so GLIB,
Do you think that I could an inkling of what is going on with my chicken ferment by monitoring the Ph for a week?
I know that with peppers it takes 2 months do be slightly edible! If the ph is in the mid 4s I know it's NOT done. Tasting it will definitely be a mouth burning-oh-my-GOD-that's-WRONG experience. Just wondering because frankly I had not thought so much about it not being quite ready!
Any thoughts?
For krauts, the pH decreases continuously. I have very alkaline water (9.2), and when I start a cabbage kraut (you need to press them to get the juice out), the initial pH is between 6 and 7. A mature kraut will be in the low 3 or high 2. For ACV, you start already in the mid 3 from the apple juice (I have done it also with crushed apples, same thing), alcoholic fermentation give you low 3, and finished vinegar is 2.7 to 2.8. But I have never tested the pH of fermented feed! My guess is that a whole corn ferment would start around 4.5 (YMMV, it will depend entirely on your mother) and be at 3.5-4 after one week. These seem like very low number but there are a lot of regular foods that are more acidic than that. Concord grapes, my fave fruit, is 2.8, and apples are 3.5. Most veggies are around 5-5.5.
The phenomena associated with fermented feed are more complex than just pH. I will try to make a list:
0) normal tap water kills bacteria through chlorine and chloramine, and the organic acids counteract that by neutralizing them. specially chloramine which is stable and reacts only with certain acids. if you drink just tap water, you may kill some of your (and your chicken's) species in the gut. ACV in water is good for a number of things and this is one of them (neutralizing chlorinated compounds).
1) bacteria express a host of enzymes themselves, most notably vitamins B and K, which are available both in the upper (due to the ferment) and lower (due to colonization and further fermentation at 100F) digestive tract. Bacteria produce short chain fatty acids (SCFA) from fermentable fiber, and these compounds are particularly anti-inflammatory, and feed the gut (blood does not reach everywhere, and the gut uses these compounds for energy directly, circulating the rest in the bloodstream). They are also extra calories from the same food. FF is plentiful in grains. SCFA also asset in mineral absorption, they stick to a mineral atom due to their acidity, and get absorbed in the gut. The best known SCFA is acetic acid.
for the rest you can follow references from this nice page
http://www.marksdailyapple.com/soaked-sprouted-fermented-grains/#axzz3RqO9MiKt
its data summarized below
2) phytates are compounds that bind to minerals, do not get digested and generally strongly limit mineral absorption. These do 90% disappear in hours to days in millet and wheat, rendering the ferment much more nutritious in minerals.
3) enzyme inhibitors disappear by 58 and 75% in 24 hrs in sorghum, and one completely in millet in 48 hrs. this increases absorption of carbohydrates and proteins from the food
4) lectins appear to need very high temperatures (105F) and they are virtually eliminated but presumably some reduction even at 70F. Eliminating lectins (which are proteins themselves) eliminates one of the major sources of gut inflammation. A healthy gut both improves the health of the animal, being a strong barrier to a host of things (such as bacteria, bacteria fragments, whole proteins), and also absorbs nutrients better. So you see that we are in very complex interactions here, and probably having the same flora work on the feed at mild temperatures (in the fermenter) and hot temps (in the gut) helps.
Agglutinins are toxins that make blood cells clump together (some, like wheat germ agglutinin, are deadly in milligram quantities), when you react to some supermarket meat you may show sensitivity to these things that entered the bloodstream of the animal at a CAFO site. they are themselves proteins so some reduction can be expected. But you get the idea. you can see why traditional societies are so keen on 2-day ferments of grains, and why chicken owners swear by a 4-day ferment. Also why the numbers on that bag of feed are rough indicators.