This is very interesting and I've thought alot about an initial stripping system that was fast and efficient to collect low wines then pot stilling or low reflux collumn stilling for flavor. It seems that large scale distilleries have continuous systems with the "beer stripper" steam fed from the bottom through collumn plates then the collected stuff going into low wine tanks then pumped into rectification collums of similar size. This does massive amounts of stuff.
The more traditional bourbon folks of days gone by, like Sitzel Weller, used a stripper for collection then a series of "pot doublers" as they called them. I'm not sure what works best, but if the flavor is any indication, pretty much anything out there really sucks badly, so there must be a better way to scale batches and maintain flavor.
But as for the system you've proposed here, a few questions/comments.
I'm wondering how the marbles are going to work with steam shooting up between them and the mash coming down, it doesn't seem like it's going to create the necessary slow-flow in order to get vapor separation. Wouldn't drilled copper plates with an overflow hole work better? The sheer density of the marbles is going to introduce a new variable as their temp will have a noticeable effect on the success of the whole vaporization process, it would seem. In other words, your 'marbles would need to be hot' for the system to work, wouldn't they?
Also, are you using the "mash input" vat as a defacto pre-heater for the mash?
Steam, the source has to be fairly precisely regulated in order to maintain the vapour pressure for the collumn to work consistently and get any type of consistent results and, again, the vapour separation, else you're going to be pouring alot of mash down the drown with ethanol still in it.
Again let me say....fascinating idea and the exact direction alot of us around here are thinking, especially with regards to batch processing for micro-distilling.
Mother Earth News has some stuff on this that I've found interesting.
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