To remove the Taint of Must from Wheat
- Put the wheat into any convenient vessel capable of containing at least three times the quantity.
- Fill the vessel with boiling water.
- Occasionally stir the grain, and remove any hollow or decayed grain that floats to the surface.
- After the water has become cold, or after about half an hour has elapsed, draw off the water.
- Rinse the corn with cold water to remove any portion of the water which may have taken up the must.
- Drain the corn completely.
- Without loss of time, thinly spread the corn on the floor of a kiln.
- Thoroughly dry the corn, stirring and turning it frequently during this part of the process.
THE BEST MANNER OF TREATING CORN HARVESTED IN WET WEATHER, OR WHICH HAS BEEN DAMAGED BY IT; AND THE MANNER OF MANAGING THE BREAD MADE FROM GERMINATED GRAIN.
- Dry the wet grain in a baking-oven, which is to be met with in most places.
- Put the grain into the oven immediately after the bread has been withdrawn, when the temperature is such that a person may introduce their naked arm without being much incommoded by the heat.
- Spread the grain into a layer of from three to four inches in thickness.
- Turn the grain frequently to facilitate the disengagement of the vapour.
- At the end of ten or fifteen minutes, according to the state of humidity in which the grain is, withdraw it from the oven.
- Expose the grain to the air until perfectly cooled.
TO REMOVE THE TAINT OF MUST FROM WHEAT.
To remove the Taint of Must from Wheat—Best Method of treating Corn harvested in wet Weather, or damaged by it—Manner in which Bread made from Germinated Grain should be managed; extracted from Professor Donovan’s “Domestic Economy.”
“The wheat must be put into any convenient vessel capable of containing at least three times the quantity, and the vessel must subsequently be filled with boiling water. The grain must then be occasionally stirred, and the hollow or decayed grain, which will float, may be removed. When the water has become cold, or, in general, when about half an hour has elapsed, it is to be drawn off. It will be proper then to rinse the corn with cold water, in order to remove any portion of the water which may have taken up the must; after which the corn, being completely drained, is, without loss of time, to be thinly spread on the floor of a kiln, and thoroughly dried, care being taken to stir and turn it frequently during this part of the process.
“This is all that is required; and I have constantly found that the most musty corn, on which ordinary kiln-drying had been tried without effect, thus became completely purified, while the diminution of weight caused by the solution of the tainted part was very inconsiderable.”
THE BEST MANNER OF TREATING CORN HARVESTED IN WET WEATHER, OR WHICH HAS BEEN DAMAGED BY IT; AND THE MANNER OF MANAGING THE BREAD MADE FROM GERMINATED GRAIN.
“Crops which have been for a long time more or less exposed to an abundant humidity, experience different sorts and degrees of alteration. In each of these different states they present different results—to the cultivator in regard to his seed; to the miller in grinding; and to the baker in bread-making.
“Wet grain, when heaped up in granaries or in stacks without currents of air being preserved through the interior, goes speedily to ruin. The humidity does not ascend to the top, so as to evaporate; it concentrates in the interior, and hastens the germination which may have begun, or excites a fermentation, which heats and discolours the grain. At times the corn even becomes mouldy.
“When the grain of such corn is sent without preparation to the mill, it clogs the mill-stones, and is difficult to work. If the germination is only just commenced, the process is soon completed in the sacks, and the flour begins in a few days to collect into pieces of such consistency, that it is necessary to pound it with mallets in order to render it workable. Flour of this description is difficult to work, even when very speedily used; and as it gets old, it is impossible to make bread of it without mixing it with some of a better sort.
“The drying of wet grain is the only means of arresting the progress of its destruction.—The most simple plan for this purpose, and the one which can generally be the most easily adopted, is to dry the grain in a baking-oven, which is to be met with in most places. It may be put into the oven immediately after the bread has been withdrawn: the temperature is then such that a person may introduce his naked arm without being much incommoded by the heat. After the grain has been thrown into the oven, it should be spread into a layer of from three to four inches in thickness, and turned frequently, in order to facilitate the disengagement of the vapour. At the end of ten or fifteen minutes, according to the state of humidity in which the grain is, it may be withdrawn from the oven, as it will then be sufficiently dried; and when exposed to the air until perfectly cooled, it will have acquired all the qualities necessary to render it fit for the miller and the baker.