When I first started, I saw Paw Paws wine and thought oh how easy and no money spent. Then I found this channel. Now I have 5 carboys, yeast nutrient, acids, sanitizing solutions, multiple airlocks, hydrometers, about 25 40 ounce empty glass bottles, ect ect. Thanks, just thanks for costing me all this time and money. All I wanted was to make a little wine out of my blackberries. Oh yeah I have a braggot, a mead, and a wine going all at once.. So actually thank you
@leifd7312 ай бұрын
I started by watching Pawpaws wine making videos too. Now I've got all the equipment and have made wine from juice, fruit (fresh, frozen, dried, jarred, canned) veggies, flower petals etc. What a wonderful hobby. I'm always thinking "what should I make next?"!!
@uqox5 ай бұрын
Yep. I tried using molasses in homebrewing back in the 90s, because it's listed as a possible *flavor* ingredient in the "Joy of Homebrewing" because of its lower amount of fermentable sugars. There's no getting away from the fact that great BBQ sauce often includes molasses. If you love BBQ, it is almost impossible *not* to associate the taste of molasses with BBQ sauce. The presence of alcohol makes molasses taste even _more_ like BBQsauce. You did nothing wrong. All you've done is enhanced the aspects of molasses *that makes it great in BBQ sauce.* "I'm not a fan of drinking marinade" is spot on. You could use it to cook all cuts of pork, and I'd guess duck would be amazing. You could also use it to make a sauce. *Loved this video.* I was genuinely hoping your choice of yeast would solve the issue of molasses fermenting into something that tasted like thin BBQ sauce. I'll be back here in a year to see if time creates something better.
@NaughtiusMaximu52 ай бұрын
my thoughts exactly. i kinda want to make it when i get a couple spare fermenting vessels, and use maybe 1 more jar of molasses. i also wonder how it would be if you left it on the stove to reduce for a while, what kind of sauce would this make? so many possibilities!!
@debonpanton33665 ай бұрын
For what its worth I am watching you from Red Hills, Jamaica W.I. and you are BOTH my friends. Great job every time. CHEERS!!!
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Much appreciated
@zworm25 ай бұрын
For my 6th grade project at school in Scotland I fermented treacle with bread yeast and then distilled it using a water cooled glass distillation tube. It produced some high proof Rum? that evaporated when you put it in your mouth. We thought it was fun and I got an 'A' from my very understanding teacher! The title was Exploring the making of HOOCH from Treacle fermentation. Our teacher did ask we put our experiment in the back room. This was 50 years ago.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Yeah, that wouldn't fly today, lol.
@mkdouglas89195 ай бұрын
Wow!! Too bad my & the darling husband's ancestors migrated from Scotland to the colonies! Our 6th grade was most assuredly less interesting!
@zworm25 ай бұрын
@@mkdouglas8919 I am also in the colonies now and I lucked out with my Chem teacher a marvelous one. I brew Scrumpy and various ciders now, some hopped.
@ThaddsRips5 ай бұрын
Have I thought about making this? Yes, am I gonna make it now, nope! Thank you for your sacrifice
@beautyisntperfect5 ай бұрын
I gave a presentation at Phoenix Fan Fusion on mead making, and I was primarily able to do that because I learned so much from you two!
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
That is awesome!
@rets34xleopard5 ай бұрын
It's re-alived! IT'S RE-ALIVED!!!
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Wooo!
@AirwolfCrazy5 ай бұрын
I would like to see a follow up cooking video with this being used.
@alexcarney57345 ай бұрын
Respiratory therapist here, CO2 is about 20x more soluable than O2 in water. When you swirle a brew CO2 is more likely to be released (also reabsorbed) than O2 is absorbed into the brew, especially with an air lock on.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Thanks.
@robertmooney14924 ай бұрын
Interesting observation. Not only am I a home brewer, but have been an RRT for these past 18 years and always look forward to conversing with someone else in the field. Do you have a recommendation for how one could maximize 02 absorption prior to fermentation to build up the colony without approaching the cusp of impracticality (i.e.-expensive 02 injection system, etc???)
@saoudalfares27954 ай бұрын
@@robertmooney1492 I use a usb powered small aquarium pump with a steel aeration stone. Works really well for me.
@bartlester5915 ай бұрын
I consider both of you not only wise entertaining, but also very, very, very informative. Keep up the good work.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Much appreciated!
@chelseagrimsley66895 ай бұрын
I was one of the people who asked for this. I'm glad y'all did it and not me. But that being said, I still may try a half gallon rift off this recipe. Maybe add some ginger, clove, and cinnamon to it.
@Shellewell5 ай бұрын
I am in the UK and managed to find Star San, so no excuses there! Also, who on earth is out there getting mad at people on KZbin for saying "Bejeezus"?! There's much more to life.
@harryhall40015 ай бұрын
Chemsan does pretty much the same thing, and is sometimes easier to find.
@robertmooney14925 ай бұрын
I appreciate the volume and frequency of your content. Started a cherry cider yesterday (no apple juice added; I consider it cider, at least by English standard lol, as long as it's a carbonated alcoholic beverage made from orchard fruit.)
@timlarsson5 ай бұрын
I look forward to hearing (or seeing) whenever you decide to try this out in cooking!
@dansullivan89685 ай бұрын
Dear Lord this video keeps getting better and better, now your drinking a 2. OK, we are going to name this "Gunpoint Cooking Wine" with the tag line "' 'cause the only way I'm drinking that is at gunpoint!" Medic! Man down! Thank you for your service. So hilarious.
@workingfortheirfuture5 ай бұрын
After thought about the molasses (?)... 1) you'd said you wanted to use blackstrap ... you didn't have that available possibly why it kept the acid and 'vinegar' pallet. 2) I wonder if you'd cooked out the molasses first with some of your water to further concentrate the molasses down (?) and possibly cook off anything not 100% organic from the manufacturing process. Just throwing that out there. And lastly: I love how in march maybe adding a hint of orange, or hoping for a rhum note when it's done went to BBQ sce with hints of Worcester in under an hour (spanning 3 months)! 😂 love your channel! Can't wait for the one year recap!
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Maybe? Honestly this is not promising enough to make me want to try it again, lol.
@A_Healthy_Fit_Lifestyle5 ай бұрын
I must admit that after watching this video I am re-alived.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
LOL
@johnp.22675 ай бұрын
BBQ Sauce Wine and Derica's implied friendship have re-alived me. Truly, this channel is a fermented miracle.
@PlainDiscord5 ай бұрын
The two of you tasting this was fun to watch. Thanks for taking one for the team. Though it sounds distinctly like it’s not worth using as a drinking wine. I think I’ll do a small batch to use as marinade like you will be doing! Also, per recommendation is got me a spaddle!! Can’t wait to have it, your recommendation for the pitcher turned into one of my MOST favorite kitchen Utensils I have! You both are awesome and thank you for the fun and for the science!
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Happy to help and glad you enjoyed it.
@1boortzfan5 ай бұрын
Thank you for another great video. It's great to see someone so honest at this day and time. This wine should make a great MOJO replacement.
@rossk79275 ай бұрын
Go all in, make a fermented barbecue sauce 😂 put some garlic, onions herbs, spices in primary and age it on charrd muskeet. No idea if it'd work, and it's not exactly a sipping drink... Maybe an April fools thing.
@jordikozminski42105 ай бұрын
There is marinades that use alcohol as the “acid“ so fermented barbeque sauce would probably make a really great marinade/tenderizer. Would be interesting to see what dishes Brian and Derica (sorry, I am horrible at spelling names) would come up with to use it
@thehoennbazaar5 ай бұрын
I started off by getting the kit from Golden hive and two other Wide Mouth fermenters from Amazon. Now I've got 9 total fermenters and more on the way. This has become such a fun hobby for me. My favorite part is gifting bottles and surprising people with how easy and delicious home-made brew can be!
@MindlessWanderingsАй бұрын
A little over a year ago I made a gallon batch using some left over ingredients from a few brews I did that day, which was basically dark malt extract with molasses and brown sugar (yeast was Mangrove Jacks M41 - Belgian strong ale). I didn't write anything down about it but I remember it starting above 1.1 OG and I let it go dry and didn't modify. Tasting it right before bottling was like licking a fry pan after burning barbecue sauce but I figured I'd bottle it anyway out of curiosity. I tried it every few months and it was still awful until about a year later. It is still hard work but it is drinkable. It lost a lot of the bad flavours and now tastes like I made liquid Vegemite (which I guess many would consider a bad flavour).. I doubt it will get any better but I'm letting it sit to see what happens. I'm sure mine was helped by having some malt in it but I get the feeling molasses is an addition only and just not designed to be the base.
@MobettaBluАй бұрын
You guys I love the humor we need more of that in this climate I highly appreciate your humor and videos thank you Brian and Derica
@CitySteadingBrewsАй бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@dawnteskey32595 ай бұрын
Great video! I made a brown sugar wine with just a small amount of added molasses a few years ago, it was blackstrap molasses though. It took forever to finish and had some funky smells, but after a year or so it was quite nice.
@007cantos5 ай бұрын
As an East coast Canadian MolAsses and rum are part of our culture. I was curious about this, thank you for saving me the time money and pain of making this. BTW its fun to see one that well to be polite didn't pan out.
@workingfortheirfuture5 ай бұрын
Re-Alived!! Love it! Sort of how I feel driving home after work on Friday!! (Which is Saturday in real life).
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
LOL
@benway235 ай бұрын
Your work has re-alived me, thank you.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Glad to help
@whynotmike5 ай бұрын
For what it's worth, most of the fermentation recipes I've seen using molasses have (1) used it as part of a ~50/50 mixture with brown sugar, (2) used a much lower SG, and (3) brewed it in the style of a beer where you have some kind of intense bittering agent. The idea is that combining brown sugar and molasses can give you a taste approximating that of malt... if you've ever tasted malt syrup and molasses this kind of makes sense.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
I can see that, yup.
@richardhenderson91275 ай бұрын
I'm glad y'all are doing this one. I've been curious about it for a while. I'll watch it later.
@AndyMorrisArt3 ай бұрын
Hey Friends! I can't believe it. I just started experimenting with Molasses Brew and the batch i started last night I pitched with some leftover Kveik Yeast, but I went to order more kveik and it won't arrive in time for next brew day so I thought hey I got some Bread Yeast (also some Red Star Wine Yeast) and down the Rabbit Hole i went... sooo this was the perfect video for me today. Thanks a million!
@TheBottegaChannel5 ай бұрын
I think if you made a braised beef stew using that and a malted stout then paired that with a bloody mary ( and added a dash of molasses mead for the Worcestershire part), it'd make your taste buds re-alive!
@aperson999363 ай бұрын
you two are my friends and I’ve only watched three of your videos so far. Keep it up!
@CitySteadingBrews3 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@seanhoude5 ай бұрын
Re-Alived! 😁 And "all the ways of cooking all the things". Great video!
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
YAY!
@dustystotler13765 ай бұрын
Baked beans. Maybe? First time making a cooking wine! Congrats! lol. I am surprised it didn't taste like rum at all. Very interesting.
@Aleph-Noll5 ай бұрын
you guys are great! you inspired me to get into mead making and its been really fun
@gunrunner50955 ай бұрын
I've done "friendship cider" like people do sourdough bread. Rack a batch of cider, swirl the yeast at the bottom, pour some in the next batch, and keep going. Done that up to 3 times with one packet of yeast.
@thomt12645 ай бұрын
Cool I got a jar of molasses for a recipe I wanted to try and used a tablespoon of it. Now I have something else to try it in.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Are you sure you want to repeat this?
@beep-beepwatermelon42035 ай бұрын
Please 🙏 keep us updated how this is to cook with. I cook all our meals from scratch, and I’m super tempted to make a batch of this to find out for myself. While you were describing the flavour I kept imagining marinating chicken in it for using Korean food
I was so hoping this was going to work as I love the taste of molasses in baked goods. Maybe something magic will happen over a year. My blueberry wine RE-ALIVED when I bottled it so I've been burping the bottles every second day or so for a couple of weeks. The bigger bottles I'll burp until still (for wineskin roulette), but with the smaller bottles, I now have a pretty tasty sparkling blueberry cider. Love your channel. Tried a metric crap tonne of new things. Thanks guys!!!
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
You are welcome!
@frankkeltch52605 ай бұрын
I was trying to up load a pic of young Frankenstein saying " IT'S RE-ALIVED " but I guess that's one option still not available
@tess55645 ай бұрын
I very much enjoyed this video. I love molasses and am very intrigued by how this turned out. I bet it would make great baked beans
@sniktripn72173 ай бұрын
I consider you guys mentors and like a video brew diary for ideas and tricks on how to do things on my end
@CitySteadingBrews3 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
@carlgray45565 ай бұрын
Great video, it would be interesting to get a follow-up on how this did as a cook wine.
@Eistier5 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video, i was wondering about a pure molasses fermentation for a while. Thought the only recipes i could find were gruit/small beer with herbs, spices and/or hops added to it and only aiming for something like 2 percent abv, or actual beers with only a few ounces of molasses added as a spice rather than the base fermentable. I think if i'll ever try a molasses fermentation i'll definitely consider the molasses itself as a spice and not the main ingredient. also an update on my ginger beer: two weeks in the fermentation has slowed down significantly; i can hear a bubble passing through the airlock about twice an hour, but visually the surface of the brew still looks rather active, so i'll wait a little longer until i check the gravity. I'll definitely try to carbonize it, if successful one might even call that RE-ALIVED!
@KevinKaneTheOneTheOnly5 ай бұрын
Very interesting. I made a surprisingly good "Colonial" Molasses Ale that had orange peel, rosemary, and juniper berries.
@notgonnatellyou27054 ай бұрын
I've added molasses to brews to add complexity similar to how to you guys use honey using mainly bread yeast, and I've had mostly good experiences. As far as aging it definitely helps, but thats true of anything (more info I use a molasses from a local orchard that grows their own sugar cane so it may vary)
@redneckgreenthumb433Ай бұрын
Hey! love the videos. question. why do you do (og-fg)x135 = ABV instead of (og-fg)x131.25 = ABV
Hi, I have a question about using raisins. It is hard to find ones without sulfates where I live.Is it smart to use sulfated raisins in conditioning,or can I cook them or something to make them more suitable for brewing?
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
You can try boiling them. It sometimes helps or just add them later.
@deroy28295 ай бұрын
I have a question. I have already pasteurized my wine and I'm ready to bottle. Can I use a funnel and just pour into the bottles. I have a auto siphon but no bottling wand. Is there a concern at this point over oxygenating the liquid? First batch nerves. :)
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Nope, please use an autosiphon as oxidation is DEFINITELY still a concern.
@papasmurf91465 ай бұрын
"we need to change the rules" ... it's your game, your rules. In this case, it seems like the rule change was completely called for. By the way, thank you for the experiment. I had actually bought molasses for this purpose. Now I won't waste the fermentation space. Thank you.
@JayDudeUgs_pubgM5 ай бұрын
You guys are awesome and funny. I like this channel bc It simplifies brewing terms and technics .
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Thanks, glad you like it!
@2Bachlors1house5 ай бұрын
Love the videos. Been watching for about a month and also collecting what y'all and other mead creators have said to get to brew mead which luck for me wasn't a lot since I had a beer starter kit that I used once. I started my first batch of mead today and it's starting og is 1.114 target to get to is 1.04. the batch ingredients are as follows. 14.5lbs of Kirkland wildflower honey, 71b yeast, and water to 5 gallons. The reason I'm doing a 5 gallons batch is I've got five 1 gallon fermenters and want to do 4 different flavors with one gallon been bog standard mead.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Target 1.040? Erm... it's best to just let it finish. Most times we let them go dry and sweeten to taste. 71b will easily ferment that to dry.
@2Bachlors1house5 ай бұрын
@@CitySteadingBrews that's what meadmakr batch builder suggested. I'll do what you suggest though. Out of curiosity have y'all ever back sweetened with honey powder? And if so is it as good as sugar?
@zachhill47213 ай бұрын
Any thoughts on using sorghum syrup in a wine? It has more of a "grain" smell (almost like wort in beermaking) but is milder in flavor than molasses. I wonder if it would work in a barleywine type recipe?
@CitySteadingBrews3 ай бұрын
We just got some. Working on something for it.
@AndrewNuttall5 ай бұрын
"you'll know how to cast the line, but you may not catch a fish" - might have worked there.🤣
@gavinbogaerts49295 ай бұрын
Always loved the jokes about the packages... Always loved the fact they foiled you to tear them, too.. Without your scissors, the packages won the fight!
@thehoennbazaar5 ай бұрын
The spaddle jokes had me rolling on the floor 🤣
@Shrinekeeper12 ай бұрын
"I'm callin' Bullshit!" Had my cackling.... Even after watching this though, I still kinda want to try it.
@TheTriFyre5 ай бұрын
😅No need to worry about zealots' feelings... Don't be mad at me!😢 Tell Derica, thank you for being a friend ❤ Actually really needed to hear that this morning. Hope you guys are having a nice weekend
@hobbytastic5 ай бұрын
Okay but what if you take some and purposely Vinegarize it? for marinades and such?
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
If you wanted to, sure.
@samjohns5444 ай бұрын
Wife and I was given a large container of sorghum as a gift. Not sure what to do with it ...we thought why not wine! Sooo....we did. Same results like your molasses wine. BBq sauce flavor...and the wife uses it to cook with...she uses it to marinate venison which is great. And we still don't think it tastes that great....kinda close to a stout taste. Thank you to both of you for videos. Try making a tomato wine, we have and would like to see your results. The Johns
@bdavre15 ай бұрын
I saw your old VacuVin video a while back for degassing. Is this something you continue to do? I find it rather good at degassing my projects.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Not really, we let them sit long enough that they degas naturally.
@dansullivan89685 ай бұрын
Blazing Spaddles!!!! -insert mel brooks meme- So the recipe is how you Rick Roll your audience? 🤣I truly enjoy y'all's channel.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
ROFL!
@MrBlasz5 ай бұрын
Cook with tofu? Or use as fluid for seitain
@thankfulpeeps54564 ай бұрын
I made a rum wine last year, started with unsulfured molasses and brown sugar, then back sweetened with brown sugar and added conditioning spices: a cinnamon stick, a Bay leaf, 5 Allspice berries, 2 whole cloves, 1 star anise, also added an American oak spiral. Turned out very nice…not at all like a bbq sauce. 😂
@briancohen-doherty43925 ай бұрын
Kepp on being yourselves 🎉
@pecans_and_rockets5 ай бұрын
Dr. Derica Frankenbrian: “it’s Re-alived! That’s a cork pop for the win!”
@atlsxfinest85095 ай бұрын
have you guys ever used Ambrosia Honey before? I just picked up 4lbs of it and am excited to try it! Apparently it has caramel/floral notes? Im so excited to brew something up with it today.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Have never had it, sorry.
@antonzubko69875 ай бұрын
I am wondering if there is any risks of backsweetening if im using a a car boy. The neck is too tight to fit anything reasonable to stir and I'm worried about oxidation if i were to stir/shake the secondary. Any suggestions?
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Mix as best you can really. Not a lot of risk but I wouldn't shake it no.
@robixcube33735 ай бұрын
Another AWESOME video! Even if the brew looked like "mud". I wonder if Sorghum wine is a thing. Different plant and flavor than molassas.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
It's very different, yes.
@battiekoda5 ай бұрын
Also, question, (I may have asked this before, but I have a memory disorder), could one use some of your methods and supplies to ferment foodstuffs? i.e. pickles etc.?
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Not the same really, no. Different methods.
@battiekoda5 ай бұрын
@@CitySteadingBrews OK, thanks!
@redbeardthepink48092 ай бұрын
So funny story: I recently started a spiced acerglyn, and I work at a grocery store, so last night when I was stocking the bake aisle and my eyes crossed the molasses, I kinda wondered if I could make a mead or wine with it. Then this morning, this video was one of the first things to cross my feed 😂
@maluse2275 ай бұрын
Word of caution from personal experience I’ve made this before and loved it with cider, my wife however experienced the worst hangovers she’s ever had from less alcohol than a usual night. Idk what it is but either some people react badly to the residue not sugar stuff, or I messed up despite a lot of successful batches before and after of other brews.
@kahlilbt5 ай бұрын
Made cherry mead a few months ago. Turned out AMAZING. I call it my sleeping potion lol. But it came out with so much sediment in my 1 gallon I only got 2.5 bottles of it. Just invested in my first 3gal fermenter so i can get a better yield
@sheogorathoftamriel1915 ай бұрын
That is definitely the most unusual ingredient you've used so far! Very interesting project, I will be waiting a video with one year tasting. Also, it is very important for this beverage to be re-alived! ☝
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Dunno, I think coca cola and kool aid were up there...
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
But re-alived for sure.
@shaneandera14095 ай бұрын
Re-alived, my new favorite word. I am wondering, have you ever used the lees cake to start a new batch of mead or wine? Would it even be possible? If it is, would it change the taste characteristics if you used the lees from the molasses wine in a traditional honey mead?
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
It's possible but not as consistent or reliable as pitching yeast.
@JeffDrennen5 ай бұрын
Brian: "let's make molasses wine." Me: "let's not." no but in all fairness I'm making a spruce wine based on the hometowns video and there is molasses in the recipe. Cooking molasses not strap molasses. But it has molasses in it, all the same.
@jpaufakoning5 ай бұрын
If you have a problem with the funnel you can also put a theespoon with the stick side down next to the funnel pointing outward.(be carefull taking the funnel out not to drop the theespoon into the mix :P
@NeuPanda5 ай бұрын
so I just pulled my light brown sugar wine (brown sugar if I remember correctly is made with molasses) off the other day. day 1, aka 0 aging. this was so smooth, what I don't understand is it tasted like apple juice with that mouth of a sweet wine. I unfortunately do not have the SG to give for starting as I didn't have the correct amount of brown sugar when I started it and it was a 1.06-7 SG and I added more to it a couple days later when I was able to make it back to the store. (note adding more to the active fermenting mad it VERY angry) when it eventually stopped fermenting it was at a 1.02. first taste was apple juice. it was amazingly pleasant, and probably one of my favorite drinks to date. I had done a test in the past using white sugar, light brown, and dark brown sugar. for this I just used fletchmans yeast the white was little to no flavor, the dark brown was less than pleasant (a bit bitter) but the light brown sugar at that time popped with a fruity floral flavor which is why I tried again this time I used a wine yeast RC212 and I have 0 regrets and want more now i sound silly given yall cover brown sugar later xD oh yeah i also added 2 tea bags of black tea
@CaananLocke5 ай бұрын
I made some molasses wine a year or so ago. It tasted pretty much, exactly like black olives out of a can when it was young. I tasted it again just a few weeks ago, and it's now closer to teriyaki.
@shortleaf68183 ай бұрын
I made a molasses mead that's currently mid cold crash after fermenting for about 28 days or so. It's my first mead and the sugars are a mix of honey, molasses, and corn syrup. It smells nice, but it very foamy. I'll be taking a first taste in a few days. I'm not getting any barbeque smell at all... but it does kinda remind me of horse feed...
@davewojtylko53485 ай бұрын
Man, the faces Brian is making starting around the 53:20-ish mark, after downing both. Yeah, I'm going to make THIS! 😆
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Good luck. 😜
@gabrielpauly79315 ай бұрын
Thank you for doing this... so i don't have to... Ive been curious about it and now i know i don't want to ferment molasses... great vid friends
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Of course!
@desfurria62324 ай бұрын
Mine is Molasses + mugwort + black tea + kombucha + bakers yeast + a bit more white cane sugar. Taste like a bitters beer yeasty which I like, but high alcohol flavor which I don't like but like the effects.
@jameshaws99862 ай бұрын
What does oxidation look/taste like? I know about vinegar, but it's supposed to produce off flavors too and look bad
@CitySteadingBrews2 ай бұрын
Oxidation can make it taste "flat", or sherry like. It also often darkens the color.
@jameshaws99862 ай бұрын
@@CitySteadingBrews thank you!
@pidlid19705 ай бұрын
Been looking forward to this since I spied in the tour of the new Fermenstation. 😜
@metalmaniac14155 ай бұрын
I tried making a historical ginger beer with a molasses base and it turned out very much the same way. weirdly savory, slightly sour, not really something I'd drink but would probably make for a pretty good stir fry sauce
@johnleyshon25815 ай бұрын
Have you ever checked the pH of3a finished wine? if s, what was it.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
They vary. Usually 1-1.5 pH lower than when they start though.
@kenblair65105 ай бұрын
Can't wait for the one-year taste test. I am intrigued by the potential for cooking uses. Also, maybe a different brand of molasses would yield a different result or, perhaps, a different yeast. Anyway, IT'S RE-ALIVED!!!!!!!
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Maybe!
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
It might, dunno. Not all that motivated to ferment molasses again either way, lol.
@kenblair65105 ай бұрын
Understood. Maybe you could start a competition...😅
@californiabrad5 ай бұрын
About 1/2 way through this video I was thinking if it keeps a similar taste take 1/2 of it put it in a slow cooker. In that slow cooker take it down to about 1/2 volume. Add some BBQ sauce seasonings if you want. With what is left make both a ketchup and a mustard sauce and see what is to your liking. I like molasses in my coffee, for the last week or so (today 6/9/24) I have been thinking about molasses based wine. Now I have an idea of ways to tweak this to a cooking wine.
@samm19265 ай бұрын
I accidentally made a bbq brew a few years back. I wanted a smoked kilju so I added some charred pecan sticks, and the sweet and smokey was 100% barbecue
@TristanGoodman-zd1fq5 ай бұрын
What is the type of rubber bands that you use to hold the air lock on the carboy?
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
They come with broccoli for us!
@TristanGoodman-zd1fq5 ай бұрын
I was wondering it looked familiar to that type of band but i didn’t know if you found them on amazon or anything, thank you so much friends!
@nasaboy875 ай бұрын
Honestly watering some of it down and using it as a marinade for a pork tenderloin going on the grill/smoker sounds delicious.
@adampalmer80265 ай бұрын
Ive made a ginger beer twice now, both times delicious but they stall out/finish at around 2.5% - with the same yeast, I can crack out a 7% cider.. any ideas??
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Maybe ph?
@adampalmer80265 ай бұрын
@@CitySteadingBrews thanks for replying! I've never bothered checking before, so I guess get some of those paper tabs and add more water? Id rather have to add chemicals
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
I'd rather not add chemicals. But, pH can need adjustment sometimes.
@adampalmer80265 ай бұрын
@@CitySteadingBrews really appreciate your responses! I meant to say I'd rather NOT 😂. Will look into PH adjustments
@gregorytomasulo43135 ай бұрын
Thanks for tackling the tough questions, like should you ever use molasses in any brew ever, so we don't have to!
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@generrosity5 ай бұрын
Speaking of degassing - did you ever make a video testing/debunking degassing during fermentation? Have you see folks using "magnetic stirring plates" to give continuous agitation, and the "amazing benefits"? The little airlocks are very cute - itsy bitsy tini wini clear two piece air lock cleany
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
We haven't tested no. We aren't likely to use the magnetic stirring plates anyway, so... lol. We just keep it simple.
@GroovyGoosee5 ай бұрын
I consider yall my friends too! I genuinely look forward to getting home from work and watching a few of your videos, and as corny as they are, I love all of Brian's bad jokes lol Kinda makes me sad to hear you're changing because someone else didn't like something you did.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Wait, what are we changing?
@GroovyGoosee5 ай бұрын
I mean hearing you say things like "I stopped doing that joke." I guess "changing" wasn't the best word.
@CitySteadingBrews5 ай бұрын
Well, things change over time too, some jokes just don't hit the same :)
@scottybryant5 ай бұрын
It would probably be a good marinade for pulled pork by your analysis!
@andrewb43265 ай бұрын
I used pineapple juice to make a cider, it tasted savory somehow. I've been curious to try a molasses beer.