They know we have to take it because there are too many dummies who buy too much shit and they have to sell to pay for it. Keeps the tread mill turning. They hate it when they have to deal with someone who can hold out for more and doesn't have to play their Reindeer games. Won't happen til farmers quit buying too much iron.
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Deduction for low px on malt
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Right, well with that scenario a guy might as well be first out of the gate or
just sell it for feed and be done with it. Race to the bottom.
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Recently had a discussion with an experienced malt grower regarding the dismal prices for non-contracted malt barley.
Figures with plump barley (96 +) that the germ will hold so malt should still be accepted next fall for potentially $1.50 more.
Could also keep some of this nearly perfect malt to use as seed for the next couple years.
It would be ridiculous to sell any of this near perfect malt barley for a measly feed price.
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A typical bottle of beer requires 1oz of Barley to manufacture. One bushel is enough for over 700 bottles of beer. The farmer gets about half a cent per bottle of beer.
Question: How many bushels after expenses does the farmer need to sell to be able to afford one beer?
#NoBeer4YouMrFarmerJustHigherTaxesLast edited by biglentil; Sep 23, 2017, 08:10.
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Thanks, mcfarms, for reference to quality.
Last few years have been unprecedented in malt contract prices over feed.
This year, after mid harvest and excess amount of high quality in the bins, price differences are back to or below more traditional levels.
Expect surplus to keep a lid on contract prices for next year production.
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Mcfarms.
Dumb question on my part, but consider that I have never been in a beer making plant, or know the process, or for that matter have any idea what beer tastes like, as excuses.
Would such a process get into serious double trouble using blended barley of half 13% with half 9% protein to arrive at a desired 11%? Is it possible that a straight across the board batch within a tiny range of a few tenths protein is actually required, or the end product is screwed?
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Originally posted by checking View PostMcfarms.
Dumb question on my part, but consider that I have never been in a beer making plant, or know the process, or for that matter have any idea what beer tastes like, as excuses.
Would such a process get into serious double trouble using blended barley of half 13% with half 9% protein to arrive at a desired 11%? Is it possible that a straight across the board batch within a tiny range of a few tenths protein is actually required, or the end product is screwed?
Brewing is a very precise art and needs uniform product to make.
Beer drinkers are very fussy and one bad batch or even bottle can lose that customer.
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If you have a good long term and excellent relationship with a malt plant your going to want to be honest on proteins and they willl work with you I should hope. They do like to malt within different protein bands and then they have better control of the finished malt blend there.
In this case I'm wondering if you had a production contract and if so is there a min spec on that contract?
You are in the business of selling grain and meeting spec if that truck unloads within spec thats your job.
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Mcfarms, do you know how pounds of "malt" would be left from a tonne of barley after it was malted? I think its germed and the sprouts/roots knocked and dried.....got to lose some weight. What is a tonne of malt worth? Should ask a micro-brewer.
Raw barley and malted barley are two different things.
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