PROBIOTICS for you and your chickens

Quote:
Hi Trish
Yea I bought a cheap collander from Target and that is what I use It is about 6 inches across and has holes about the size of say the tip of a house Maybe a quarter inch tall by a eight inch wide! Always remember to tap the strainer several times but never mash the grains with anything but you can stir with a spoon while in the collander! I will try to get a pic of mine but it is just a small pasta collander

Ernie
 
Hey Guys!
big_smile.png


Did you know we can use our extra kefir grains to make lacto fermented beverages? Ones with a mild alcohol content like mead! I was flipping through my copy of "Full Moon Feast" by Jessica Prentice, and found several recipes..all of which have a very minimal alcohol content, but are full of healthy enzymes and such- She uses any extra kefir grains for making these beverages....She says to rinse the milk from them before adding them to your beverage.

Mellow Mead

2/3 C raw unfiltered honey
1 1/2 C filtered water, very warm (about 110 F)
6 C filtered water
1/2 C kefir grains- rinsed if used for milk, or water kefir grains

1. Pour honey in a clean, 2 quart mason jar,
2. Pour the hot water over the honey and stir to dissolve.
3. Pour the rest of the filtered water into the jar.
4. Add kefir grains.
5. Cover the jar and put in a warm place for one week.
6. Strain into 2 glass bottles with screw tops (or probably those wire stopper bottles you can get from wine making supply shops- to hold in carbonation without blowing the tops off). Put an equal amount in both bottles. If they are 1 quart bottles, they should be full; if they are liter bottles, add enough water to fill to the top. Screw lids on tightly, and return to the warm place for another week.
7. Transfer to the fridge. Once they are cold you can enjoy them anytime! Open carefully over a sink, or unscrew partially to release some of the carbon dioxide and them open it a more bit by bit so you don't loose all the carbonation.

Lemon Verbena Ale

1 C loosely packed lemon verbena lleaves
2 quarts filtered water
2/3 C Sucanat, Rapadura, or palm sugar
Juice of 1/2 lemon
1/2 C kefir grains

1. Put lemon verbena leaves in a large pot and pour 1 quart of water over them.
2. Bring to a boil, then turn off the heat and let it sit, covered for 30 minutes to infuse.
3. Pour the sweetner into a 2 quart mason jar and strain in the still got verbena infustion, stir to dissolve.
4. add the lemon juice, along with the remaining 1 quart of water, stir to combine.
5. Make sure temperature is down to about 100 F before adding the kefir grains. Add grains, screw on lid and leave to ferment for 2 days in a warm place.

Follow steps 6 & 7 from above, except only let it sit for three days after you have strained the kefir out.

Sounds good, right?? What can't these little grains do?
tongue.png

She also has recipes for root beer, yarrow ale, hibiscus and rose hip soda (yum!), birch beer and sorghum ale.

Let me know if you guys want any of the other recipes and I'll add them. I'm going to try the Mead this week!

Andrea
 
Quote:
I use a fine mesh strainer and gently stir around with a plastic spatula to push the curd through the mesh. The batch I strained yesterday was about 3/4 whey to 1/4 kefir, so I strained out my grains and gave that batch to the animals.
 
AndreaS--thanks for posting the 2 Mead & Ale recipes. Hmmmm, I have a couple of jars of raw honey, a packet of champagne yeast on hand to make Mead, yet your recipe sounds more do-able for small batches. Dh & I like Mead, but I have to be very careful and not drink the commercial kind that contains sulfites. Just thinking about sulfites makes me start itching.

Do you know if dried Lemon Verbena would work? I have a small jar of leaves that I dehydrated last year.
 
It's a honey wine. I recall my mom telling me that in olden times, a newlywed couple would be gifted with enough mead to drink for a month, hence the name honeymoon. The Bees Lees is a collection of mead recipes in case anybody wants to try making some using champagne yeast. I've got so many bookmarks it's unreal.
roll.png
 
Quote:
I'm sure you could use dried leaves- I mean, basically you are making a strong tea/infusion to add to your other ingredients, right? I imagine you would just use less? Like with dried herbs in cooking.....try it and let us know how it turns out! I'm kicking myself in the butt for not drying any of my lemon verbena from last summer. I have a potted lemon geranium inside, and i was thinking of maybe trying that instead of the verbena.

The book, "full moon feast" is really good. She has all kinds of great recipes and lots of information. It's one of the books Sally Fallon recommends, and has lots of instructions for tradition skills like fermentation and rendering lard. I love it.
 
The book, "full moon feast" is really good. She has all kinds of great recipes and lots of information. It's one of the books Sally Fallon recommends, and has lots of instructions for tradition skills like fermentation and rendering lard. I love it.

I'll have to get that one then. I already have Nourishing Traditions.

I raise a lot of eyebrows among in-laws and some of my family members because I drink raw milk, eat butter instead of those RBD spreads
sickbyc.gif
, and have weird concoctions growing on what little counter space I have.
smile.png
I really wish our tiny house was large enough to have a real utility room where there's plenty of space to do more fermentations. A laundry closet just doesn't cut it.

Do you render lard too? I used to do it over a fire in the fall, but now I use a crock pot.

I was talking to a local grass farmer about the possibility of asking his other customers if they might be interested in starting a local WAP chapter, either for northeast TN or southwest VA. Do you have a chapter near you or get the WAP newsletter? I let my subscription lapse a couple of years ago when money got very tight and I just kept forgetting to renew it.​
 
Last edited:

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom