![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhIU81Y6glXzUkw4MtP2A0asto68uSt8u8CoACmB0wqKflhMtCe_hEROaGcGkJcrCzeAQbssDyL5buvgy0lYbUbV82GRXcVWEcuvvTATWFyPZiLdRmI2NNLtb7kcVoyc22nuFN1WzVP1hfu/s400/IMG_5715+copy.jpg)
First off, the red yeast and wine biscuit had to be purchased from medical halls from chinatown, though some in the old towns may have one or the other.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhYr_YOykk_u0N_45L7wh6p7Fjbgp-LNziGCVr3tTQz-in9ghy15ZZG17PIAOi1FndDQ0Qqj23JylK484Zr5VdshCcjkLYhAWgLPihY38C9IIQp_WTUHnd6UNasLSbwXumJg4y-E2E7KdtQ/s400/IMG_5717+copy.jpg)
There also don't seem to be much options for the glutinous rice. All this to be developed. For the water, I selected Volvic.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkwUhv9Q9_2zBJ0utpV6fak2gfCWKP27sjg-iq8tREzArgotqDACaYnsXe2X1Fi6xsweY8hVxdCWcNUnmXtvCIARNIn997nWoiHbYkc1Ejt6VmLjS_DPEAAsVXiwCNgoWVmpeQRFUxFx_I/s400/IMG_5716+copy.jpg)
The red yeast, Monascus Purpureus (红曲菌), is the key to the distinctive hue. It may also have cholesterol-lowering properties!
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWQzvJ8hrAA6kHifytuil0ze0mQBO973HdLgwfu-DxTHcqLbwmq93mQoe8C2CYoqAMEbByzQrE-XrcgQb_GpaMQ6ZA_S6FpQkrxpjRXL2ydjbhPrpJTRjJGiNM0Tt6ndciqJSBkvZeeF_W/s400/IMG_5718+copy.jpg)
Wine biscuit, the starch to feed the yeast and kick-start the fermentation, seem to be from the same Malaysian supplier for most shops in Singapore. It may be the left-over residue from previous batches of rice wine-making, which is similar to the concept of 'sour mash' in bourbon-making. There is also mold in the mix, and the main ones used here may be Ragi, the strain also used in Indonesia. I would like to experiment with the Japanese strain Kōji-kin/麹菌 (Aspergillus oryzae) used for sake-making if I could get my hands on it.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEglSYuyyy2jMggQ6aWlP_QgfEdpyklct-wjsIdnEJs_CxSRF72TUBS6g9LreyfASELT9Tt-AwsGRiVN4X4uKcKVJyFHdnBqKVGdocMqN6Eh9pCXllcLY2FQxnc18heSfEsibv714500DDmR/s400/IMG_5738+copy.jpg)
This is the powdered mix of the red yeast and wine biscuit. I break up the biscuit as much as possible, and then throw it into the blender with the red yeast, and this is the result.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjvUni7LIDKxON94wEtPPBCImn1IOWarhTu4On-nSvm1M38t6XF0Kmh5GiXChGP2x7FfZjHL2f_l6I1GGd6rVmEfFyBXxNrdUD-IeqNpUABA891crynW5qfvgCjD-wogjdSFEEw9rT3fSVL/s400/IMG_5739+copy.jpg)
This is the glutinous rice soaked in Volvic water; I left it for about 5 hours.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjRCs6SBakJm7b1RJcqcGt0JhfeGQlySJDXoVKi8z6DfVsiGpSpyk0emk0nubAFogaMuhyJrge7i6fonC2ZdJyn_6c2dYRqFMT12PZrUrpBg6o7ZO2_3uC6LIZbLrajviPJ2Ludv_i58u0U/s400/IMG_5740+copy.jpg)
Setup for the final phase. Boiled Volvic water is to wet hands to shape the rice.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjpREDKjCoRzW1PuA_1YreKlh77Hj9H12WNTGGK6fyHY4_qnXibn9fsk0tzSe7cQ-pGsIWJq03sBeUzBHI-jMAs1OwZ5KX74mAMeQESZvfE7l7OgfebFQddxYdMldzQ1sFIntGGdNTtbp5P/s400/IMG_5741+copy.jpg)
The first ball of coated glutinous rice. Resulting art:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiyh3hjM2Qu9tQWfk8r7qu7cLx_QZIP1zwBy4gi_Ez9Ws9QwiV6GdBesuFwLYKEKZFJlQ86mJhkSAlTstCVNRUIWYKk6Fio33B4Kgf2GbbQN40Xa_vKMSS64Pp5iWek5bRG0bROXEse22PH/s400/IMG_5743+copy.jpg)
The bottled product:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEga4z_ygt4PPoK6FCxg8KSS1NEquX5Q9pOllZN4zadr2oJ8auVBLlZ2lXIjkLDth7U-F5tUsTyoL9yLbeP_7EoKnqsafjPqfmn3m16kCMndMffbJLxIxZAbyxuC9VWfiGqfbmyXHHaCmzwi/s400/IMG_5742+copy.jpg)
Day 3; just checking up on progress:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEibccBsFDxTx2l7b4XmPVovicURGCNNWeeJrt4lrZvPuueB98KlWkQVejlhzEbTpkYvXl1XHl_qq9v28M3Ja7TNCfHtc3jVpZcidtU1InxTGPuZNMZLOdrtjwzz36OKs94xYV_4l6p6bvJr/s400/IMG_5751+small.jpg)
Next ingredient; patience. 7 days later...
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgAhMzfo-CLL_AAfChPqheY-key7PFNv5NVMFvjFy8E0f9MJoxWA_eHW7zoquo8O_ZQEqT68dYjB4ai8-BGVt6ZbR_WtnsudiQ-QieoUVD22VCcfNG5DCItK7MIxIjIIc-Revz7dxmP0THw/s400/IMG_5754+small.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgR9Fp7bHkToHE5J5e4Wm_KIHAves_Jrvv2SUf7V882-s2e3GzmLV9lDVk1W7vd-rFYo1RVLRPfrY95WAMMtMhEMBy48D7T_M6fSNC0xE9CNXKWOH7tAHibUzbnt8eXu4NMcymtIFNABM2w/s400/IMG_5755+small.jpg)
And 27 days after that... (should have be 23)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeRu4RNGjzJNFCXePYzwyhcfP7GdB5dcvlVvBBnmNdSP7GnbCh3D4nMyIbh-P2TQ5kXj7zrM9UgkBM7rUFq5tp8UGECwmlrDwMY-XQNA1xQ19kVOPRy3_MnIj7tjZh24NhPufyHAADNzan/s400/Day27.jpg)
The red rice wine after the first filter:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKOSx7GJFf3jZP0NxKcYrnYcCGjwEyqQWmu6wamVjfkDsMgWL72dGNBMphwBLOT8p8QJ64uT8SJ2QDt9uAkSURGTH1RYWv_uiljFbENXjpY-YaKy1vWx1xGqwvp-2KPp3gPx19sFLfjpPL/s400/RedWineBtld.jpg)
And of course, the precious red rice residue:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgglhH0hRadACdqQo_j20zSNSdAIubEY7HwQqXElIHQxBqzqNkciM-qcvuMmObfKvdruQWmZ2YD1L_X1sH9wQMvRMVSvYL19ddVFQK9d5TbUsYznNPewUxvMplRIDXLiYxiE5HuTMbBHMwc/s400/Residue.jpg)
Some other recipes that I may experiment with later:
Home-cooked Food
AuthoritySitesBlog
Food Recipes using this wine:
Under the Fuzhou section
No comments:
Post a Comment