As I prepare traditional beer
We use locally sorghum grains
They are feremented for three days, and graded to sorghum flour, which is then dried before it is used to make beer. however, it requires a huge fire, meaning a lot of firewood is needed, big pot and a lot of water.
A brief process of brewing traditonal beer
We mix the flour with water in a bucket or something and then add it to the pot. You measure the flour according to the amount of drinking litres you would want.
Start steering, with a small branch from a palm tree, I dont know why we use it but i guess its the best๐๐
let it heat for hours (2-3), after that, you remove it and let it cool down
We use a calabash (omindo) to transfer it from the pot into abrown sack with fine pores sieving process. It doesnt take hours though๐it drips very fast into a bucket from the schumucker.
After the sieving process, we find a thick part from the sorghum flour, which is used to feed the animals.
I must say cooking and filtration is about a half a day then you need 7 hours overninght fermentation before its ready to consume.
And Omalodi is ready to consume๐ป



I learned something new ๐๐พ
ReplyDeleteThank you ☺️
DeleteInteresting,
ReplyDeleteBut What percentage of alcohol does this drink have?
It’s not yet scientifically proven, but it does contain small small percent alcohol
DeleteCan I get drunk if I drink this ,even one glass??
ReplyDeleteIt depends on your immune system ๐น๐น๐น
DeleteThis is really amazing๐ and that fermenting sound"shaaaaaaa" is just everything mahn๐๐.....๐ค
ReplyDeleteIt is๐ฅฐ๐ฅฐ
DeleteEish my favourite drink
ReplyDelete๐ฅฐ๐๐ฝ
DeleteThis drink slaps different when all the family members are together๐๐พ
ReplyDeleteIt really does๐๐ฝ๐ฅฐ
DeleteYou're making me miss home ๐ฃ
ReplyDelete๐น๐น๐น
DeleteOmbili
Ository yaahu twa zile๐๐
ReplyDeleteIjaaaa☺️
DeleteThis is interesting, I like it for Xmas even
ReplyDeleteIt’s slaps different po Xmas nee shili
DeleteAm definitely going to follow this steps so I prepare my traditional beer ๐
ReplyDeletePlease do it
DeleteI will expecting the outcome results
Wow Gud learned something new
ReplyDeleteThank you
DeleteDo try it out
Wonderful
ReplyDeleteGreat job
ReplyDeleteThank you ☺️
DeleteHow long does it stay before it goes bad
ReplyDeleteAfter 4 days
Deleteso interesting,and i like it especially early morning while its sweet and cold
ReplyDeleteI like it when it’s a bit sour ๐น๐น
DeleteNow this is the indigenous knowledge not to be lost, great work Kristy
ReplyDeleteThank you dear
DeleteGreat work Kristy๐ค๐
ReplyDeleteThank you๐ฅฐ
DeleteGreat! This needs to be documented for future generation to know the process.
ReplyDeleteYou giving me a big head๐น๐นbut thank you๐ฅฐ
DeleteAshike ove nani onkulukadi ike lela nani?๐๐๐ฝ๐๐ฝ๐๐ฝ๐ฅฐ
ReplyDeletePitako utale, wutale neee๐น๐น๐น๐๐ฝ๐๐ฝ
Delete