So some of the starches are turned to sugar and then into protein. That is a protein increase, correct? But the calories don't change. Still higher protein is good. Thanks for explaining the process.
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Glad to espouse forth..., the calories do go down, measurable apparently but not enough to hurt I think. I would expect almost all the sugars to get eaten up. I don't know how much ethanol gets through, but the ramaki has a marinated hint to it....So some of the starches are turned to sugar and then into protein. That is a protein increase, correct? But the calories don't change. Still higher protein is good. Thanks for explaining the process.
Glad to espouse forth..., the calories do go down, measurable apparently but not enough to hurt I think. I would expect almost all the sugars to get eaten up. I don't know how much ethanol gets through, but the ramaki has a marinated hint to it....![]()
they fill up faster on less dry weight. Gluttons crap it out like Professor Schweetie. He is a glutton, always attacking the newest pile i dole out. Medium pile under his chin. Big pile across dias. He goes for da big one.I suppose calories going down is expected but higher protein means you could use a cheaper feed like corn to raise the calories.
One point though, and it wasn't you that claimed this, fermenting the feed doesn't double the feed or nutrients, or cut your feed bill in half, it doubles the volume of the feed. Kind of like adding lacquer thinner to lacquer paint, makes it spray easier but you gotta spray more of it to make up for the lower solids content.
Also. It is an ancient technique. Must be goodI suppose calories going down is expected but higher protein means you could use a cheaper feed like corn to raise the calories.
One point though, and it wasn't you that claimed this, fermenting the feed doesn't double the feed or nutrients, or cut your feed bill in half, it doubles the volume of the feed. Kind of like adding lacquer thinner to lacquer paint, makes it spray easier but you gotta spray more of it to make up for the lower solids content.
Doubting Thomas here, no doubt the volume of the feed doubles but does its nutritional value change? I would think not unless some sugars are turned into starches or vice versa and somehow unlocked nutrients that were previously unavailable. palatability increased, sure.
Laying hens have one main restraint in eggs per year; the ability to ingest and digest enough protein and other nutrients needed to produce eggs. Which is why the chicken industry came up with laying pellets, not too much that gets wasted, not too little that egg production drops.
Perhaps by feeding swollen feed the bird might eat more if it is more palatable but if it eats twice as much you haven't gained anything, right? If you are feeding a quarter pound of feed per bird per day and its volume is double, that is still a quarter pound per bird.
I prefer my grain products fermented but no more...not fermented. Over a dozen got sick and died, and they were really scrawny....... I really think that the nutritional value increases with the fermented food.
Great conversation with the members! Thank you for starting this thread! This has been featured on our homepage.Hello everyone,
I was wondering if anyone knows how to make a simple, easy, whole corn/layer pellet feeder for chickens? I would like something that keeps the food dry when it rains. I was also wondering if it is a good idea to feed whole corn?
Thanks!
- Clucky