With my leftover millet from my earlier grain experiments, I am trying my hand at malting. I started yesterday, but today I found this article:
http://www.scientificsocieties.org/jib/papers/2004/G-2004-1303-247.pdf
which has some interesting information regarding the malting of millet. My grains are starting to make tiny roots; based on the information in the paper I think I will dry and kiln them tomorrow. I haven't found ref 22 yet, which describes more details about the drying and kilning (I hope). Perhaps Medsen can work his internet find-em magic.
Also here are a couple of papers of interest, though again I haven't found more than the abstracts so far:
Carbohydrate Polymers
Volume 66, Issue 1, 5 October 2006, Pages 71-74
Journal of the Institute of Brewing 1995, vol. 101, no5, pp. 345-350
REF 22: Pelembe, L.A.M., Dewar, J. and Taylor, J.R.N., Effect of malting
conditions on pearl millet malt quality. Journal of the Institute
of Brewing, 2002, 108, 7–12.
I wonder how much the J Inst Brewing subscription would be. Could get ourselves a Patrons site license? Eh? Well I can dream.
I am not following the wetting procedures from the paper (since I started before I found it). Here is what I did: soak millet in water for 4 hours. drain and spread on paper towel. cover with paper towel, spray with water to moisten.
Half the millet went into a warm oven (initially 90 F and 40% RH) and half into the brew cave (steady 60 F and 50-55% RH). The oven obviously cooled to room temp over a couple of hours, but I have since applied another heat pulse or two. After 1 day root/shoots are appearing on some grains, with the oven grains slightly ahead. I am periodically spraying with water to keep things moist. Sounds like I am roughly along the "medium" water path outlined in the paper, though I don't have a space which stays 25 C.
My drying plan is to put the grain in the oven at about 100 F for an hour or two. Then try to ramp the temp up to about 150 for another hour or two. Do we think that will work? This paper also mentioned not deroot/shooting the malt, which greatly increased the FAN content. Thoughts on root beer?
Update: More Google fun-- http://www.ianr.unl.edu/INTSORMIL/smscientificpubs/Guide to Floor maltingSci publ.pdf
http://researchspace.csir.co.za/dspace/bitstream/10204/2043/3/pelembe_2002.pdf <-- REF 22, I found it!
http://www.scientificsocieties.org/jib/papers/2004/G-2004-1303-247.pdf
which has some interesting information regarding the malting of millet. My grains are starting to make tiny roots; based on the information in the paper I think I will dry and kiln them tomorrow. I haven't found ref 22 yet, which describes more details about the drying and kilning (I hope). Perhaps Medsen can work his internet find-em magic.
Also here are a couple of papers of interest, though again I haven't found more than the abstracts so far:
Carbohydrate Polymers
Volume 66, Issue 1, 5 October 2006, Pages 71-74
Journal of the Institute of Brewing 1995, vol. 101, no5, pp. 345-350
REF 22: Pelembe, L.A.M., Dewar, J. and Taylor, J.R.N., Effect of malting
conditions on pearl millet malt quality. Journal of the Institute
of Brewing, 2002, 108, 7–12.
I wonder how much the J Inst Brewing subscription would be. Could get ourselves a Patrons site license? Eh? Well I can dream.
I am not following the wetting procedures from the paper (since I started before I found it). Here is what I did: soak millet in water for 4 hours. drain and spread on paper towel. cover with paper towel, spray with water to moisten.
Half the millet went into a warm oven (initially 90 F and 40% RH) and half into the brew cave (steady 60 F and 50-55% RH). The oven obviously cooled to room temp over a couple of hours, but I have since applied another heat pulse or two. After 1 day root/shoots are appearing on some grains, with the oven grains slightly ahead. I am periodically spraying with water to keep things moist. Sounds like I am roughly along the "medium" water path outlined in the paper, though I don't have a space which stays 25 C.
My drying plan is to put the grain in the oven at about 100 F for an hour or two. Then try to ramp the temp up to about 150 for another hour or two. Do we think that will work? This paper also mentioned not deroot/shooting the malt, which greatly increased the FAN content. Thoughts on root beer?
Update: More Google fun-- http://www.ianr.unl.edu/INTSORMIL/smscientificpubs/Guide to Floor maltingSci publ.pdf
http://researchspace.csir.co.za/dspace/bitstream/10204/2043/3/pelembe_2002.pdf <-- REF 22, I found it!
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