UJSM

Sugar wash info and questions

UJSM

Postby Sam. » Fri Jul 22, 2011 7:33 pm

Can someone please post what this UJSM recipe is I keep reading about I am having trouble finding the fucking thing
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Re: UJSM

Postby MacStill » Fri Jul 22, 2011 7:36 pm

It's the same as my bourbon knock off in tried and proven recipes ;)

Only UJSM just uses corn
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Re: UJSM

Postby MacStill » Fri Jul 22, 2011 7:43 pm

UJSM

This method was originally taken from J.W. Walstad's book Simple Sour Mash to Simple Alcohol Fuel! and has been modified according to my experiences.

This method is the most inexpensive I have found for producing Corn Whiskey. It is perfect for beginners because it does not rely on skill for mashing and does not require any cooking which greatly reduces the hassles and expenses.

I used this method for years until I mastered the processes involved in creating a quality sour mash whiskey, at which point I moved on to cooked mashes and more advanced efforts.
Ingredients

For a 5 gallon mash: (20l)
5 gallons soft, filtered water.
7 lbs (3.2kg) cracked corn. 6-8 pieces/kernel is the proper crack. If using bird feed, make sure it is perishable, or in other words is free of preservatives.
7 lbs (3.2kg) of granulated sugar.
1 tbsp yeast (distillers yeast if available.)
Theory

Unlike a cooked mash, a simple mash does not rely on grains for starch. The corn is included for a bit of alcohol, but mainly for flavor while the sugar provides the alcohol. The conversion of starches to sugars is a natural process, accelerated by cooking. An uncooked mash will convert starches to sugars but much more slowly and less efficiently. Your added sugar will ferment rather easily and will provide most of the alcohol in your beer.

Your first distillation run will be a "sweet" run since you will not have any backset to use for sour mashing. I recommend using the spirits you collect in your first run as feints for the next run. Yes, all of them. Your second run will produce your first batch of sour mash, which will be good, but in truth the flavour and consistency will not start to reach their peak until the third or fourth run in my experience.

Practice, practice, practice!
First Fermentation

Put your ingredients into the fermenter in the order listed and close it. You should start to see fermentation of the sugar within 12 hours. It should take 3 or 4 days for the ebullition to end. Siphon your beer out of the fermenter with a racking cane and charge your still.

Siphoning is the best method because it allows you to pull the beer off the top of your lees, leaving them undisturbed. You do not want suspended solids in your still and this method works quite well in keeping the lees at the bottom of your fermenter.

At this point you need to make your first decision. How much backset will you use in your subsequent mashes? The legal minimum for a sour mash is 25%. I do not like to go above 50% in my experience. For the sake of simplicity, let's say you will start with 25% backset. This means that for a 5 gallon mash you will use 1-1/4 gallons of backset and 3-3/4 gallons of water.

Since you will be running your still for hours, you do not want to leave the fermenter empty. Put your 3-3/4 gallons of water back into the fermenter so your yeast won't die while you distill. While you're at it, this is a perfect time to scoop the spent corn off the top and replace with an equal volume of newly cracked corn. Later we'll add the 1-1/4 gallons of backset and 7 more pounds of granulated sugar.
Basics of Pot Distillation

There are two basic types of pot distillation:
The first involves a traditional pot still, which has no cooling in the neck or column. The distillate produced is lower in proof than that produced by a reflux still with a fractionating or splitting column. This is the traditional method of distillation and requires multiple runs. The distiller will save up enough low wines from the first runs or stripping runs to fill the still for a second run. If a triple distillation is desired, the product from second distillations are collected until enough spirit is saved to fill the still for the third spirit run, and so on.
The second type of pot distillation is performed in a reflux still equipped such that the column can be cooled during distillation. This type of still is far more efficient and can produce a high proof, high quality spirit in a single run.
First Run

Pot distill your wash, being careful to keep things running slowly. For beginners, 2-3 drops of distillate exiting the worm every second is just about the perfect speed. As you collect, periodically put 4-5 drops of distillate into a spoon with an equal amount of water and sip it. You will learn to identify the off-taste of the heads very quickly.

For your first run it is best to take very conservative cuts. I recommend very generic whiskey cuts, say 80% down to 70%. As your skills improve you will be able to go deeper into your cuts, tasting periodically for the off-taste of the tails. Once you learn to identify the off-tastes of the heads and tails you will be able to make proper cuts without the use of a hydrometer, a big step toward becoming a competent distiller.

By law any spirits collected above 80% cannot be called whiskey because they are considered too "light" or neutral. In other words, they are too high in proof and thus do not properly imbue the spirit with the flavour of the grain mash. I use anything collected above 80% as feints for the next run. For more information on the legal definitions for whiskies and other spirits check out Title 27 of the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations.

Remember to discard the first 150ml or 5 fluid ounces collected so you don't get any methanol build up over time and batches.
Second Fermentation

Your fermenter should now contain 3-3/4 gallons of water, your old yeast (barm) and your old corn.

Take 1-1/4 gallons of backset from your previous distillation and add to it another 7 pounds of granulated sugar. This will dissolve the sugar rather easily. Hot backset directly from the still works better at dissolving sugar, but adding hot backset to your fermenter will kill your yeast, so allow the backset to cool if you use this method.

Next, add this mixture of sugar and cooled backset to your fermenter, which already contains 3-3/4 gallons of water. This will bring your total beer volume back to 5 gallons.

Now is the time to make sure you have removed and replaced any spent corn kernels, which float to the top of the fermenter. You only need to do this if you plan on a continual ferment, that is, past 7 or 8 fermentations at which point your corn would otherwise be expended.

Cover the fermenter and let it ferment for another 3-4 days or until the ebullition ends.

Congratulations, if you have done everything properly you are now ready to run your first sour mash!
Second Run

Siphon off your beer and charge your still. Again, replace 3-3/4 gallons of water into your fermenter so your yeast doesn't die while you distill.

Distill your whiskey in the same manner you did during your first run, being conservative with your cuts until you gain more skill. Anything collected under 80% ABV on this run is considered a Sour Mash whiskey. Congratulations! This spirit is a palatable moonshine when collected directly out of the still.

Collect your run down to your stopping point. Again, I recommend 70% ABV for beginners, perhaps a few degrees into the 60's if you are bold. Save all of the spirit run as good sippin' whiskey.

Most moonshiners keep running their stills long after they are finished with the spirit run, collecting down to about 20% ABV before stopping. Together, the heads and tails are reused as feints. I do not normally go as low as 20%, you'll have to find your comfort zone. If you start to get blue or green flecks in your spirit, you've gone too far or run things too hot.
Repeat the Process

After your run, collect 1-1/4 gallons of backset to return to the fermenter for your next batch. Repeat the process starting at the Second Fermentation.

You are now producing a simple sour mash whiskey and with practice you will be able to produce a very high quality moonshine. Age this whiskey in an uncharred oak barrel to produce a traditional Tennessee-style whiskey.


Safety first, Duke boys. Have fun!



So, for 40l wash. Recipe goes like this.

7kg cracked feed corn,
7kg raw or white sugar (I like raw)
Dissolve sugar in hot water, then add enough cold water to make 40 l total.


Strip in potstill discarding 100ml of foreshots down to 20%. Save the strip. While the drum is empty, scrape off 1/3rd of a bucket of corn and add 1/3rd of a bucket of new corn.
Add some water (20l or so) to the yeast bed so you don’t burn the yeast next step.

Use 10l of hot slops (backset from the still run) to dissolve 7 more kg of sugar, stir it up and add to the drum. Add water to bring it up to the level it was before.

Watch it ferment and strip again and again.

When you have 40l of strip saved up, do a slow spirit run in the potstill making careful cuts. Age it on toasted oak sticks.

_
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Re: UJSM

Postby R-sole » Sat Jul 23, 2011 6:17 am

UJSM is the staple round here, i've refined the recipe a little though.

If you use about 20% of your grain bill in cracked malt barley (beer malt) it is much more flavourful and it gives the mash an occasional boost as it converts some of the corn at fermenting temps.

If you cut the amount of backset down to 20-25% it will prevent problems with the mash becoming too acidic and stalling. Other than that, it goes forever.
Take about 1/5th of the grain out each time and add fresh cracked corn and crushed malt. My neighbour uses dme.
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Re: UJSM

Postby SBB » Tue Aug 16, 2011 8:03 pm

[quote=""My neighbour uses dme.[/quote]
dme??????.........scuze me for asking..but what is that ????
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Re: UJSM

Postby Sam. » Tue Aug 16, 2011 9:05 pm

[quote][/quote]

I believe DME is Dried Malt Extract (used for kit brewing beer normally)
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Re: UJSM

Postby SBB » Tue Aug 16, 2011 9:07 pm

Tank ya very much S&L
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Re: UJSM

Postby R-sole » Wed Aug 17, 2011 5:25 am

Yep, he buys little 500gm packs of Coopers Malt Extract from the brew section at Woolies.
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Re: UJSM

Postby SBB » Fri Sep 30, 2011 7:44 pm

Im now at the point where I have about 45L of UJSM low wines stored up so Im getting ready to do my first real spirit run with the pot still soon. These low wines range from 1st generation through to 4th gen. To try and get the best flavor I can I intend stripping my 5th generation and mixing it with the rest before I do the spirit run, maybe even leaving the first generation aside for now.
Ive read on HD's UJSM thread and also on Artisan Distiller that some people recommend mixing a percentage of wash in with the low wines when doing the spirt run.
Just wondering if those here who have done UJSM recommend doing this and if so what percent wash to low wines???
Most figures Ive seen are around the 10% mark
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Re: UJSM

Postby MacStill » Fri Sep 30, 2011 8:56 pm

I would run the 5th gen wash in a spirit run with all your low wines if your boiler has the capacity to do it all in one run, I would also save that run to do through your bubbler when you get it done ;)
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Re: UJSM

Postby SBB » Fri Sep 30, 2011 9:07 pm

At my current rate of progress the whole shed will be full of low wines before the Bubblers finished.
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Re: UJSM

Postby MacStill » Fri Sep 30, 2011 9:17 pm

you've done the yards getting to the 5th gen & you've done all the difficult bits on your bubbler, dont waste all that work on being impatient..... rack that 5th gen into a cool spot n get that bubbler done...... you wont regret it I promise ;)
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Re: UJSM

Postby R-sole » Sat Oct 01, 2011 4:34 am

10-50% is what i use depending on the outcome i'm after.
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Re: UJSM

Postby maheel » Sat Oct 01, 2011 6:58 am

could you run half of it ?

take 1/2 of each gen and run it now, save half for the bubbler

would make a very interesting experiment on taste / quality etc...
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Re: UJSM

Postby R-sole » Sat Oct 01, 2011 9:03 am

That's a good idea Maheel, mix the whole lot together and run half in each still. Would be a great way to compare flavours.
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Re: UJSM

Postby SBB » Sat Oct 01, 2011 9:19 am

Im thinking along those lines Maheel. Ive got about 60L of 5th gen wash almost ready to go. In another week or two Ill have another 60L of 6th gen. Easily enough to experiment with.
Im also keen to get at least one proper spirit run under my belt using the pot I built to fit the beer keg. I seem to have spent more time building the things that using them. :lol:
Last edited by SBB on Sat Oct 01, 2011 9:23 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: UJSM

Postby MacStill » Sat Oct 01, 2011 9:19 am

I have done the same wash through a pot and a bubbler but it wasnt with UJSM, I think you'll be pleasantly surprised with the bubblers product compared to the pot ;)

One of the big pluses for me is the amount of feints you end up with from a bubbler run compared to a pot still, and the cut points on the bubbler are very tight too.

You'll get a bit more flavor through the pot but it's not necessarily better flavor, but everyone's tastes are different.
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Re: UJSM

Postby Kal » Wed Mar 14, 2012 5:12 pm

Fuck me this thing fermented quick. My WPOSW takes about 2 weeks to go below 1.00 on the hydrometer, this thing took 4 days!

Never distilled on a weekday before but I've charged the still with about 20L from this first gen and I'll give it a strip 8-) I want to get my 2nd gen started :mrgreen:
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Re: UJSM

Postby Kal » Sat Mar 24, 2012 1:25 pm

Stripped the second gen today pouring all of my captured alcohol from the first run back in the still. Tasting the output I could tell straight away that there was a massive difference. The first gen certainly had a whisky character but had a bit of a straw or hay taste to it. The second gen didn't have that characteristic, and had alot more flavour and definately tastes like whisky!

I can't wait until I get to the final product on the second distillation. I will need to capture at least two more strip runs before I get to that second distillation though!
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Re: UJSM

Postby Kal » Tue Apr 17, 2012 4:58 pm

Did my first spirit run last weeken on 4 stripped generations. I had about 28 liters and had to add 7 liters to get it below 40%.

I removed foreshots and some heads as I normallyu would with the bok (with all the packing) then shut down the power, removed all the scrubbers (except 1) and ran it from here on in with the valve wide open and about 1100W power. I had 13 750ml wine bottles so I captured in this initially, then pre-empting the tails moved to another 4x 2L wine bottles with the power on full.

Some notes when I tested the ABV later on, bottles 1 & 2 were 81%, and by bottle 13 I was still up at 75% ABV :shock: Next time I will extend my capture through a longer epriod of time.

Aired it out for a day, and I ended up rejecting the first two bottles because tehy were light on flavour, and the 13th bottle because it was becoming quite sweet by that stage and lacking alot of the notes that I associate with whiskey. Possibly still fine to blend with even beyond this bottle though!

I have it aging on some american oak chips that I toasted in the oven at 200C for 2.5 hours, and some bottles also with some chips I took to with a butane torch.

Now the waiting game begins :D
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