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Secondary Fermenter
(Total time: 14 days)
If you made no additions at yodan, then it is now time for joso - the pressing of the moromi. Clean and sanitize three one-gallon jugs, a small (1-2 qt range) stainless steel or other non-reactive pot with a handle (you'll be using this as a dipper), a nylon paint straining bag (or a natural cotton canvas joso[i] bag like the Japanese use), your standard bottling bucket, and one-hole stoppers with airlocks for each of the jugs.
How you go about doing your pressing is up to you, but here is one method I've used: Line your bottling bucket with the straining bag, then use your sanitized dipper to carefully ladle out as much of the [i]moromias your joso bag will hold and use your hands to press as much nigorizake out of the moromi as you can (if you have a small fruit press this will be a lot easier, though your method will differ somewhat).
After the pressing is done, it's a simple matter to open the valve on your bottling bucket and fill your sanitized jugs. Leave a little head space in the jugs and close them with your one-hole stoppers and appropriate airlocks.
If you want some nigorizake (cloudy sake) to drink, this is a good (but not the only) time to draw it off, bottle, and pasteurize it. See how that works? You don’t have to commit an entire batch to it!
Affix stoppers and airlocks to these jugs, then keep them right at that 50ºF (10ºC) temperature for the next couple weeks. This will allow any residual fermentation to finish up and will allow the rice solids and yeast to settle out, leaving your sake relatively clear.
If you intend to make a fruit-flavored sake by adding fruit juice or puree, this would be the appropriate time to add it.
At this point you could just put a tight lid on your jugs of sake and store it in your fridge for anywhere from 2 weeks to a month before you drink it all. I seriously don’t recommend this because any longer and lactobacillus can and will take over and turn your sake very, very sour. The next step is pasteurization.
I'm loving your directions for making Sake. I have the last of my rice steaming as I write.
I do have a couple of questions, though.
First, at the end of the page talking about steaming and then fermentation, you say next is pasteurization.
When you go to the next page, it talks about bottling and "re-pasteurizing" the sake.
When does it get the first pasteurization, and why does it need to be done twice?
Second, I'm doing it with the 60% polished rice. I plan on Bottling one gallon as nigorizake, one as Moroka, and one as seishu.
If I understand right, letting it settle and bottling only the liquid gives you Moroka, and fining with bentonite gives you Seishu- is that correct?
If I use the 60% polished rice, is it still Nigorozake, Moroka Sake, and Seishu Sake, or are they named different? What makes it Ginjo sake?
Thanks for the great guide, and for taking the time to answer questions from Noobs like myself.