Fermenting Chicken Feed: A Straightforward Method

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Fermenting is a simple process which involves soaking chicken feed then feeding it to your chickens. It is similar to a sourdough starter! And there are so many benefits!

The Benefits
  • It is easier for your chickens to digest, especially if you are feeding them pellets or crumbles. Even grains get softer after soaking.
  • Your chickens will eat less. Soaking expands the food, and chickens also digest the fermented feed more thoroughly.
  • It is harder to spill than dry food. But even if a bit is spilled, the chickens will gobble it up. Sometimes it takes them a while to get used to fermented feed, but once they do they love it!
  • Tests have shown that chickens who eat fermented feed lay more eggs and they have thicker shells. By this I mean female chickens; roosters won't lay eggs no matter how much fermented feed you give them! ;)
  • Fermenting brings out probiotics that strengthen the chickens' immune system, making them less likely to get sick.
  • It adds more nutrients! Good for gut health too!
  • The chickens have shinier feathers, look healthier, act healthier, and are healthier. Some people even claim that they poop less and that their poo is less messy and smelly when they are fed a diet of fermented feed!
  • As said before, the chickens love it!

Now you're probably thinking, "how to I get this marvelous food?" Hold your horses, I'm getting there!

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How To Do It
First, gather all your suppplies. You will need:

  • A bucket
The size of your bucket depends on how many chickens you have. I use a one-gallon bucket for my flock of 10-20 chickens, mixed standards and bantams. If you have a very small flock you could probably just use a kitchen container.
  • A loose-fitting lid for the bucket
Make sure the lid is not tight! If it is, it will explode and make a mess. As long as a bit of air can still go out you should be good!
  • A stirring stick
Currently, I'm using a brand-new paint stick. It is a bit flimsy, but food doesn't stick to it and it is just the right size. That should give you an idea of what to look for in a stirring stick!
  • A shallow container
It is nice (but not necessary) if your chickens can reach in without standing on the rim or jumping in, but the sides should still be tall enough to keep the food in. Or you could just dump the feed on the ground, if you prefer.
  • A scoop
I like a 1 cup scoop so I can easily keep track of how much my flock eats per day. But if you don't care about that kind of thing, it doesn't matter.
  • Water & chicken feed
The water should be drinkable. More about chicken feed later!


1. Put your chicken feed in the bucket. I wouldn't dare fill the bucket any more than half-way with pellets You still have to add water, and pellets swell a lot! In my experience, grains don't swell as much.

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Feed in the bucket.

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Water has been added.

Add enough water that it is about an inch or two above the food, or maybe more if you are using pellets. For your first time you will want a little extra water (though not too much) so you can check for bubbles, as you will see in step 3

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Loose-fitting lid on bucket. You can also see my stirring stick and scoop on top.

2. During the first day check it at least twice to make sure you have enough water. A little extra is better than not enough. After day one, feel free to experiment with water levels to see what you like best. I like mine to be pretty thick, with extra liquid but not so much that it is "liquidly." Your ferment should never be dry, as shown in the picture below.

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This feed needs more water!

3. Around day 2-3 it will be ready (by "day two" I mean 24 hours after you started fermenting)! I have been told that finished ferments have a smell that is hard to describe (the best adjective somebody gave me was "sort of fruity"), but because my nose doesn't have a good sense of smell, I judge the bubbles.

When you stir normal chicken feed in water, a few bubbles are sure to come up. But when the ferment is ready, it will bubble excessively at the slightest of pushes from the stirring stick. You will know it when you see it.


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A healthy ferment! Notice all the bubbles.

4. Once your ferment is ready, scoop some out into your shallow container. I drain most of the juice in the scoop back into the bucket. My chickens don't drink the juice.

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Fermented feed in shallow container.

I don't have a set amount that I feed my chickens. I prefer to scoop out a little extra. They will eat the leftovers in the evening or early the next morning.

After you scoop out some chicken feed, add some dry feed into the bucket. Here is a secret: you can control how full your bucket is by how much dry feed you add every morning. If your bucket is too full, add less feed. If your bucket doesn't have enough, add more feed.

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Dried chicken feed on top of the ferment, ready to be stirred in.

Check the water level. As mentioned in step 2, please experiment to find what you like best! Once you are done with this, put the lid back on and head out to the coop!

5. Once you are in the coop, let the chickens at their feed! It may take them a couple of days to get used to their strange new food, but once they do they will forever adore it! I have never met a chicken who does not like fermented feed!


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It is a race to get to the feed every morning!

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Sometimes the smaller birds will jump into the bin and eat. The only disadvantage is their muddy feet.


After the chickens are done eating, I take the bin and scoop and give them a quick rinse. This just makes cleaning easier in the long run.

Repeat steps 4 and 5 every morning!


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Choice of Feed
I don't know a ton about feed choices, but I'll give you my best!

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Whole grains from Big D Ranch!

Gains are best to ferment, because they have more nutrients than pellets. When grains are fermented, they open up to allow more nutrients They are also less sloppy and easier to manage than pellets.

Pellets (and crumbles) work, but they are not the best. Fermenting pellets is like putting greens into a smoothie; yummier, but with about the same nutrients.

Corn is not the best either. It is not as nutritious as other grains. It works, but it could be better. And of course, you wouldn't ever want a single type of grain to be the sole part of your flock's diet!

Kahm Yeast
After just a few days of fermenting, you may find a thin white film of something mold-like on top of your water. Upon discovering it, most people (including myself) think it is mold.

Don't panic! After some research and advice from friends, I found out this is Kahm Yeast. Its a yeast, not a mold. It is harmless, though I have heard that it can affect the taste a bit, and can make the ferment pretty smelly.

Kahm Yeast is white and grows like a film on top of the water. It almost always has bubbles trapped under the film. On the first day it is very thin with a few bubbles here and there. After that it rapidly gets stronger until it looks like a bunch of wrinkly, gray film.


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Day one of Kahm Yeast.

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Day two of Kahm Yeast.



It is not harmful, though it does smell. Some people even claim that it provides extra nutrition!

When I ferment outside I just scoop it into the container and let the chickens eat it with the rest of their feed.


When I find Kahm Yeast, I skim the majority off and throw it away. This is one reason to keep the water an inch above the feed; to make it easy to remove the Kahm.

Over time, the Kahm Yeast smell grows. When it gets to the point where my family start pestering me (every couple of months) I sometimes let my ferment die out by not adding any food and completely start over. I dump out all the old water and give my bucket and stirring stick a good scrub. This helps keep the Kahm down a little in the next batch.

Warmer temperatures help the Kahm Yeast grow faster. So by keeping your ferment in a cooler area you will be able to control the Kahm better.


Additional Notes
  • I take care of my fermented feed in the morning, because that is when I feed my chickens. I don't allow my adult chickens free-choice unless I am on vacation. If you want, you could feed your chickens twice or even three times per day; it is just personal preference.
  • If I am going on a short trip, I put extra water and feed in the bucket and let it be, but if I am going on a long vacation I let my fermented feed level in the bucket drop lower and lower, then start over when I get back.
  • I ferment feed outside during the summer and inside during winter. My family makes me keep it in the garage because of the smell from the Kahm Yeast.
  • I have not yet dealt with mold in my ferment, but if I ever did, I would completely restart and wash my bucket very well.
  • Recently my feed bin tipped over and got stuck on top of one of my pullets. The first time this happened I was near and lifted it off her. The second time I did not find her until several hours later and she suffocated. From her death, I have learned to stay near my chickens while they are eating from a tall container that is tippy. To clarify, it was not the fermented feed that killed her, it was suffocation from being stuck under the bin.
  • As I mentioned before, it might take a while for the chickens to get used to fermented feed. If they refuse to eat, cut off all access to dry feed. If they are used to having access to food 24/7 it will take them a couple days to learn they should eat all they can at your one or two designated meal times. Be patient with them and don't lose hope!
  • For future reading you can check out this thread: https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/fermented-feeds-anyone-using-them.645057/post-8695537
  • Remember, everybody's method is different. And that's okay! I would love to know what you do in the comments!

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About author
PioneerChicks
The Creative Homesteaders raise and love on chickens, pigeons, cats, honeybees, rabbits, and a dog! We love nature and are working on becoming more self sufficient. We breed and conserve endangered heritage breeds!

About myself personally... I've been raising chickens for almost eight years and have participated in 4-H since 2017! I love using my chicken knowledge to help other people!

If you have any questions or feedback about my article, please comment below or send me a PM. Don't forget to rate and review!

Latest reviews

I’ve been wanting to try fermenting feed for my chickens for some time now and I finally got started last night. I work out of town for 3 to 5 days every other week so I figured that if I could get it started as soon as I got home this time I could see how it goes. I have pellets and it’s organic so that’s what I’m going with. I got up this morning to fully absorbed water so I added more. As soon as it settled I got bubbles and a little foam! I added more water and then decided that my sourdough discard would speed things up. They love the sourdough discard anyway. I wasn’t sure if anyone else had added that but right now, less than 24 hours, it smells amazing!
What a great article on fermented feed! Even a total beginner to it, like me, can find it easy to follow along with and learn from.
:jumpy🐔 I love this great article. I need to save on feed with 10 sweet chickens. Thank you so much!

Comments

My girls are very picky. When I started giving them dried meal worms, they loved it. Ha! After giving them live ones, they turn their beaks up at dried ones. Won't touch them. I ended up returning an open, almost full bag of the dried ones to the pet store and just told them to give it to the critters in the store. As for what I add in for flavor, it's usually like my leftover cooked grits, oatmeal, rice, all of which they love, sometimes a little honey. And oh how they love cooked sweet potatoes! I'm careful to keep the volume of extras low, so their main food is always the formulated feed pellets and I never give them meat. I keep bags of frozen fruit for my own smoothies, so a few frozen blueberries or raspberries are a special treat to mix in. It's an especially good way to give them their flax seeds (THE Omega 3 source for their eggs!) The seeds are so tiny and it's one of their very favorite things to fight over when it's scattered on the ground, so mixing it in their damp food is what works best. That's why I started mixing a lot of their treats in the fermented food. Treats on the ground can lead to battle. They have free range all day with lots of dead fall with bugs and they eat their layer food really well, so I don't really need to add extras to get them to eat it. They need NO encouragement to eat! With only 2 hens, instead of a larger flock for them to interact with, my interactions with them are not just for raising them for a food source. Food is their life, they are much loved pets and I get a lot of pleasure in dressing up their food and watching their reactions to it.
Why don't you give them meat? Just curious
 
Chickens LOVE meat! I give them ground beef ( past sell by date) or crushed lamb bones, they go crazy, and that is when you see the dinosaurs they came from, I wouldn’t give them chicken or raw pork for health reasons
Oh thank you for that info I was actually starting to feel sick thinking I had done the wrong thing but mostly my chickies leave whats not good for them alone like when they sneak into my garden and ravish my spinach, lettuce, corn, broccoli, strawberries etc but leave well alone my onions, garlic, spring onions and leeks....
 
Oh thank you for that info I was actually starting to feel sick thinking I had done the wrong thing but mostly my chickies leave whats not good for them alone like when they sneak into my garden and ravish my spinach, lettuce, corn, broccoli, strawberries etc but leave well alone my onions, garlic, spring onions and leeks....
My chickies steal the huge beef bone from my american staffy lol I wish I had a picture because he is the sweetest thing and just gives them up but he looks as though he could eat my girls if he wanted too😂😍🐶🐔💕
 
I think they forbid feeding chickens meat back when mad cows disease was a problem, here in Germany, you are still forbidden to feed meat to your chickens if you sell them/their eggs, but that is not nature, in the wild, 80% of the foods chickens consume are bugs/grubs/worms, and to make them vegetarian does not make them happy :(
I totally agree only because like I said my chickies steal the dog bones and go crazy over them and believe me they are spoilt girls when it comes to their feed plus vegie scraps...
 
Great information! I would like to try.
I am looking whole grain in the internet, but what kind grain do I need to get?
One kind or mix different kind?

Any informations would be appreciated.

Thank you.
 
Great information! I would like to try.
I am looking whole grain in the internet, but what kind grain do I need to get?
One kind or mix different kind?

Any informations would be appreciated.

Thank you.
If you plan on feeding your chickens FF only then you will want to find a brand of chicken feed that sells while grains, because they have all the important nutrition. If FF will not be the sole diet of your chickens, any grain mix will work.
 
Great information! I would like to try.
I am looking whole grain in the internet, but what kind grain do I need to get?
One kind or mix different kind?

Any informations would be appreciated.

Thank you.
I feed my girls FF made from whole grains. We eat organic as do my chickens, since we eat their eggs and birds who make a trip to freezer camp. Organic whole hard red wheat, soft white wheat, oats, barley, flax seed, kelp, fish meal, peas (whole or split). DON'T put rye in the mix--it has toxic elements to it and my girls refused to eat. Had to buy another round of grains and "dilute" it enough that the rye wasn't a problem. Also, too many oats will give them the runs. Found this out by experience.

Attached is a spreadsheet link that is super helpful. It calculates your mix so you know how much protein and fat is in your proposed mix.

The link should takes you to the lady who made the form (I think) and there is a download link in the first paragraph.

 
Do you cook you meat for them or feed it to them raw?
If the ground beef is beyond sell by date, I fry it up until all the pink is gone, if I get a cheap batch which is still good, I sprinkle some oregano and calcium over the raw beef and feed it to them, they also love bits of beef heart my dog gets ( I have to cut it up fine) and when we eat bbq lamp chops I just crush the bones fine with an axe and they are flying up to be the first to get some
 
I live in an area where 100+ degree days are normal in the summer. That being said usually the ladies don't like eating that much when it's hot, but I've found if you mix cold water in the feed and mash it up with some oats they love it. It's not fermented because I can't determine what it will do when it gets that hot. Also on an unrelated note save watermelon rinds and put them in the fridge for the following day. When its over 100 the chickens love them and its a great way of getting cool fluids into them.

On the flip side when its cold you can put heated water into a tin pan with some feed pellets and oats (even toss in ground-up eggshells to boost calcium and help with shell thickness).
 
This website publishes newsletters and pushes articles like blogs that I get through e-mail monthly. Great site and I missed this the first time around when it was published. Popped up yesterday on my computer! Thank you for writing this.
Julie Sz
Why don't you give them meat? Just curious
I don't think there's anything wrong with giving them meat in moderation, but it isn't necessary in their diet. Mine have a yard that is rich in well composted ground cover with bugs to chase and worms and baby snakes to scratch up all day long. I do know that any carnivore (and I am one, in moderation) has much smellier feces. I can't own a dog or cat because I throw up if I have to empty a litter box, get a whiff of dog poop, or have to clean up hair balls and puke. Their coop is inside a partitioned off section of my huge garage, with the floor covered with hay. Every day I sprinkle fine pine shavings on the poop piles on the hay outside and inside the coop, let it dry the poop a bit, then pick it all up with a paper towel. Not a bit of nausea and the smell never gets strong in the garage. I have offered my hens a cooked shrimp. They weren't interested. They don't miss meat because they don't know it.
 
I feed my girls FF made from whole grains. We eat organic as do my chickens, since we eat their eggs and birds who make a trip to freezer camp. Organic whole hard red wheat, soft white wheat, oats, barley, flax seed, kelp, fish meal, peas (whole or split). DON'T put rye in the mix--it has toxic elements to it and my girls refused to eat. Had to buy another round of grains and "dilute" it enough that the rye wasn't a problem. Also, too many oats will give them the runs. Found this out by experience.

Attached is a spreadsheet link that is super helpful. It calculates your mix so you know how much protein and fat is in your proposed mix.

The link should takes you to the lady who made the form (I think) and there is a download link in the first paragraph.

This is a very helpful post, thanks for sharing!
 
I feed my girls FF made from whole grains. We eat organic as do my chickens, since we eat their eggs and birds who make a trip to freezer camp. Organic whole hard red wheat, soft white wheat, oats, barley, flax seed, kelp, fish meal, peas (whole or split). DON'T put rye in the mix--it has toxic elements to it and my girls refused to eat. Had to buy another round of grains and "dilute" it enough that the rye wasn't a problem. Also, too many oats will give them the runs. Found this out by experience.

Attached is a spreadsheet link that is super helpful. It calculates your mix so you know how much protein and fat is in your proposed mix.

The link should takes you to the lady who made the form (I think) and there is a download link in the first paragraph.

Thank you so much. I will check out this link!
 
i tried FF a few months ago and had no success...they did not eat it...so after a few months i gave up.....but then again my chickens were very finicky at the time...now they eat almost anything, so i am going to give it a try again
It took a little bit before our flock decided they really liked the stuff. I think it was something new for them so it took them a little time to come around to it.

Even though our flock has other dry feed and scratch to graze on 24-7, they still go crazy over the FF when I set the dish down for them. They all act like they have been starved and the feeding frenzy is on.

I ferment the feed in a spare room and the rate at which the grain ferments will very at times because of the fluctuating room temp. When the grain is fermented it will have a very distinctive sour smell to it, just like taking the cap off of a vinegar bottle and taking whiff of it. :sick
 
My chickens LOVE their every other day fermented feed. I have been doing this for several years and have a pretty good system down. I have a grandpa's feeder with pellets and they get fresh veggies mixed into their fermented gruel every other day. I go to Winco, beer making stores, and other places to make my own feed to ferment which is VERY economical. Garden Betty has a fantastic chicken feed calculator that I use that determines how much protein I want to make up. Here is the link to her website. https://www.gardenbetty.com/garden-...culator-for-determining-your-protein-content/

Basically I make a batch every other day and re use the water for healthier fermentation. Yes during the summer it can smell a bit but I have 5 chickens and do not need to use a huge bucket. Here are some photos of my system. I didn't know what the smelly stuff is and appreciate learning that it is called Kahm yeast. It is not too strong since I pour it off every other day.
 

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