I'm using neutral with cuts being made Kiwi. This is the thire time through old Jenny.kiwistiller wrote:Out of interest OD, have you ever tried using finished neutral (cuts already made) or have you always done it with wash?
blanik
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I'm using neutral with cuts being made Kiwi. This is the thire time through old Jenny.kiwistiller wrote:Out of interest OD, have you ever tried using finished neutral (cuts already made) or have you always done it with wash?
This is why I run it from wash, by the time the forshots and heads have been taken you get the full flavour.blanikdog wrote:Funny using a bag. The first to come through was totally tasteless but as the run progressed - particularly near the shutdown point - it became really strong. Obviously the botanicals need a bit of steam to work and just keep on working. This is what makes me think that I had too much bots for the run.
kiwistiller wrote:It has replaced lavender in my vapour infused stuff. I'm also irresistable to cats and aphids now. And my skin repels mossies
Slow & Steady wrote:It took me a long time to work out this recipe, I was trying to do the Bombay gin head thing with a tilt towards Tangeray. Some of the problems I encountered may have had to do with the quality of some of my botanicals and the distilation techniques I was using had to change. The quality of the alcohol needs to be your FINEST. I like the distilled maceration flavor better than my gin head flavor. This recipe favors the upfront juniper of Tangeray while subtle citrus and warming herbs take the edge off the gin... I don't like being hit in the face by a pine bough any more than the next guy, but a walk in a pine forest on a warm spring day, well that is what I'm looking for. This will produce a sipping quality gin, but it can stand up to a bit of tonic or vermouth as well...
Macerate at least 24 hours but not more than 48 hours
1 gallon of the finest aged neutral you can produce at about 75% ABV
7 oz - Juniper berries (crushed)
2 oz - Coriander (crushed)
1 tsp - bitter orange peel (minced)
1 tsp - dried licorice root (little bits and pieces)
1 - whole Star Anise (crushed)
1/2 tsp - Grain of Paradise
1" from a cinnamon stick
zest 1/2 of a sweet orange
zest of 1 lemon
zest of 2 limes
1 small clove
4 fresh leaves from a Rosemary plant.
After half the maceration time has elapsed add 1/2 gallon of pure water.
When maceration time is over distill in a pot still, no scrubbers of any kind, as they knock down flavor profiles, and catch 100% of the distillate. No cuts are necessary as the quality of the neutral you have used is beyond reproach. Run the distillate down to 10% ABV or 99 degrees C. Some of the warm mouth feel crosses over at 98 to 99 degrees so do not shut down to early or your gin will lack a certain quality that comes from the coriander, be careful not to go to far and burn the maceration on the bottom of the still as it is a bitch to remove. I have burned it twice... yes I realize... I'm a slow learner.
The distillate is likely to be a flavor concentrate (unless you like your gin really strong), I add aged neutral to the distillate until I get a flavor profile that matches my taste. I do not water it down less than 141 proof as I like the way a gin and tonic turns out at the higher proof.
S&S
Slow and Steady ,Slow & Steady wrote:It took me a long time to work out this recipe, I was trying to do the Bombay gin head thing with a tilt towards Tangeray. Some of the problems I encountered may have had to do with the quality of some of my botanicals and the distilation techniques I was using had to change. The quality of the alcohol needs to be your FINEST. I like the distilled maceration flavor better than my gin head flavor. This recipe favors the upfront juniper of Tangeray while subtle citrus and warming herbs take the edge off the gin... I don't like being hit in the face by a pine bough any more than the next guy, but a walk in a pine forest on a warm spring day, well that is what I'm looking for. This will produce a sipping quality gin, but it can stand up to a bit of tonic or vermouth as well...
Macerate at least 24 hours but not more than 48 hours
1 gallon of the finest aged neutral you can produce at about 75% ABV
7 oz - Juniper berries (crushed)
2 oz - Coriander (crushed)
1 tsp - bitter orange peel (minced)
1 tsp - dried licorice root (little bits and pieces)
1 - whole Star Anise (crushed)
1/2 tsp - Grain of Paradise
1" from a cinnamon stick
zest 1/2 of a sweet orange
zest of 1 lemon
zest of 2 limes
1 small clove
4 fresh leaves from a Rosemary plant.
After half the maceration time has elapsed add 1/2 gallon of pure water.
When maceration time is over distill in a pot still, no scrubbers of any kind, as they knock down flavor profiles, and catch 100% of the distillate. No cuts are necessary as the quality of the neutral you have used is beyond reproach. Run the distillate down to 10% ABV or 99 degrees C. Some of the warm mouth feel crosses over at 98 to 99 degrees so do not shut down to early or your gin will lack a certain quality that comes from the coriander, be careful not to go to far and burn the maceration on the bottom of the still as it is a bitch to remove. I have burned it twice... yes I realize... I'm a slow learner.
The distillate is likely to be a flavor concentrate (unless you like your gin really strong), I add aged neutral to the distillate until I get a flavor profile that matches my taste. I do not water it down less than 141 proof as I like the way a gin and tonic turns out at the higher proof.
S&S
Novice Guide for Cuts (pot still)kook04 wrote: maybe cuts are the biggest learning curve, here.