Romantic notions of the mountain
moonshiner stoking up his still deep in the woods soon fade away when one
seriously attempts to produce his or her own "liquid sunshine". For
example, though distillation is the fun part of the process, preparing the
mash, fermenting it, and using the by-products are the real work -- as well as
the keys to running an efficient operation. MOTHER's staffers have been hard
at it for the last year -- mixing and mashing -- and we've put together a
series of formulas to help take the mystery and confusion out of ethanol fuel
production.
The list of raw materials that can be used to make alcohol grows each day.
Newcomers -- such as mangel-wurzels (or fodder beets), Jerusalem artichokes,
manioc, poplar trees, cellulose waste, and even cattails -- have been added to
the list of traditionals, which includes corn, sugar cane, potatoes, rice, and
barley. (There are also peculiar -- but potentially fruitful -- food industry
byproducts such as waste pastry and stale tortilla chips.)
Despite the variety, every alcohol-producing raw material belongs to one of
three groups: starches, sugars, or cellulose. And though the materials in each
category are treated differently, the end product is always the same: glucose
(or simple sugar), which yeast can easily convert to alcohol. The chart
accompanying this section covers most of the major raw materials and how they
are prepared.
STARCHES
All starches are converted to sugar with the help of enzymes,
which are used during the cooking process. These biochemical activators
function only at the correct temperature and can be destroyed by boiling.
(Enzymes are available from a variety of sources, including THE MOTHER EARTH
NEWS, or you can produce your own at home by sprouting barley.) You'll also
need to agitate the mash thoroughly and later in the process you'll need to
maintain a full rolling boil to bring about complete conversion. (However, if
you use a high-speed mixer or pump to create the violent agitation, the boll
can be eliminated by holding the mash at 180 deg F for 45 minutes while mixing
the brew continuously.)
SUGARS
Sugar crops -- such as sugar beets, sugar cane, and molasses -- give a greater
yield per acre than starch crops as a rule, because the material doesn't
require conversion. Unfortunately, sugars don't store well. Processing
includes squeezing the juice out of the stalks of plants or leaching it from
their tubers. Whichever way you extract the sugar, be sure to sterilize the
syrup to discourage contamination. Then, before you add the yeast, the sugar
concentration should be adjusted to 18% (using a saccharometer). In addition,
yeast food should be introduced along with the yeast to increase alcohol
production.
Cheese whey also contains sugar (in the form of lactose) but is treated
somewhat differently from the other sugars, although the end result is still
good old ethanol.
CELLULOSE
America "produces" 500 million tons of cellulose waste (such as wood
chips and paper-processing by-products) a year. This waste, if properly
handled, could yield almost 40 billion gallons of ethanol annually. However,
cellulose is a hard nut to crack ... in fact, it's made virtually
indestructible by a binding agent called lignin. Only in the last few years
have researchers begun to develop economical methods for converting cellulose.
There are successful approaches based on both enzymatic and acidic conversion.
Cellulase (the enzyme that converts cellulose to glucose) was isolated by the
U.S. Army in 1945. Since then, that enzyme has been improved, and though it is
now fairly expensive, it will be available at reduced prices as demand
increases.
Another method of converting tough cellulosic fiber involves forcing cellulose
pulp (under high temperature and pressure) into a short -- but intense -- acid
bath. The acid immediately converts the cellulose to glucose, but must be
removed quickly to avoid further processing and the destruction of
the glucose. Researchers at New York University and the University of
Pennsylvania have developed still other methods -- very effective extrusion
systems -- but they're well beyond the pocketbook of the small-time operator.
The following chart is meant to serve as a rough guideline to mashing. Once
you start your own operation, you'll probably discover shortcuts that will
allow you to use less heat and/or enzyme powder than the chart indicates. In
addition, you'll need to look into proper mash testing and fermentation
procedures, as well as the best ways to handle and sell your by-products.
STARCHES
Wheat,
Corn, Rye, Barley, Milo, Rice, Cattails
Preparation: Grind to a fine meal using a 3/16" screen
on a hammermill; add 30 gal. water per bushel.
Additives (Enzymes): Add 3 spoons mash cooking powder* per
bushel.
Preboil: Raise temp. to 170 deg F for 15 min.; agitate
vigorously.
Cook: Hold at rapid rolling boil for 30 min.
Cool Down: Cool with coil to 170 deg F; add 3 spoons mash
cooking powder*; agitate for 30-60 min.
Culture: Reduce temp. to 90 deg F; add 6 spoons mash
fermenting powder*; agitate for 10 min.; cover.
Comments: Results: 9% alcohol. Wheat, rye, and barley may
cause foaming: Use Low-FoaM** or mix with cornmeal.
Pastry
Waste
Preparation: Break apart, do not grind; add 30 gal. water per
55 lb.
Additives (Enzymes): Add 3 spoons mash cooking powder* per
bushel.
Preboil: Raise temp. to 170 deg F for 15 min.; agitate
vigorously.
Cook: Hold at rapid rolling boil for 30 min.
Cool Down: Cool with coil to 170 deg F; add 3 spoons mash
cooking powder*; agitate for 30-60 min.
Culture: Reduce temp. to 90 deg F; add 6 spoons mash
fermenting powder*; agitate for 10 min.; cover.
Comments: Results: 9% alcohol. Remove oil (if content is
high) before fermentation.
Potatoes,
Cassava (Manioc), Taro
Preparation: Slice, crush, or break apart; add 10 gal. water
per 100 lb., or as little water as possible.
Additives (Enzymes): Add 5 spoons mash cooking powder* per
100 lb.
Preboil: None.
Cook: Raise temp. to 180 deg F for 30 min., agitate
vigorously.
Cool Down: None.
Culture: Reduce temp. to 90 deg F; add 10 spoons mash
fermenting powder*; agitate 10 min.; cover.
Comments: Results: 9% alcohol.
SUGARS
Sugar
Beets, Mangel-wurzels (Fodder Beets), Artichoke Tubers
Preparation: Slice or crush; add 10 gal. water per 100 lb.,
or as little as possible.
Additives (Enzymes): Acid may be added to beets to reach pH
5.0.
Preboil: None
Cook: Raise temp. to 190 deg F for 20 min.; agitate.
Cool Down: None
Culture: Reduce temp. to 90 deg F; add yeast; agitate 10
min.; cover.
Comments: Results: 7% alcohol. Beets may require some
molasses yeast food**.
Sweet
Sorghum, Cane, Artichoke Stalks
Preparation: Squeeze out juice.
Additives (Enzymes): None.
Preboil: Raise temp to 180 deg F for 10 min. to sterilize.
Cook: None.
Cool Down: None.
Culture: Reduce temp. to 90 deg F; add water to make 18%
sugar; add yeast; agitate 10 min.; cover.
Comments: Results: 9% alcohol. Molasses yeast food** may be
added to increase yield.
Molasses,
Sugar Products
Preparation: None.
Additives (Enzymes): Molasses from beets may need
neutralization with acid.
Preboil: If necessary, raise temp to 180 deg F for 10 min. to
sterilize.
Cook: None.
Cool Down: None.
Culture: Reduce temp. to 90 deg F; add water to make 18%
sugar; add yeast; agitate 10 min.; cover.
Comments: Results: 9% alcohol. Use molasses yeast food** to
insure proper yield. High NaCl content may interfere with fermentation.
Cheese
Whey
Preparation: None.
Additives (Enzymes): None.
Preboil: None.
Cook: Raise temp. to 210 deg F for 10 min. to sterilize.
Cool Down: Separate protein with NH40H; adjust pH to 5.0.
Culture: Reduce temp. to 90 deg F; Add Kluyveromyces fragilis
or Torula cremoris yeast. Fermentation takes only 12 hrs.
Comments: Results: 3% alcohol. Aeration may increase yield.
Whey may be used as liquid with corn, but lactase must be added for
conversion.
CELLULOSE
Preparation: Chop straw or soft material. Wood must be fine
sawdust or treated with 400 deg F steam for 2 hrs.
Additives (Enzymes): Add a 1% caustic solution; hold at 140
deg F for 3 hrs. to separate lignin.
Preboil: Draw off lignin, neutralize.
Cook: Cook at 140 deg F for 4 hrs. in 1% solution of
Biocellulase**.
Cool Down: Remove sugar liquid.
Culture: Reduce temp. to 90 deg F; add brewer's yeast;
agitate for 10 min.; cover.
Comments: Results: 2.5% alcohol. Acid hydrolysis is an
alternative but expensive method.
*
Available from THE MOTHER EARTH NEWS, P.O. Box 70, Hendersonville, N.C. 28791.
** Available from Biocon, Inc., Dept, TMEN, 261 Midland Ave., Lexington, Ky.
40507.
Important!
Read Before Making Mash
MOTHER's New, Improved
Three-step Mashing Recipe
MILLING
Shell, clean, and grind a bushel of corn (56 pounds) into a fine meal of about
the size needed for livestock feed. Use a 3/16" screen on a hammermill
(or a similar grinder) to eliminate any large starch grains. However, do
not grind the corn into a flour. If the grains are too small, it'll be
very difficult to separate the solids from the mash, with a resulting loss of
feed grain and a miserable mess inside your still.
STEP ONE: COOKING
Start with 30 gallons of water in your cooker, and then add the cornmeal
slowly, to prevent lumping. Once the meal is stirred in, stir in 3 level
measuring spoons of MOTHER's Alcohol Fuel Mash Cooking Enzyme (mixed in water)
and bring the mixture up to 170 deg F (77 deg C). Hold the mash at this
temperature for 15 minutes, stirring vigorously throughout the process. Then
bring the liquid to a rapid rolling boil and hold it there for 30 minutes
more. Be particularly careful that the mash doesn't stick to the bottom of the
cooker. (For batches larger than a bushel, we recommend using an automatic
agitator, which should spin at 30 to 45 RPM.)
STEP TWO: CONVERTING
Using the cooling coil, bring the temperature of the mash down to 170 deg F
(77 deg C), and add 3 more measuring spoons of MOTHER's Cooking Enzyme (mixed
in water). Keep the mixture at this temperature for 30 minutes, while you
agitate it constantly.
STEP THREE: FERMENTATION
Start cold water flowing through the cooling coil again, to reduce the
temperature to 90 deg F (32 deg C) as rapidly as possible. Once the mash has
cooled, add 6 measuring spoons of MOTHER's Alcohol Fuel Fermentation Powder (a
complex glucoamylase, yeast, and denaturant combination), stir the
mash for 10 minutes, and then cover the tank.
While it's fermenting, the mash must be kept between 85 and 90 deg F (29-32
deg C). Consequently, you may need to cover the tank with wet burlap in hot
weather, or insulate it during colder months. At this temperature, the mash
will reach maturity in 2-1/2 to 3 days.
TESTING PROCEDURES
Using a saccharometer: At the beginning of fermentation, the
specific gravity of the mash should be about 1.080 (8 to 12% alcohol
potential), while by the end of the process it will have dropped to 1.007 or
less (0 to 1% alcohol potential). Once the specific gravity has remained
constant for 6 hours, you can be sure that the mash is ready for distillation.
But to double check that complete conversion has been attained, both a
standard starch test (using iodine) and a glucose test (using glucose test
strips available at drug stores) must read negative.
YOU MUST HAVE A COOLING COIL
To make a cooling coil, just wind a 30-foot length of soft copper tubing
around a large pipe (6 inches, or more, in diameter), and add garden hose
adapters at each end. Attach the hoses to the tube, and drop the assembly into
your cooking vat.

Properly
fermenting mash.

Saccharometer
floating in fermenting mash.
Preparing
a Mash From Saccharide-rich Materials
Alcohol can easily be produced
from sugar-bearing crops instead of the standard complex carbohydrates such as
corn or grain. For example, sugar cane, sugar beets, or fruit can be processed
-- by crushing the raw material to extract the juices -- to form a perfectly
acceptable mash. Furthermore, the more refined examples of sacchariferous
compounds -- such as raw sugar or molasses -- can also easily be turned into a
high-yield fermentation material.
SUGAR CONCENTRATION
Once the sugar juices have been extracted -- in a cider press, for example --
the sugar concentration in a potential mash must be adjusted to suit the
growth of yeast: between 14 and 18%. Such a concentration should be measured
with a Balling hydrometer -- sometimes called a saccharometer -- at 60 deg F.
Excessively high sugar concentrations (which inhibit yeast growth by promoting
more rapid alcohol fermentation) should be diluted with water, whereas liquids
with low readings (which are wasteful of fermenting space and the
energy used in distillation) should be augmented with a concentrated sugar.
(EXAMPLE: Molasses which contains 60% sugar by weight should be diluted with
three parts water to form a 15% solution.)
pH ADJUSTMENT
The pH should be maintained between 4.0 and 4.5 to give the yeast a healthy
environment for growth, while retarding bacterial formation. Sulfuric acid is
the most common and least expensive substance available for lowering pH,
though lactic acid does the same job, while restricting the growth of butyric
acid bacteria. It's also possible to inoculate the mash with lactic acid
bacteria before fermentation to provide a substitute for the acid itself.

ADDITION OF NUTRIENTS
Some of the more sophisticated distillers actually go so far as to augment
their sugar-heavy mashes with nitrogen and phosphorus, two nutrients which
sugars tend to be deficient in. A variety of ammonium salts -- such as
ammonium sulfate or phosphate -- can be added to encourage a healthy yeast
culture. Such a procedure is usually more complicated than the backyard
alcohol producer should consider, but -- in the event of yeast growth problems
-- some cautious experimentation might be in order.
MIXING A YEAST STARTER
For every 100 gallons of mash remove 1 quart of solution and add 2 ounces of
dry activated yeast to it. Then allow the inoculated wort -- as it is called
in brewing technology -- to incubate for 60 to 90 minutes while holding the
temperature between 77 and 95 deg F. This technique promotes the rapid growth
of yeast and speeds the entire fermentation process.
PITCHING THE WORT
Combining of the yeast-inoculated mixture with the main mash is called
"pitching". There are several ways in which the yeast starter can be
added to the fermentation tank, but the most important aspect of the process
is keeping the mash well aerated. One technique consists of using baffles
which the mash flows over as it enters the tank. The splashing introduces air
to the wort, which encourages a thriving yeast population. Another approach is
to place a compressed air line -- with a bacterial filter -- in the bottom of
the tank. However, for the small producer a human-powered stirrer (a canoe
paddle, for example) will be satisfactory. (Of course, once the yeast
population is thoroughly established, aeration must be halted to allow the
microbes to adapt to the anaerobic conditions which result in maximum
production of alcohol.)
TEMPERATURE CONTROL
Since the
temperature of the fermenting mash should -- ideally -- be around 85 deg F,
the pitching temperature will be determined by the ambient air temperature.
For example, if the outside mercury is quite high, the initial temperature of
the mash should be in the low seventie, and it may be necessary to cool the
wort as the yeast begins to produce warmth of its own. On the other hand, low
air temperature dictates an introductory level of 85 to 90 deg F. (Note: Any
temperature over 90 deg F will both evaporate alcohol and encourage bacterial
growth.)
COMPLETION OF FERMENTATION
Assuming that you have properly controlled the sugar concentration, the pH,
the yeast nutrition, and the temperature, fermentation should be completed in
about 50 hours. Activity will lessen in the mash, and the cap on top of the
mixture will break apart and sink once the yeast has done its job.
A
Handy Hydrometer Jacket
A hydrometer is actually quite a
delicate instrument, and will easily break if handled roughly. By making one
of these protective jackets, you'll not only guarantee that your hydrometer
will be in one piece when you're ready to use it, but also reap a second
benefit: The sturdy cylinder will serve as a vessel to "float" your
proof-measuring tool in while you take alcohol strength readings.
To make the protective device, merely cut a length of 3/4" rigid copper
pipe about 1/2" longer than the hydrometer itself, then locate two
3/4" copper pipe end caps. Solder one of the caps to one end of the tube,
then cut a small piece of sponge, inner tube, or neoprene stopper to fit
snugly into the bottom of this permanently plugged end (shove the "shock
absorber" into the cylinder with a long pencil or a dowel). Now just drop
your instrument into the tube, and cap the open end. If you wish, you can also
glue a piece of padding inside the removable tip. This will just about
guarantee that no matter how roughly you handle the copper jacket, its
delicate cargo will remain unscathed. To use the cylinder as a vessel, just
uncap it, fill it nearly to the brim with your alcohol product, and
"float'' the hydrometer in the liquid. The proof strength will be
indicated on the scale stamped on the side of the instrument.
Mother Earth
Alcohol Fuel
Chapter
1
Introduction
to a Farmer's Fuel ... Alcohol
Introductory Overview of the
Alcohol Production Flow Chart
A Short But Complex Story About
Enzymes and Their Functions
Chapter
2
Farm
Crops for Alcohol Fuel
Raw Materials
More on Raw Materials
Feedstock Handling and Storage
Chapter
3
Basic Steps in the Production of Ethyl Alcohol
More On Conversion and
Fermentation
Fermentation Addendum
Alcohol Yield
Chapter
4
Control of Infection by Planned Sanitation in the Production of Fuel
or Gasohol Alcohol
Chapter 5
MOTHER's Mash Recipes for Alcohol Production
Important! Read Before Making Mash
Preparing a Mash From Saccharide-rich Materials
A Handy Hydrometer Jacket
Chapter
6
Distiller's Feeds
By-product Utilization
Animal Feed By-product
More Information On By-product Utilization
Chapter
7
How the Distillation Process Works
Packed Column
Perforated Plate
Bubble Cap Plate
Solar Stills
The Reasoning Behind MOTHER's
Still Design
Still Operation
Making Your First "Run"
"Economizing" Your
Alcohol Production
Chapter
8
Six-Inch Column Still Plans
Three-Inch Column Still Plans
Bill of Materials
Chapter
9
Two Low-cost Backyard Stills
Alcohol
as an Engine Fuel
How
To Adapt Your Automobile Engine For Ethyl Alcohol Use
Ron
Novak's Do-It-Yourself Water Injection System
MOTHER's Waste Oil
Heater