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March 29, 2013
Last updated

Moonshine Mash Recipe Guide

Owner of Clawhammer Supply

how to make moonshineThe first step in making moonshine is to create a moonshine mash. This is an essential process that involves mixing moonshine ingredients to prepare for the fermentation process. The primary ingredients used in a moonshine mash are corn and barley. Though other ingredients are sometimes added to provide a distinctive flavor or to increase the proof. A mash made with corn, barley, and rye is perhaps the most popular moonshine recipe of all time. However, did you know that there are actually a lot of different moonshine mash recipes? 

In this article we’re going to give you our all time favorite moonshine mash recipe plus six additional mash recipes that we love. Each varies in difficulty, cost, and time required to make. However, they all have one thing in common - they produce high-quality moonshine. Though before you make a moonshine mash at home, it's essential to keep in mind that making moonshine mash is generally legal, but distilling alcohol at home without a federal fuel alcohol or distilled spirit plant permit (for commercial distillers) is illegal. Therefore this article is for educational purposes only and we highly recommend that you read our legal summary for more information on the legalities of distillation before proceeding.

Also, check this out if you're looking for an educational article on the entire process for how to make moonshine. It's a comprehensive guide on making moonshine, from start to finish.

Moonshine Mash Recipes

Here are some of our favorite moonshine mash recipes that produce high-quality moonshine:

  1. Classic American Moonshine Mash -This recipe is a favorite among those who truly know moonshine. We regard this recipe as the gold standard for making moonshine. It’s primarily made with corn, which will create the most aromatic, sweet, rich, and smooth tasting shine you’ve ever had and also features barley and rye.
  2. Sour Mash Moonshine Recipe - This recipe is more complex and requires additional steps, but sour mash is the go-to method for some of the most popular distilleries and commercially produced moonshine on the planet.
  3. Peach Moonshine Mash Recipe - This recipe is made using fresh peaches, straight from an orchard, to create a sweet and delicious moonshine mash. The final product will contain sweet but subtle notes of peach, which will be the perfect base for making peach pie moonshine. However, this recipe makes a smooth final product that has subtle peach aroma and flavors and is great for drinking straight as well.
  4. Apple Moonshine Mash Recipe - This recipe is great for folks who have apple trees or access to an orchard. It uses fresh apples to make a mash that is the perfect base for apple pie moonshine. However, it can also be turned into an subtly apple flavored moonshine, perfect for drinking straight.
  5. Thin Mash Moonshine Recipe - This recipe is relatively easy and involves using less grain, resulting in a more affordable and less time-consuming process.
  6. Sweet Feed Moonshine Mash Recipe - This recipe involves using sweet feed, a combination of grains used to feed livestock, to create a flavorful and unique moonshine.
  7. Sugar Shine Moonshine Mash Recipe - This recipe utilizes sugar as the sole ingredient to create an easy to make and straightforward moonshine mash. However, contrary to the name, it isn’t sweet. And it’s not going to taste good straight. This mash recipe is primarily geared towards making an easy, cheap base for mixers.

What is Moonshine?

First, let's establish a definition for moonshine.

The term "moonshine" actually originated during prohibition in the United States. The term was coined due to the fact that early “bootleggers” often made their whiskey in the middle of the night, under the light of a full moon – out of sight of neighbors and the law. These days moonshine actually refers to a robust commercial market of high proof, unaged, and often flavored spirits, such as the products made by Ole Smoky.

Modern, commercially produced moonshine, is subject to regulation. The entity that manages and defines different spirit types in the United States is the U.S. Trade and Tax Bureau (TTB). Products such as whisky, Bourbon, gin, vodka, and more are all defined in chapter 4 of the Beverage Alcohol Manual. However, you'll notice that "moonshine" is conspicuously absent. The closest definition you'll find is for a "white whiskey," which is actually what moonshine is - clear (unaged) whiskey.

Since there no standard recipe for moonshine (like there is for Bourbon), it can be made from any combination of grains in any type of still. Though we would suggest that the best way to determine a "real" moonshine mash recipe is to look at historical precedent. Moonshine was traditionally in the mountains of Appalachia with simple ingredients available to farmers and common folk. These ingredients would have included cereal grain and perhaps a bit of granulated sugar.

The distillation equipment used by authentic moonshiners was homemade, was almost always made using copper, and was also fairly simple. So, we'd suggest that real moonshine needs to be distilled in a copper pot still.

In simple terms, moonshine is an unaged spirit distilled in a copper pot still from a mash made primarily of barley and corn. Rye and wheat are also sometimes added to either create a spicy finish or a smooth moonshine.

Classic American Moonshine Mash Recipe

corn whiskey

Early American farmers found that the same amount of corn sold for a few dollars at market could easily yield a few hundred dollars after it was mashed, fermented and distilled. Corn also yields more sugar than other grain crops. Thus, mashing corn and turning it into alcohol became the standard method of alcohol production on the early American frontier, and “corn whiskey” was born.

A commercial distiller making a high quality finished product would believe that pure, all grain whiskey is the way to go when making a craft spirit. Corn whiskey is preferred because it's naturally sweet, it’s smooth, and it’s tradition. Here’s a simple way they would use to make a corn whiskey mash with some additional options for the advanced distiller:

Ingredients:

  • 6.5 gallons of water
  • 8.5 pounds of flaked maize
  • 2 pounds of crushed malted barley
  • Yeast

Procedure:

Heat 5 gallons of mash water up to 165F. Turn off heat when target temperature is reached and stir in the 8.5 pounds of corn. Stir the mash continuously for about 5 minutes then stir for a few seconds every five minutes until the temperature drops to 152F.  Once the target temp is met, stir in the malted barley. Cover and leave it be for about 90 minutes, uncovering only to stir every 15 minutes or so.  At this point all of the starches should be converted into sugar. Leave it sit for a few hours or use an immersion chiller to cool the mash to 70 degrees. At 70 degrees, add yeast, aerate (by dumping back and forth between two containers), cap, and add an air lock. In a week or two fermentation will be complete. Leave it settle for another week and it will be ready to distill. Siphon into still. Make sure to leave yeast and other sediment behind.

crushed malted barley

Tips for Advanced Distillers

Advanced distillers should consider adding 2tsp of gypsum (CaSO4) to the mash water and adjusting the pH of mash water to somewhere between 5.8 and 6.0 before adding any ingredients. After adding gypsum, add citric or tartaric acid to adjust the pH of the mash water downward. If the pH needs adjusted upward, add calcium carbonate (CaCO3). 

A second trick for advanced distillers is using tincture of iodine to determine if all starches have been completely converted into sugar. Drip a few  drops of the clear yellow liquid (not the solids) from the top of the mash (after the 90 minute rest) onto a white plate. Drip a drop or two of the tincture of iodine onto the sample on plate. If it turns blue, there is still starch in the mixture. Rest it longer. Discard the sample.

Here's some additional information if you're unclear on how much yeast to use for moonshine mash.

Sour Mash Moonshine Recipe

Sour mash is a technique that has been used for hundreds of years, if not more, to make whiskey mash. To make sour mash, you'll first need to make a regular mash and then distill the mash. However, instead of dumping the contents of the still (backset) down the drain it will be added to the next batch of mash. It should make up roughly 25% of the next mash. This will drop the pH of the mash and make it more consistent from batch to batch.

Peach Moonshine Mash Recipe

To make peach moonshine mash, you'll need at least half a bushel of peaches. Wash and cut them, removing the pit. Add them to a fruit press and squeeze as much juice out as possible. Transfer this to a kettle and heat to 170F. Once temperature is reached, add 6 pounds of cane sugar. Completely dissolve sugar and hold heat for 10 minutes. After that, cool to room temperature and transfer to a fermenter. Aerate then add 1 package of bread yeast. Allow to ferment for 10 days. Once finished, transfer to a still and distill.

Apple Moonshine Mash Recipe

Apple moonshine is one of the more popular styles among all of the various fruit moonshine mash options. A single highly productive apple tree can make many bushels of apples. This, in turn, can be converted into gallons and gallons of apple moonshine mash, and then be distilled into a lot of apple moonshine.

Ingredients

The first step in making apple moonshine mash is to gather the ingredients. Here’s what you’ll need

  • water
  • 1 bushel of apples
  • 4 lbs granulated sugar
  • Distillers yeast

Equipment

You’ll need a fair amount of equipment to process the fruit and make the apple moonshine mash. Here's our suggested list.

  • fruit mill,
  • fruit press,
  • nylon strainer bag,
  • bucket for collecting apple juice,
  • a fermenter with an airlock.
    • Note: The the collection bucket and the fermentation vessel can actually be the same container.

Apple Moonshine Mash Procedure

  1. Wash apples
  2. Half (or quarter, depending on strength of mill)
  3. Grind with mill
  4. Collect juice in a bucket and pulp in a nylon strainer bag
  5. Transfer to fruit press and compress
  6. Collect juice in a bucket
  7. Transfer juice to a kettle
  8. Heat to 170F for 10 minutes
  9. Chill to 70 degrees
  10. Transfer to a fermentation bucket
  11. Aerate
  12. Add distillers yeast
  13. Seal and apply airlock
  14. Allow to ferment for 10 days
  15. Transfer to still and distill.

Thin Mash Moonshine Recipe

Cooking a thin mash is an easy way to double the quantity of mash while retaining some of the natural grain flavor of corn whiskey. It's made by starting with an actual mash, such as the one above, and then adding water and granular sugar to increase the quantity of wash.

Ingredients:

  • 10 gallons of water (5 gal to start then 5 more)
  • 8.5 pounds of flaked maize
  • 1.5 pounds of crushed malted barley
  • 6-8 pounds of sugar

Yeast - Read this article to learn about yest pitching procedures

Procedure:

Creating a thin mash is accomplished in two steps. First, cook the standard corn whiskey mash described above. However, after the final rest period, add 5 gallons of cold water and 6-8 pounds of sugar. Once the mash temperature has dropped to 96 degrees, it is ready for aeration, yeast and fermentation, as described in the Corn Whiskey recipe above.

Advanced distillers should shoot for a specific gravity of about 1.08. Dilute with water if high.

Sweet Feed Moonshine Mash Recipe

We think there are better ways to make a moonshine mash, but there are also worse and some folks really like the sweet feed option. Sweet feed is a type of horse feed that is available at most farm stores. Manufacturers don't typically put the exact ingredients list on the packaging so it's a little hard to tell what you're getting. However, sweet feed is generally oats, barley, corn, and also typically contains some molasses (cane sugar). Molasses is one of the primary ingredients in traditional rum so using sweet feed to make a moonshine mash can offer an interesting twist.

Sweet feed moonshine mash ingredients

To make a sweet feed mash you'll need the following. You should be able to find sweet feed at any farm store. The sugar can be purchased from any grocery store and the yeast will be available online or at a homebrew supply store. If you want to keep it local, bread yeast can always be used in place of the distiller's yeast.
  • 10 lbs sweet feed
  • 6 lbs granulated sugar
  • 7 gallons of water
  • 1 package of distiller's yeast

Sweet Feed Moonshine Mash Steps

  1. To make a sweet feed moonshine mash, follow these steps.
  2. Add the water to a pot and heat to 170F.
  3. Add the sweet feed and cook for 90 minutes
  4. Cool to 150F
  5. Add amylase powder
  6. Allow to sit for 90 minutes
  7. Chill to 70F
  8. Transfer to fermenter
  9. Aerate
  10. Add 1 package of high proof distillers yeast
  11. Ferment for 2 weeks
  12. Transfer to a still
  13. Distill

Sugar Shine Moonshine Mash Recipe

sugar shine
Real corn whiskey is rather uncommon these days. More often than not, modern moonshine is nothing more than straight sugar with a bit of flavoring. Although it isn’t as smooth as corn whiskey, what it lacks in flavor and smoothness is made up by convenience. Also, some people don't care about corn flavor...they'd rather have apple pie, peaches, or other fruit flavors. This recipe works just fine for that stuff. Here’s how a sugar shine wash is made:
Ingredients:
  • 5 gallons water
  • 8 pounds of white sugar
  • Yeast

Procedure:

Heat 2 gallons of water (to no more than 120 degrees) and add sugar a few pounds at a time. Stir until dissolved and add more sugar.  Keep adding sugar until all sugar has been added / dissolved. Dump this mixture into a fermenter and add 3 more gallons of water. Shoot for a final temperature of 96 degrees and adjust heat of additional water accordingly. Add yeast once final liquid temp is 70 degrees. Aerate by dumping back and forth between two buckets a few times. Shoot for a constant fermentation temperature of 70 degrees for the shortest fermentation time and highest alcohol yield. If the distilling environment isn't this warm, wrap the fermenter in a blanket and use a heating pad if necessary. Leave it sit for a week to ferment and another week to settle. Then, siphon into a still, being careful to not overfill (the vapor cone should not contain any liquid).

Kyle Brown is the owner of Clawhammer Supply, a small scale distillation and brewing equipment company which he founded in 2009. His passion is teaching people about the many uses of distillation equipment as well as how to make beer at home. When he isn't brewing beer or writing about it, you can find him at his local gym or on the running trail.

  • Good job

    Posted by Alozie alex orji on July 12, 2013
  • Looks great. Can’t wait to give it a try! How much yeast is needed for the corn whiskey recipe?

    Posted by Chris on July 11, 2013
  • When using your recipe for the corn mash I see that it is for 5 gallons at a time. The question I have is how much yeast to use for how much mash. I plan on purchasing the 10 gal still and need a little help with the yeast. Thank you for your help all your information is very helpful

    Posted by Dustin on July 09, 2013
  • I like your corn whiskey recipe. How much yeast? If you made a 2nd run, how much yeast and sugar?

    Posted by Jim on July 08, 2013
  • Can you use a stainless steel still and why do that recommend the copper over the stainless

    Posted by cracker on June 30, 2013
  • I had the same issues, have you tried a local home brew store?
    ask if they will order it for you

    Posted by Bill on June 29, 2013
  • third run,good. now shine has a cloudie in bottom of the jar, what did i do wrong ?

    Posted by sparkie lewis on June 21, 2013
  • On my first batch i bought a 32 gal. trash can, I then took a beer keg and made a keggle out of it so i could do my mixing. in the 15 gal. keggle I added about 8 gal. of good well water an heated it to about 180 degrees, i then added 25 pounds of suger and about 8 scoops of crushed corn. I then added another 25 pounds of suger. I then added more water to cool the mash to around 80 degrees. When it reached 80 degrees I added 6 packs of yeast. the next morning I checked my mash and it was magic! it was bubbling like crazy! Im on my 9th day and it has a strong odor of alcohol coming form the top!

    the second batch I made I ued a 50 gal. pilking barrel from atwoods farm supply. I added every thing that I did on the fisrt batch but on this one I done 3 scoops of crushed corn and 4 scoops of sweet feed and a jar of molasses. The next day it was the same but it had a very strong odor of alcohol coming from the barrel! im a new at this to! but just trying diffrent ways to make it! has any one ever made it like this and if so how did it turn out? Thanks!
    Posted by chuck on June 21, 2013
  • Made a batch of corn whiskey. I used 7lbs of cracked corn and 7 lbs of sugar. Pitched the yeast and it took 2 to ferment. I did my distilling and when I placed my hydrometer in my finished sample. The hydrometer sank to the bottom of the test sample. I poured a little out and lite it and it burned. I’m wondering why the hydrometer sank instead of floating to show ABV.

    Posted by William on June 17, 2013
  • can you post a honeyshine recipe for 5 gallons

    Posted by Aaron on June 15, 2013
  • Ashley
    if you think you have a low alcohol content , what proof is it , if you are new to the business don’t worry about it , its all trial and error , rule of thumb is you want a higher gain or proof ad more sugar , just by sugar yeast and water you can get as high as 180 , but the more sugar you use , the headache the next morning is going to be worse , plus later on in life all that sugar will catch up with you , take a little time and work with malting your own corn and barley , it takes time to learn it right but will be better in the long run , if you want to wast the money on turbo yeast you can , but red star and freshman’s does just as good , there is a lot of information on malting your own barley and corn . on the net providing you have a place to do it , its impossible to do it RIGHT in a five gallon bucket , I am not a pro by no means . I don’t think any of us are
    I just know what works for me and in time you will know what works for you . we can get a basic idea , but the rest is up to us , that old boy that has claw hammer is a good man as anything when in school and being schooled take notes , the stock pot I had use is a 40 gallon stainless steel stockpot ,, works real nice , and I used George Washington recipe , try that but I used 40malted corn 30 malted barley and 30 rye , and was a steady 145 to 160 , and the tails would be saved for the thumper on the next run I had a false bottom 2" off the floor and if take good cotton canvas and make a mash sack and add 5 to
    8 pounds of mash in it tie it off and toss it in like a tea bag , back then my
    x father in law could never figure out why my hogs had rotten teeth .. but had the best tasting meat in the county , lol be safe and happy shinning

    Posted by Lucky B on June 09, 2013
  • Morningwood- I know how you feel. I don’t even drink that much these days but for some reason I am completely fascinated with making shine. It’s a really cool hobby.

    Posted by Hanman on June 08, 2013
  • I am a rookie first run came out blue and cloudy i really want to do this rite any help would be greatly appricated thanx

    Posted by Dan on June 06, 2013
  • this moonshine is yummy

    Posted by tom jim (jim toms brother) on June 04, 2013
  • I tried the barley/ corn mash and it seem to be going well till I set it to ferment. ( went moldy). I realize it could be many things but should I have strained the corn from the liquid before I added yeast. 1st time trying it this way and recipe did not specify

    Posted by Island guy on June 03, 2013
  • finally have all my eqpt…….next is mash…am leaning toward corn/barley 70%/30%…adding 5lbs of fine sugar…2tblespoon yeast……question?? should I double distill??

    Posted by c.t.mckenzie on May 28, 2013
  • im hooked

    Posted by morningwood on May 26, 2013
  • I need a simple shine recipe for corn, sugar, water, and yeast. I have these products and need a how to. Just a starting point. Bigger and better things next.
    Thanks

    Posted by USN Sparky on May 19, 2013
  • in the moon shine recipe would I be able to use liquid malt extract instead off barley grain if so what would be the rate

    Posted by Steve O'Connor on May 18, 2013
  • trying to find/buy a great peach moonshine receipt using natural peaches no sugar shine. like to make a 2 gallon batch. i made my first ever peach sugar shine last year, it was a bit hit, but now i’m finding out no sugar is better.
    any helpfull info for this rookie from the cornpatch state would be greatly appeciated……………

    Posted by terry on May 14, 2013


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