Isn’t fermented feed alcoholic??

Ihavesomechickens

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Wouldn’t fermented feed become alcoholic as it ferments due to the fermentation of the feed?

Is alcohol okay for chickens?

I’ve personally never tried fermented feed but I just got this random thought all of a sudden.

And don’t worry I’m not planning on giving my chickens beer. They deserve high quality champagne :lau :gig
 
There may be trace amounts of alcohol, similar to why kombucha companies are legally obligated to put such a statement on their bottles. Sugar + yeast = alcohol.
 
Hmmm.

I think that’s why some people have trouble with fermented feed, as if it was left too long the alcohol content might go up significantly, causing the chicken to ingest larger amounts at once
 
If you want to get tricky, you can use the first to make beer and then the second to make the spent grains into fermented chicken feed! :drool
 
Yeah as others have said lacto-fermentation and yeast fermentation are both totally different fermentations.

Yeast turns the sugars into alcohol while the lactobacillus bacteria turns carbs into lactic acid. So fermenting feed should produce lacto-fermentation naturally because of the carbs. Other things that are lacto-fermented are pickles and krout, which never turn alcoholic.The only reason you MIGHT get yeast fermentation, which would make alcohol, would be if some sugar got in the feed like molasses.

I saw someone mention Kombucha, interestingly Kombucha IS a mix of both fermentation, the SCOBY as the name implies (symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast) is both a yeast and bacteria creating a nice probiotic that can be alcoholic.

Really your fermented feed has very little danger of becoming alcoholic.
 
Yeah as others have said lacto-fermentation and yeast fermentation are both totally different fermentations.

Yeast turns the sugars into alcohol while the lactobacillus bacteria turns carbs into lactic acid. So fermenting feed should produce lacto-fermentation naturally because of the carbs. Other things that are lacto-fermented are pickles and krout, which never turn alcoholic.The only reason you MIGHT get yeast fermentation, which would make alcohol, would be if some sugar got in the feed like molasses.

I saw someone mention Kombucha, interestingly Kombucha IS a mix of both fermentation, the SCOBY as the name implies (symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast) is both a yeast and bacteria creating a nice probiotic that can be alcoholic.

Really your fermented feed has very little danger of becoming alcoholic.
Best answer ever! Thanks!
 

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