Saturday, March 26, 2011

Homebrew Glutinous Rice Wine


What prompted me to make my own glutinous rice wine in the first place was I tasted a sweet homemade glutinous rice wine before.  It was so sweet and made the stir-fried ginger chicken so sweet and flavorful.  The sweetness that came from the rice wine couldn't be compared with the sugar you added to make it sweet.  The natural sweetness that came from it was unbeatable.  The above picture was taken in day three of fermentation.  I used my slow cooker to ferment it because I don't have a big glass jar.  You can also use the ceramic pot (Corning ware).


I tasted the rice wine and it was sweet but not much alcohol content.  The sweetest I tasted was day six.  But after day seven and when I tasted the rice wine again it was less sweet and started to taste more alcohol.  Subsequently the alcohol taste became stronger, the sweetness was gone and it turned sour.  At first I wanted to ferment it for up to 45 days but I quickly harvested it at day 22 because I was afraid that as the alcohol content went up, it would be more sour.  I might have introduce some bacteria to turn the wine sour when I played with the wine too much, I almost checked it every other day by spooning it around and tasting the wine.  Because a successful one will still produce a sweet rice wine even at day 45.  It was my first try so pardon my curiosity.  At day 22, the wine tasted dry and sourish.  A failed first attempt at wine making for me but luckily it didn't turn moldy and still very fragrant.




This was the rice residue at day 22.  I used a sieve to squeeze out the wine by pressing it with a spoon.  You can use your hand and a cheese cloth if you prefer.  If your rice wine is sweet, you can keep this in the refrigerator and use it to make a Chinese rice wine dessert by adding water, egg drop and tang yuan.  Or use it in cooking or marinate meat/poultry.  Since mine was sour, I didn't bother to reuse this.


The rice wine that I got from 4 cups of glutinous rice and 2 wine biscuits.  I got a 750ml bottle of rice wine and the one you saw below.  It was white and muddy at first, but would turn clear once you let it sit in the refrigerator (see picture below).  Keep it in the refrigerator to stop the fermentation process.


Besides the 750ml bottle, the above was the extra that I got.  I cooked the above with my ginger chicken and would share the recipe in my next post.  Since it's sourish, I need to counter it with sugar in my cooking.

If you are interested in making your own sweet rice wine, here's the Guide that I was referring to.  I knew for a fact that if I followed the recipe and harvested at the said time (at the end of fifth day), I would have sweet rice wine.

15 comments:

Lisa H. said...

This is how tapai (fermented glutinous rice) is made... its just that we dont age it to become wine :D

daphne said...

Wow! U make your own glutinous rice wine! That's very impressive!!

Jen (Tastes of Home) said...

I love cooking with glutinous rice wine! What a useful guide..thanks for sharing!

Min {Honest Vanilla} said...

Wow I'd never in my life thought of making my own rice wine! This is such a novelty idea to me :) Bravo for showing us how it can be done!

Mochachocolata Rita said...

wow! kudos for trying to make your own... lazy spoiled me normally just grab a bottle from a supermarket...

Food For Tots said...

I never have the patience to brew rice wine (partly due to my lazy bones!). I'm sure you will make it in your 2nd attempt. Jia yu, my friend!

tigerfish said...

I never thought of doing my own too. But that is because I never thought of buying glutinous rice in the first place. I like your idea of adding sweet rice wine to savory dishes. Must be so delicious (and different).

Kay @ Chopstix2Steaknives said...

Wow. Would love to make this too. Can't wait to see your future successful attempts.

Cuisine Paradise said...

I can nv success in this. I have tried a few time and the end result is noooo good :( But your really look great and it goes well with that rice wine chicken....

Little Corner of Mine said...

Lisa, the next time I make it, I don't going to age it, I will harvest it in day 6. Hehehe...

No lah Daphne, actually very easy to make only. ;)

You're welcome Jen, I also found the guide useful. :)

You're welcome Min.

Haha Rita, actually grabbing a bottle at the supermarket is cheaper than making our own. ;)

Thanks F4T, I want to try again. :) But have to finish this batch of 750ml bottle first.

Tigerfish, this batch of wine is sourish lah, not sweet at all. :P I shouldn't have aged it. Should just followed the recipe.

Thanks Kay!

Cuisine Paradise, maybe you can try again but don't age it.

Joy said...

That is so cool you made rice wine.

Janine said...

This is how my grandmother does it too! (I think) It tastes fantastically sweet and yummy!

babe_kl said...

i'm surprise you could actually buy the wine cake there :p

i usually buy the commercial ones here which is just as good but not as sweet as those homemade ones which my mother used during my confinement

Anonymous said...

Hi Chin,
Hope you remember me, Cindi from KC and Jodeli. I have been reading your blog often, just wanted to say hi to you.
Yeah, glutinous rice wine, just made and harvested last Sunday. I used my MIL method, the difference is after cooking the glutinous rice, we do not wash...then boil- results is the same - glutinous rice wine...lol. It would last a long time.
Yours looks great, very clean residue, this can be cooked with chicken

Little Corner of Mine said...

Hi Cindi, of course I remember you. :) Thanks for leaving me a message. You mean you boil the collected rice wine for 5 minutes before keeping it right?