut or sweet rice. The second time I soaked the rice (600 g) for 15 hours, drained 2 hours, steamed 1 hour on stove top steamer, inoculated with 5 g of koji starter. I bought on Amazon and now I suspect that what I bought wasn't koji kin as described. Instead it could be ground up koji rice because the powder is white, not even pale green. And that was why I did not add sanitized rice flour to it ( www.amazon.com/Koji-Starter-Steak-Sake-Spore/dp/B07KCLMY5H/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=koji+kin&qid=1570610201&sr=8-3 ) Anyway, this time I put a big tray of water in the bread proofer so the humidity was much higher. The rice got to 105'F in about 20 hours. Again, there was no clumps whatsoever even though there were more traces of mold on rice. And again, after cooling it to 95'F, the rice got up to 105'F quickly. I turned down the proofer to 90'F and had to cool the rice 4 more times. Every time the rice was very loose. I had sprayed water on rice and on the cheesecloth to keep it moist. I even lay a Sara wrap on top. No matter what I did, the rice just didn't clump up like all the videos I watched. And the rice started out smelling right but after 2, 3 times, it started to smell like yeast again. What did I do wrong? Please advise! I do not want to give up!!! Thank you in advance! And last but not least, since it did not form a block, I didn't know when to stop the fermentation. It's just frustrating.
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
Hello Ivy. I love your fighting spirit. Thanks for letting me know your process and before I begin I want to encourage you to take a deep breath and keep at it. It will be so rewarding when you finally get it. There are several different types of Aspergillus Oryze. Each one producing different types of enzymes so depending on what you are going to make you might choose a koji that produces lots of Amylase enzymes. For this project though we are not going to worry about that. Most of the koji spores are green but there is 1 that produces white spores. This may be the version you have. Koji needs moisture to survive. If the temp is too high, if the humidity is to low, or if the rice is not wet enough your koji will be very stressed and possibly die. The biggest issue I see from others making koji is the rice. Generally it's too dry. The process is this. Rinse the rice very well. The water should run clear. This will remove excess starch. Next Soak the rice for 12-15 hours. This will soften the rice. Then steam the rice by placing a cheesecloth in your stovetop steamer, add your soaked rice, close the cheesecloth, and cover. Let steam for 45 minutes to an hour. About half way through I like to mix the rice around so that it steams evenly. After 45 minutes taste the rice. You should be able to easily cut the grain with your fingernail. Continue steaming till you achieve this. Allow the rice to cool the sanitize some rice flour For 600 grams of rice I would only use about 1/4 cup of rice flour.. Allow that to cool. Mix your spores with the rice flour and when everything is below 100F toss it all together. Place the newly inoculated rice on some cheese cloth and put it on a tray. Cover with seran but leave 2 sides open. Here's where we are going to change your process a little bit. Next time you make koji ferment it at 84F. Be sure your humidity is 90-95%. When you ferment at 84F you won't have to worry about it getting too hot so don't disturb it. Koji takes 48 hours to fully colonize and a 72 hours it will have formed spores. So for you I would check it at 40-48 hours. If you leave it in longer then you'll get spores and that a good thing also if you want more koji kin :) If your rice is too wet then the koji will not want to penetrate the rice as it has all the water it needs on the surface. So having the right moisture level in your rice is critical. We get clumps when we make koji because our koji has penetrated the rice and has developed a strong colony within the grains. If your rice is too dry then the koji wont grow well either. If you want an inexpensive way to check your humidity and temperature I recommend this little tool. I have 4 of them and it helps me adjust my environment as necessary. It's called a Pocket Temp/Humidity Meter: www.thermoworks.com/Pocket-TH-RT819?tw=2GUYSACOOLER. Let me know if this helps on your next batch..
@ivymok6688
@ivymok6688 5 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler Hi Eric, I'm so grateful for your response. I will certainly try again and let you know the outcome. Meanwhile, can I still use the rice koji I made? Like I said both batches smell like yeast (not pleasant) and the rice in the second batch taste sweet and sour. Is it safe to use or should I toss them out? I'm currently drying them on baking sheets. And when I try again, 1. is Calrose medium grain ok or should I buy short grain and 2. should I stop the process after 48 hours no matter if it clumps or not? Thank you!
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks Ivy. That's a hard question for me to answer. Not being able to see it and smell it makes it hard. I say toss it if you are unsure that what you have is a good healthy koji mold. Medium Grain is fine, I like working with jasmine rice personally.. If everything went according to plan then at 48 hours it should be completely finished. Be sure to get something to measure the humidity and temperature in the proofer. Does your proofer have a fan?
@ivymok6688
@ivymok6688 5 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler I knew that was a dumb question. I just feel sick in the stomach that I have to toss so much rice and a week worth of hard work. I'm Chinese and was raised that we can't waste even one grain of rice in our bowl. My dad will punish me when we meet again in heaven. LOL... The proofer I purchased doesn't have a fan (see link below). It is relatively small and wouldn't have room to put a fan inside either, I think. But I haven't seen anyone from all other videos I have watch used a fan. This proofing box doesn't seal all the way around. It's foldable so I assume air and moisture can escape from all the sides. I'll try one more time this weekend. I asked my husband to make me a wooden tray instead of using stainless steel trays l have used. Hopefully that will help with balancing the moisture. www.williams-sonoma.com/products/brod-and-taylor-folding-proofer-and-slow-cooker/?catalogId=69&sku=5463356&cm_ven=PLA&cm_cat=Google&cm_pla=Electrics%20%3E%20Slow%20Cookers%20%26%20Pressure%20Cookers%20%3E%20Slow%20Cookers&cm_ite=5463356&gclid=Cj0KCQjwrfvsBRD7ARIsAKuDvMNa_LxQpMdu4EHQL9qHls7XLC_PgwwnZpST0b0Ml-G2vO56MjCdY1EaAjzREALw_wcB
@fartboy1975
@fartboy1975 4 жыл бұрын
I live in the tropics, so hot and humid and I grew koji in my attic. Nevertheless, the first batch turned out AWESOME! Basically I grew up koji rice (Miyako Koji Rice I bought online) on 500 g long grain rice that was spread out on a sanitized aluminum cookie sheet. The key was to keep it all spread out and to stir it each day with sanitized spoon. No cheese cloth or anything. I had a sanitized grain bag from malted barley I used for beer brewing to cover up my sanitized cookie sheet covered lightly with steamed rice (@90-95f), innocculated with 50g of Miyako koji rice I ground up in coffee grinder, and natural humidity in the air. Now I am making chckpea/garbanzo miso with that koji and will be doing more starters in the future to use for coutless more koji projects.
@annakarenina8447
@annakarenina8447 2 жыл бұрын
Super interesting video! will there be a huge difference between Chinese yeast balls made of rice and koji, in the making of miso?
@firaaziz9159
@firaaziz9159 5 жыл бұрын
very nice video , thanks for sharing this video ...... god bless you ...... ! alhamdulillah .........
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you. If you try this please let me know how it turns out for you..
@firaaziz9159
@firaaziz9159 5 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler sooner i'll try to catch koji from wild like the way in your video , thank u very much from Indonesia . god bless you and all family ...
@usamaalhaj80
@usamaalhaj80 4 жыл бұрын
Hello I ask you to be patient with me a little because I have more than one question 1-The wild koji generation takes 72 hours, isn't it? I noticed that after 48 hours, you previewed the koji mold and then you returned it for another 24 hours. 2-The conditions for generation are the same as for koji rice in terms of heat and humidity. Is that true? 3-Why did you choose jasmine rice, does it have privacy or any other kind that works? 4-When you take a koji mold image under a microscope, will Spores separate from rice kernels or what exactly do you do before? For example, would you add domething to koji spores because last time when I took spoers to see them under a microscope, the assigned person in the laboratory there added some liquid to Spores and then put them under the microscope! Please answer questions because I am really interested in this .
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
ok. 1. Yes. It takes Koji 72 hours to sporulate under the right conditions 2. Yes. The temp is between 85F and 95F and 90% humidity 3. No particular reason. I happen to have some on hand. Any rice will work 4. No need to do anything special when looking a koji under magnification. Don't use water and there's no real need to go beyond 200X. The koji looks like dandelion flowers : images.app.goo.gl/U1tSjKutTB8PCJNJ9
@usamaalhaj80
@usamaalhaj80 4 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler Thanks for the details and the photo too I am now on the third day and until this moment I see very similar white spots that you referred to in this video as a koji mold and I wait 72 hours until I see the final result If you want to see it, I will send you a picture via e-mail Thank you, I really appreciate your help❤
@usamaalhaj80
@usamaalhaj80 4 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler Thank you so much Truth be told I would not have succeeded had I not seen your videos and i would not have succeeded had it not been for the answers you were answering for the frequently asked questions I was asking you. Some samples are white without red mold but I see some green spoers among them Now I will follow the steps that you have applied in your video after you growing koji spoers after 72 hours The rest of the time is about two hours to reach 72 hours, I am very excited Thanks you again, my sincere greetings
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@usamaalhaj80
@usamaalhaj80 3 жыл бұрын
@@jayzz2451 I thank you very much 🙆‍♂️
@stickyrice6102
@stickyrice6102 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the information. If I could buy koji rice and made Shio Koji, could I keep it indefinitely in a jar in the fridge and just add cooked rice and some water to keep the fermentation going?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 5 жыл бұрын
That's a very interesting question. I don't know. In theory if the conditions are right and you kept giving the Koji food then it might possibly work. If you try it please let me know the results....
@violettaschmieder2096
@violettaschmieder2096 4 жыл бұрын
this reminds me of this game girls used to play in germany, where the girls in my class made a dough named Hermann with this yeast and they gave it more and more feed and kept him alive like that, like a pet, and they gifted their friends the 'children' of their original Hermann and it was alround a pretty odd thing but a great bonding experience i guess.
@jayzz2451
@jayzz2451 3 жыл бұрын
If you really want koji try this. Hit mortar to each and every goose berry then keep it in a big bowl for 3-4 days then you see white snd green mold pure aspergilus then remove seed and make paste out of gooseberry then add your boiled soybeans thats it miso ready after sometime.. In india we just add mustard seeds, green chillies, roast fenugreek seeds all grinded, salt to that it comes out as delicious pickle after 2 weeks ready to eat, can be aged for decades the more it age more valuable its. It taste just similar to miso., many Indians probably dont even know this now lost these traditional foods and culture now. In olden days everyone is poor only brahmins have this pickle when someone sick or get fever they ask this pickle from them they give it..
@hellbilly007
@hellbilly007 4 жыл бұрын
When you were removing the koji from the cheesecloth, is cross-contamination possible from wearing the same gloves?
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
Yes it is. Behind the camera I have a little alcohol station that I'm dipping my hands in though.
@hellbilly007
@hellbilly007 4 жыл бұрын
@@2guysandacooler thank you for the very quick reply. Thank you for sharing all this info. I eagerly await the day when I can start this among many other projects. I'd start this one sooner but I live on the road and visit home sometimes, lol
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
@@hellbilly007 I hear you😁😁. That was me before I said ,"that's enough!!".
@elizerlemuelmarbaniang790
@elizerlemuelmarbaniang790 Жыл бұрын
hi i actually don't have a microscope. so is there any other way to distinguish oryzae and flavcus🥲😅? plus I don't understand how ash wood can increase the chance of oryzae to be cultivated. Can you please explain I would be very greatful. Thank you
@maxrandom5331
@maxrandom5331 2 жыл бұрын
I once grow koji in a petri dish with just soy sauce and rice flour.
@TheEbulla
@TheEbulla 3 жыл бұрын
In case you haven't gotten tired of hearing it. Amazing video
@stevepenney2073
@stevepenney2073 3 жыл бұрын
Awesome....ive wanted to know this for a long time
@ismaelmannheim
@ismaelmannheim 3 жыл бұрын
please a question: can koji spores be obtained to inoculate rice starting from kome koji? If I previously mix it with rice flour and move it in the mill with a milino of coffee? thank you!
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 3 жыл бұрын
It depends on how fresh it is. I've never been able to get it to go to spores from store bought kome.
@FuerFullLee
@FuerFullLee Жыл бұрын
Gratitude 🙏 and Blessings 🙌.
@mattydunc1
@mattydunc1 3 жыл бұрын
Awesome Video mate. I love making stuff from scratch. I wanted to make Sake and this video has become my starting point. Thank you so much
@ronanthebadbrain
@ronanthebadbrain 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic. love your work here. thanks for making this.
@tommychen1834
@tommychen1834 4 жыл бұрын
We know that miso is made from mixing Koji, suspecting that miso might contain Koji spore? Is it possible taking miso as Koji starter? I tried once but not working, maybe there are other factors I did not count into.... anyone make it ?
@Ethans9999
@Ethans9999 4 жыл бұрын
It is not possible.
@Ethans9999
@Ethans9999 4 жыл бұрын
This is a great video and I can't wait to try this method. There is a safer way to select for koji versus other harmful molds which uses ph. Koji can tolerate and grow in high ph environments. Here is a reddit thread talking about this process for koji selection. If anyone is interested in cultering wild koji but worried about growing something harmful then try this. Would love to see a video on this, see how well it works. www.reddit.com/r/Koji/comments/f8scm0/interesting_experiment_on_the_effects_of_wood_ash/
@2guysandacooler
@2guysandacooler 4 жыл бұрын
That is incredibly fascinating!!
@MrMcGillicuddy
@MrMcGillicuddy 2 жыл бұрын
is it possible to do this with other grains besides rice?
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