Mk Neal wrote:Do you malt you own rye? I have never seen rye malt for sale in the store.
Thomas Agresti wrote:I'm curious what you're putting into the gruit?
elle sagenev wrote:My husband has made it quite a few times. He burns the bread, like burnt burnt, in the toaster (outside of course). Then he puts it in the liquid to boil, etc.
Harmony d'Eyre wrote:This is an interesting question, and I'm now following your thread to see how it turns out.
I don't have any experience making miso myself, but I found an older thread that might be useful to you discussing making miso from soy, chickpeas, adzuki beans, etc.:
https://permies.com/t/52034/kitchen/miso-home
Mk Neal wrote:Maybe by using less sugars than called for you are inadvertently fostering a less-tasty fermenter than what was intended? The bread kvass (or Estonian Kali) recipes I have seen use a large amount of honey or sugar, it is almost like a short-fermented mead. The botanicals may only be used for part of the fermentation too.
Anne Miller wrote:
the brew smells horrid and reminds me of the pong coming from the half-rotten orange peels in my compost heap.
The orange peel may be your problem. A google search talked about adding fruit such as raisins or apples.
How much honey did you use? 4 cups of sugar was what I saw mentioned.
Kvass is made by the natural fermentation of bread, such as wheat, rye, or barley, and sometimes flavoured using fruit, berries, raisins, or birch sap. Modern homemade kvass most often uses black or regular rye bread, usually dried, baked into croutons, or fried, with the addition of sugar or fruit (e.g. apples or raisins), and with a yeast culture and zakvaska ("kvass fermentation starter")
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kvass