After my food ferments, I could just do like a grain-to-grain transfer. I know it is probably not the best term, but I think that you understand. I would not really need a EM-1 serum after I get started. I really appreciate both of you bearing with me and helping me make sense of this!!!
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All good man. We're here as a community!!!
It all looks good. Just a few pointers...
This is an anerobic process, so the less head room you have, the better. If you can use smaller containers and fill them up, that would be better.
Not completely necessary but it does help to cube or chop the food scraps first before leading them into the fermenter. Remember the head room, well air pockets around the food scraps will be counterproductive. Get a trash bag and line you bucket first. Poke a couple holes in the bottom so the liquid can leech away. Load scraps into the bag/bucket and press them down using the bag to force out any air pockets. Twist up the top of the bag and fold/lay it down. Put on the buckets lid.
I'd also sprinkle more bokashi grain/meal/paper to cover the scraps. Throw grains in there like barley and mung beans, ect... BIG TIME FUNGI FOOD!!
As far as not really needing the serum after the bucket is made and composted.... your gonna need to make more bokashi at some point and your going to need the serum to make it. I'd just make some serum and store it in the fridge for 6month. Once you have it, making more serum is as simple as adding 1tbsp of serum into a gallon of milk. 5 days later you'll have almost another full gallon of serum.
Technically you could do a g2g, but the bokashi starter wouldn't work as effectively as concentrated serum. Serum is always step 1 and the backbone of the process.
I'll grab some pics from my thread and show you my fermenter design.