Sweet smelling fermented feed normal?

SwtGrc

Songster
7 Years
Dec 2, 2017
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Northern California
Good morning, good afternoon (to some)!
I just started fermenting a small batch. Seemed to be going well. I let it ferment about 3 days. It smells almost sweet to me. Is this typical? Is it ready to feed or am I looking for something different?
No mold of course. I used wheat and barely this time just to experiment.
Appreciate some feedback, I'm extremely new:p but love to adopt new/better methods.
 
Good morning, good afternoon (to some)!
I just started fermenting a small batch. Seemed to be going well. I let it ferment about 3 days. It smells almost sweet to me. Is this typical? Is it ready to feed or am I looking for something different?
No mold of course. I used wheat and barely this time just to experiment.
Appreciate some feedback, I'm extremely new:p but love to adopt new/better methods.
Sounds more like you made a precursor to beer there to me. I used to home brew but never got into the part of extracting my own sugars from my grains to make my wert.

My brief foray into FF was that it is sour and easily grows hair after 8 hours. Also if you are growing it in cool outdoor temperatures it will go slowly. When I did FF the chicken did love it, but I used commercial feed as my base. Are your grains even cracked to allow the yeast access to the starches they want?
 
Sounds more like you made a precursor to beer there to me. I used to home brew but never got into the part of extracting my own sugars from my grains to make my wert.

My brief foray into FF was that it is sour and easily grows hair after 8 hours. Also if you are growing it in cool outdoor temperatures it will go slowly. When I did FF the chicken did love it, but I used commercial feed as my base. Are your grains even cracked to allow the yeast access to the starches they want?
Darn! No, it was whole grains. They did eat most of it. I've added scratch this time to the original water. Hopefully that will work better?
 
I would think it would do better also to ensure your FF has a chance to get seeded by the environment so no airtight lid. Also I went for a just softer than penutbutter consistancy. Others will use a smidge of yougurt to seed a new start as well.
What do you mean peanut butter consistency?
Also, I've read an article that recommended an airtight lid.
I'm confused now:th
 
The reason for not using an airtight lid is to allow yeast and lactobacillus in to the ferment since it needs to "Seed" bebofe it can grow.
Also related to consistancy I was using crumble as a base not grains and didn't want to force my chicken to drink more than they wanted naturally.

Additionally, you don't want to bottle up an actively fermenting yeast culture as they respire and produce quite some pressure.
 
To give you an idea of the amount of pressure they can generate just think of beer. My final bottling step was to add a known quantity of honey/sugars to the final product and close the bottle cap my yeast did the rest to get it carbonated.
 

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