After re-researching malting my own grain and hearing some anecdotes, I think that my wife would have me offed if I tried it. So, I'm using the modern chemistry approach instead.
Idea: see what I can extract out of several GF grains using amylase enzymes.
Process:
Attempt to crack grain with a rolling pin
Cook grains in water
Cool and add amylase
Hold near 150 until conversion
Sparge, crudely
Boil with some hops for 10 minutes
Cool, add yeast, and see what happens
The grains: Quinoa, Buckwheat, Amaranth, Millet, Brown Rice, and Tapioca
Notes: Tapioca may or may not really be "true" tapioca, I have no idea. Quinoa and amaranth were too small to be effectively cracked, and the rice was just too darned hard. I used 1 oz of grain and collected 1 cup of wort, which should come out to the same as 1 lb per gallon.
"Mashing" Results:
Quinoa--Conversion complete in 2 hours, extract SG 1.014.
Buckwheat--Conversion complete in 3 hours, extract SG 1.017.
Amaranth--Conversion complete in 2 hours, extract SG 1.017.
Millet--Conversion complete in 3.75 hours, extract SG 1.018.
Brown Rice--Conversion complete in 3 hours, extract SG 1.009.
Tapioca--Conversion complete in 3 hours, extract SG 1.037.
Mashing notes: the tapioca went from snot-like to watery as the enzyme was stirred in. Wow! Everything but the rice was pretty well dissolved at the end of the process. The low extract of the rice could be due to incomplete starch extraction. Maybe try longer cooking times or repeated cook/enzyme treatments. Quinoa provided a good amount of yellow color, the rest came out kind of milky white. Temperature control was difficult with such small volumes. All I can say is that I stayed between 130 and 155, with probably lots of fluctuations in between.
Brewing notes: all except the tapioca and rice had really funky hot breaks. They all had very clumpy cold breaks. Proteases would be a good idea for these. Do they sell those?
Results of fermentation forthcoming, probably in about a week. Mostly I want to see what the FG is and not so much what they taste like. I will taste them anyway, in case one of them is particularly good or terrible.
I wanted to get sorghum and teff as well, but could only find them as flour. Maybe next time.
Also here is a price list ($/lb) for comparison purposes. Malted barley is usually $1-1.50/lb for small quantities.
Quinoa (organic): 3.29
Buckwheat (organic): 1.59
Amaranth (organic): 2.59
Millet (organic): 1.15
Rice: 1.35
Tapioca: 1.69
Prices will probably vary by region and grocery chain.
Using this method and suffering from some poor efficiencies (low to no cracking, incomplete starch extraction, bad temp control, crude sparge), the tapioca is far and away the cheapest sugar. Millet and buckwheat are also good values, while amaranth and especially quinoa are quite pricey. For rice, I'm probably better off buying the pre-made extracts or syrups or suffering a few hours of cooking.
I'm hoping this information is useful for recipe formulations. Getting malted grain is preferable (at least to me), but that may be difficult or impossible based on geography and sleeping habits of irritable spouses.
Idea: see what I can extract out of several GF grains using amylase enzymes.
Process:
Attempt to crack grain with a rolling pin
Cook grains in water
Cool and add amylase
Hold near 150 until conversion
Sparge, crudely
Boil with some hops for 10 minutes
Cool, add yeast, and see what happens
The grains: Quinoa, Buckwheat, Amaranth, Millet, Brown Rice, and Tapioca
Notes: Tapioca may or may not really be "true" tapioca, I have no idea. Quinoa and amaranth were too small to be effectively cracked, and the rice was just too darned hard. I used 1 oz of grain and collected 1 cup of wort, which should come out to the same as 1 lb per gallon.
"Mashing" Results:
Quinoa--Conversion complete in 2 hours, extract SG 1.014.
Buckwheat--Conversion complete in 3 hours, extract SG 1.017.
Amaranth--Conversion complete in 2 hours, extract SG 1.017.
Millet--Conversion complete in 3.75 hours, extract SG 1.018.
Brown Rice--Conversion complete in 3 hours, extract SG 1.009.
Tapioca--Conversion complete in 3 hours, extract SG 1.037.
Mashing notes: the tapioca went from snot-like to watery as the enzyme was stirred in. Wow! Everything but the rice was pretty well dissolved at the end of the process. The low extract of the rice could be due to incomplete starch extraction. Maybe try longer cooking times or repeated cook/enzyme treatments. Quinoa provided a good amount of yellow color, the rest came out kind of milky white. Temperature control was difficult with such small volumes. All I can say is that I stayed between 130 and 155, with probably lots of fluctuations in between.
Brewing notes: all except the tapioca and rice had really funky hot breaks. They all had very clumpy cold breaks. Proteases would be a good idea for these. Do they sell those?
Results of fermentation forthcoming, probably in about a week. Mostly I want to see what the FG is and not so much what they taste like. I will taste them anyway, in case one of them is particularly good or terrible.
I wanted to get sorghum and teff as well, but could only find them as flour. Maybe next time.
Quinoa (organic): 3.29
Buckwheat (organic): 1.59
Amaranth (organic): 2.59
Millet (organic): 1.15
Rice: 1.35
Tapioca: 1.69
Prices will probably vary by region and grocery chain.
Using this method and suffering from some poor efficiencies (low to no cracking, incomplete starch extraction, bad temp control, crude sparge), the tapioca is far and away the cheapest sugar. Millet and buckwheat are also good values, while amaranth and especially quinoa are quite pricey. For rice, I'm probably better off buying the pre-made extracts or syrups or suffering a few hours of cooking.
I'm hoping this information is useful for recipe formulations. Getting malted grain is preferable (at least to me), but that may be difficult or impossible based on geography and sleeping habits of irritable spouses.