simplifications,    Chinese and Japanese    brewers
have    traditionally   used    very    different
preparations    for breaking    rice    starch  down
into    fermentable sugars.
Chinese Chhü :  Several Molds   and Yeasts
The  ancient     Chinese     preparation,   chhü,    is
usually made    from    wheat   or  rice,   and includes
several different   kinds   of  mold    as  well    as  the
yeasts   that    will    eventually  produce     the
alcohol.    Some    of  the wheat   may be  roasted or
left     raw,    but     most    is  steamed,    coarsely
ground,  shaped  into    cakes,  and     then    left    to
mold    in  incubation  rooms   for several weeks.
Species  of Aspergillus  grow    on  the     outside,
and  species     of Rhizopus     and    Mucor    on  the
inside. Aspergillus is  the same    kind    of  mold
used    to  digest  soybeans    to  make    soy sauce   and
Rhizopus    is  the major   mold    in  soybean tempeh
(p.  496,    500),   while  Mucor    is  important   in
some     kinds   of  aged    cheeses.    All     of  them
accumulate   starch-and  protein-digesting
