How to press sorghum and making syrup

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  • čas přidán 12. 10. 2020
  • Steffen Mirsky, former evaluation and trials manager at Seed Savers Exchange, walks you through pressing sorghum and making syrup in this video from the Resilience Garden video series.

Komentáře • 100

  • @jsa-z1722
    @jsa-z1722 Před 2 lety +5

    Your farm looks like a slice of paradise, by the way. So green and lush, with maples starting to get their autumn colours. You must have the most wonderful climate.

  • @georgewilkey5283
    @georgewilkey5283 Před 2 lety +19

    enjoyed the video. i was actually thinking of buying that same crusher so it was good to see it in action. just a few things, although great for animals, sorghum grain (seeds) is used quite extensively as human food especially in india and africa. it is the 5th most human consumed grain in the world. the leaves, although great for mulch, are even better animal food. i never met a cow or horse that didn't like sorghum leaves, i assume do to the high sugar content. also, back in the day, all that foam you threw on the ground would have been saved, fermented, and distilled into a rum type alcohol (strictly for medicinal purposes.). the old timers didn't waste anything.

    • @danielsterling4918
      @danielsterling4918 Před 2 lety +1

      I wondered about the foam, figured there's probably a good use for it and most likely alcohol to be specific lol

    • @kalebmcdaniel9147
      @kalebmcdaniel9147 Před rokem +1

      It’s just chlorophyll

    • @danieljordan4320
      @danieljordan4320 Před 3 měsíci

      Not just chlorophyll, all sorts of stuff can be floated up - that’s when you can skim all the floats. Let it sit to thicken

  • @staceyrashkin2609
    @staceyrashkin2609 Před 2 lety +12

    You can cook the seeds too. Humans can eat them also. Not just livestock. They taste like wheat berries.

  • @surendersingal9122
    @surendersingal9122 Před 2 lety +3

    Great video in learnin some basics of making syrup.

  • @FC-xc3zy
    @FC-xc3zy Před 2 lety +3

    Wow...amazing. Much thanks for taking the time out and making a video about the syrup.

  • @VincentAmanorBoadu
    @VincentAmanorBoadu Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you for the education. Excellent presentation.

  • @JaniceBlake128
    @JaniceBlake128 Před 3 lety +3

    I remember doing this as a kid when it was a community endeavor!! We still have a “Molasses Festival” in late September in Arnoldsburg, WV.

  • @KeoniKoa
    @KeoniKoa Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much for this video!

  • @jsa-z1722
    @jsa-z1722 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for an informative and interesting video!

  • @towerproclimber
    @towerproclimber Před rokem +4

    Loved the video. Scientifically explain the mask.

  • @rontropics26
    @rontropics26 Před 2 lety +1

    Sorghum is an underappreciated crop I think. I'm trying popping sorghum for the first time this year.

  • @jeffcokenour3459
    @jeffcokenour3459 Před 10 měsíci

    Excellent video - thank you!

  • @CherylLynnColwell
    @CherylLynnColwell Před rokem

    Thank you for showing another way to use sorghum

  • @sonyainmichigan1403
    @sonyainmichigan1403 Před 6 měsíci

    Great video. thank you

  • @DROKMELCHISALEM
    @DROKMELCHISALEM Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you so much for this video Mr. Steffen Mirsky and your team. Your teaching is very simple and to the point. Is the Presser custom made, where can I find one for purchase?

  • @taunusfarmboy7530
    @taunusfarmboy7530 Před 3 lety

    This is very very cool.

  • @eshetiejone613
    @eshetiejone613 Před 2 lety

    Good job!

  • @frogjunk
    @frogjunk Před 3 lety +4

    Do you press the stalks a second time? I would recommend doing it.

  • @patrickakalulwa311
    @patrickakalulwa311 Před 3 lety +3

    Good show with an indication of recoveries...12 gallons of juice of 20 degrees brix give 1.5gallons of syrup after 6 hours boiling to 212 degrees Fahrenheit....what is the brix of syrup?

  • @olviraballo5380
    @olviraballo5380 Před 2 lety

    muchas gracias , que video tan lindo, muy rico!,

  • @dannyreasons6070
    @dannyreasons6070 Před 3 lety +3

    heat sorghum to crack temp. and pour on freshly popped corn.

  • @try2diy1styoucandoit65
    @try2diy1styoucandoit65 Před rokem +1

    A year late but did you calibrate the refractometer? That could be why it reads a bit higher than you expected.
    Great video!

  • @lunahilberg2451
    @lunahilberg2451 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you so much for this video! Sorghum grows well for me, and had done some juicing with a juicer and added to our home beer brew.. but so tedious..and not sure if the sugar cane juicers would work, but this looks like it does just fine :) and worth investing in. Excited about doing the boil down process and making syrup! Thank you so much. :) Also, how is it stored once a syrup? cheers.

    • @georgewilkey5283
      @georgewilkey5283 Před 2 lety +2

      because of the high sugar content, sorghum syrup is highly acidic so it does not promote the growth of microbes. the same is true for other things high in sugar such as honey, maple syrup, even jams and jellies. it is shelf stable almost indefinitely, just jar it up and stick it in a cabinet.

  • @RobCalhounPGH
    @RobCalhounPGH Před 2 lety +1

    The maple tree behind him: Am I a joke to you?

  • @willowlaken6303
    @willowlaken6303 Před 2 lety

    Where can I purchase a press like you used?

  • @jeffschmidt8491
    @jeffschmidt8491 Před 2 lety

    Could you use an osmosis to remove the water before boiling it like maple syrup

  • @everettsartin7556
    @everettsartin7556 Před rokem

    Good job we make surup u told the process well we cook too 230 thicker syrup but u have too stay right on top of it not too scortch it

  • @wholecirclehomestead2529
    @wholecirclehomestead2529 Před 3 lety +9

    Great video! Where did you get the press? Been looking for one for a while....

    • @indoorsandout3022
      @indoorsandout3022 Před 3 lety +2

      it looks like the sugar cane press I have in my shopping cart on amazon.

    • @wholecirclehomestead2529
      @wholecirclehomestead2529 Před 3 lety +2

      @@indoorsandout3022 found it! Thanks for the help.

    • @ochiengolum2808
      @ochiengolum2808 Před 3 lety +5

      @@wholecirclehomestead2529 please let me know where you got it from. I grow lots of Sorghum in Kenya for cows and grain and would certainly like to add this value. Thanks.

    • @brandond3291
      @brandond3291 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ochiengolum2808 Here is the item I found on Amazon. www.amazon.com/dp/B07MNSSFW3/?coliid=INY0NMUTZVEZJ&colid=3EEWXTTKW8QD&psc=1&ref_=lv_ov_lig_dp_it

    • @ochiengolum2808
      @ochiengolum2808 Před 3 lety

      @@brandond3291 Bless you!

  • @sdfft820
    @sdfft820 Před 3 lety +5

    Can you put spices in the sorghum sap and drink it as a chilled beverage? In India people regularly drink spiced sugarcane sap

    • @Melissa-gn3dv
      @Melissa-gn3dv Před 2 lety

      I heard that it is bad for you until it is cooked.

  • @josephhinton5489
    @josephhinton5489 Před rokem

    Enjoyed the vid but tuned in originally to learn a method of separating the seeds so I could put them in the bird feeder that spawned the dozens of stalks that germinated in my front yard in the first place.

  • @LG-gw6xw
    @LG-gw6xw Před 2 lety

    I grew sorghum by accident but now I want to utilize it thoroughly. Just a small little crop of it due to feeding the birds. Do you think it will be okay for me to do the same and make syrup from? Also is there a particular time I should harvest the seed pod? I saw that the moisture content is supposed to be low (both the seed pod and stalk) but I have no way of measuring this. I can fairly easily work the seed off the plant right now so I was wondering if this was dry enough? Or will the seed spoil because it is too green? Some are green and some are brown. I would like to feed this to the birds again.

    • @kalebmcdaniel9147
      @kalebmcdaniel9147 Před rokem +1

      If you smash one seed between your fingers if there is a white Milk substance then it is not ready but if you press it and it is soft and doughy then it is ready for syrup but you have let the seed dry till it turns red or whatever color it’s supposed to

  • @elephantcup
    @elephantcup Před 3 lety +2

    If I were there, I'd cook it with some hops, dump a pack or two of clean wine yeast into it and make some beer. Some of that beer would get inoculated with a vinegar mother to make vinegar, but I'd drink most of it.
    If it has starch in it, some amylase to break it down to sugar.
    Wondering if I can grow that in hot dry southern California and how much one of those cane presses costs. And could I DIY one. ;-)

    • @teagranola
      @teagranola Před 10 měsíci

      Hi, I know your comment is old but I grew a lot of sorghum this year in hot, dry Oklahoma. We are zone 6, I believe. Clay and rocky soil. I didn't even water it once it got past the sprouting stage and we only had a couple days of rain

  • @ugochinwaeze-pm2sh
    @ugochinwaeze-pm2sh Před rokem

    I enjoyed watching your video. Your teaching was simple and straight to the point. My question though is ,are there other uses for Sorghum molasses apart from feeding livestocks. What are the business opportunities? And also, can you produce molasses/syrup from corn stalks?

  • @verngib9041
    @verngib9041 Před rokem

    Do you think a steam juicer or a tomato miller have a similar juice release? I planted about five stalks and i don’t think that warrants me spending money on an expensive piece of equipment. I want to try making syrup.

    • @kalebmcdaniel9147
      @kalebmcdaniel9147 Před rokem

      Five stalks isn’t going to make very much syrup maybe a quart

    • @leonardpearlman4017
      @leonardpearlman4017 Před měsícem

      There's a video where a small harvest of this is chopped into short pieces (not short enough I thought) and cooked in a lot of water, making a thin sweet liquid. The steam juicer might do the same. They were just using a big pot on top of a stove.

  • @muyfoods
    @muyfoods Před rokem

    In nepal we plant these for seed which is just like popcorn for roasting.tasty like popcorn

  • @brendalee8394
    @brendalee8394 Před 2 lety

    When do you harvest the canes to juice?

    • @PatientMoney
      @PatientMoney Před 2 měsíci

      When the top part of the seed head is brown and the lower half is still sorta green.

  • @iniquitousman8251
    @iniquitousman8251 Před 2 lety

    Thanks! Wouldn't you use a scythe?

    • @leonardpearlman4017
      @leonardpearlman4017 Před měsícem

      Maybe a machete? It's pretty rugged for a scythe! There's a CANE KNIFE of course, a kind of machete.

  • @egtrsonlinebizchannel6663

    Hi stefen....i am interested to have some seeds. Can i buy some of shorgum seeds. Thanks.

    • @georgewilkey5283
      @georgewilkey5283 Před 2 lety +1

      if you google sorghum seeds, there are a lot of seed companies that carry them.

  • @TheBaconWizard
    @TheBaconWizard Před rokem

    What does the juice taste-like fresh off the press?

    • @leonardpearlman4017
      @leonardpearlman4017 Před měsícem +1

      It's GUARAPO, which is sold in some places. Common in Miami, sometimes done on the street, sometimes in juice bars, typically with a motorized press. It tastes grassy! And very sweet. I didn't like it when I was a kid, but I like the syrup! Also the distilled liquor made from it (Cachaca, something like rum)

  • @christopherbrownlee8154

    Did you have to put sugar into your syrup or is sorghum naturally sweet already

    • @inharmonywithearth9982
      @inharmonywithearth9982 Před rokem

      Sorghum is of course naturally a intense sugar making grass itself. No additional sugar needed ever.

  • @bronwynesterhuizengreensha5294

    Can you direct me to an online seed shop for this variety "sugar drip". I am in the Bahamas. We grow it as a staple cereal much like in west Africa. Yes, we eat it. Pearl millet is a sorghum better suited for animal feed as it has higher omega fatty acids especially for layer chickens. But sorghum or guinea corn is recognised as a super food in india and africa. Much healthier than Americas staple and much less intensive to grow.

  • @user-sk6ch9jo9c
    @user-sk6ch9jo9c Před 3 lety

    My friend, please satisfy my curiosity: This is sweet sorghum, right?
    The taste of this "juice" extracted is somewhat similar to sugar cane juice (in taste and texture)? Thank you so much in advance!

    • @JaniceBlake128
      @JaniceBlake128 Před 3 lety +1

      It’s molasses.

    • @georgewilkey5283
      @georgewilkey5283 Před 2 lety +4

      sugarcane has a neutral sugar taste. sorghum juice has a very distinct molasses taste that gets stronger the more you cook it. some folks like, some don't. you can buy "blackstrap" molasses at most stores if you want to try it. if you dissolve about a tablespoon of it into 8 oz of water it will give you an idea of what the fresh juice tastes like.

    • @kalebmcdaniel9147
      @kalebmcdaniel9147 Před rokem

      It is not molasses it is sorghum syrup two different things

    • @kalebmcdaniel9147
      @kalebmcdaniel9147 Před rokem +1

      Sorghum syrup is not Molasses and is way sweeter than molasses it’s almost a mix between honey and molasses

    • @user-sk6ch9jo9c
      @user-sk6ch9jo9c Před rokem

      @@kalebmcdaniel9147 Thanks a lot. But I mean the juice. Pure juice. Not molasses, not syrups, cause, to make those two, we must boil the juice, and, I was wondering about the pure juice all alone . My curiosity is: Let's say that some plague destroys the entire sugar cane species from Planet Earth... and, the most similar thing we have now is sweet sorghum... sugar cane juice is consumed in many, many countries around the world, so, the juice extracted from sweet sorghum is similar enough in taste and texture, to be a decent substitute to the sugar cane one? I've made this question in more than 8 countries that produces both sugar cane and sweet sorghum and IT LOOKS LIKE NOBODY has this answer. In Brazil they make
      lump of brown sugar (brown sugar candy) and cachaça (sugar cane liquor) from sugar cane juice AND they also do the same with the juice extracted from sweet sorghum and the final product looks pretty much the same, but i've asked for 4 producers there and, or no one has the answer OR they don't give a damn about it (sugar cane production turns the soil MISERABLE, sorghum production, on the other hand,.not so much... and, it grows faster... but it is smaller and has less juice if compared to the same amount of sugar cane). Anyway, Thank you so much for trying to help, you guys!

  • @Omgalchemy
    @Omgalchemy Před 15 dny

    Beautiful production. Please don’t use plastic to skim it leaches into the final product.

  • @zhp500
    @zhp500 Před 3 lety

    Ever try to make taffy from your sorghum.

  • @Ableurself
    @Ableurself Před 3 lety +1

    Can you drink it raw like sugarcanejuice!? How come you did not drink what was in the glass!?!?

    • @Melissa-gn3dv
      @Melissa-gn3dv Před 2 lety +1

      Another video said there is cyanide in it until it is cooked.

    • @inharmonywithearth9982
      @inharmonywithearth9982 Před rokem +2

      @@Melissa-gn3dv what they are fear mongering as cyanide is actually prussic acid. The acid is only present during major stress, such as when a person sprays a herbicide toxin on this species of grass and a foraging animal consumes very large amounts of the herbicide stressed grass while still attached to their roots. Once cut from it's roots the prussic acid quickly evaporates within hours and it is completely safe even if it was severely stressed. The prussic acid is also only in the green leaf blades of the live plant never stalks or roots or grain.

    • @Melissa-gn3dv
      @Melissa-gn3dv Před rokem

      @@inharmonywithearth9982 Thank you for your reply. I fed a little to my chickens and they lived so I will try more. I wanted something to feed them since the store feed is expensive. I also made syrup, but I don't know that I like it enough to make it again.

    • @kalebmcdaniel9147
      @kalebmcdaniel9147 Před rokem

      Prussia acid only affects ruminant animals anyways so chickens can eat as much as they want

  • @jsa-z1722
    @jsa-z1722 Před 2 lety

    Birds always eat my sorghum seeds before they're ripe enough to harvest. How do you stop bird thieves?

  • @cupidjrrobianto
    @cupidjrrobianto Před rokem

    11:50 look like honey

  • @rogerscottcathey
    @rogerscottcathey Před 9 měsíci

    Eat sorghum sprouts!

  • @truthseeker5496
    @truthseeker5496 Před 2 lety +9

    Why are you wearing masks outside?

  • @Fit.For.A.Firefight.
    @Fit.For.A.Firefight. Před 2 lety +5

    Awesome! But You guys are young and healthy. Take off your masks while outdoors ya dorks

  • @kdavidson6771
    @kdavidson6771 Před rokem

    Oh brother! You are all outside with masks. Good grief!!! Moving on to another video.

  • @nikolayminchev6282
    @nikolayminchev6282 Před 2 lety +4

    Good video but (useless mask -you need to read some books about virus/bacteria )don't be lazy and give bad name of permaculture

  • @joeburns5318
    @joeburns5318 Před 3 lety +19

    love the video. Hate the mask. Not needed.

    • @armymobilityofficer9099
      @armymobilityofficer9099 Před 3 lety +4

      Mature sorghum is high risk for infection. I guess.

    • @indoorsandout3022
      @indoorsandout3022 Před 3 lety +7

      your rudeness is not needed.

    • @Sanecrist
      @Sanecrist Před 3 lety +4

      Thank you for speaking up. Two weeks to stop the spread has gone on for 18 months. It needs to be said. They were already outside in the sun. Nothing "rude" about not enabling munchausen syndrome by proxy.

  • @mikedaddydotcom6875
    @mikedaddydotcom6875 Před 2 lety +5

    I couldn’t get past the face masks outdoors 🤷‍♂️

  • @FlylightD
    @FlylightD Před 2 lety +3

    Super smart folks wearing masks in a field 😂 🤡🌎