Posted by Chef Green on February 02, 2023 at 11:36:08 from (73.22.118.71):
In Reply to: Doing research posted by Chef Green on February 02, 2023 at 10:43:30:
Hey, thanks for the quick response.
The corn side of the equation is a roller coaster season to season. These are heirloom strains that I use more for the flavors they impart rather the fuel used to make ethanol.
I scrambled last year which is the third time in a decade to find a source for bloody butcher that wasn t asking an acre of land for a metric ton.
To give you an idea. In the heirloom and craft markets, little ripples have big impact and a 50lb bag of medium cracked heirloom can go well into triple digits for something so trivial as a media video.
If I break even and have 2 extra weeks of my time because I didn t have to scour every mill house in the continental US to cobble together. 2 ton purchase that I have to transport . It will have been worth it.
My initial thought, without making public my mash bills, was 4 acres of corn and using my barley, oats, wheat, and rye requirements for cover crops and just rotating seasonally.
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