what effect doesOdin wrote:There is multiple ways to handle this. Yes, macerating for a longer time is good. But for a short time and then distilling with herbs & berries in the boiler gives of more complex tastes. But if you can't do that (e.d. electrical element in boiler), macerate for a longer time. Yes, if you do that, you might want to decide to lower the amount of berries. Depends on the kind. Sorry, no straight forward answer. The fresh ones are fine. The ones you can crush between your fingers and even some oil gets out. Often the ones you buy are harder, dry. Those have more tanines to come over. In that case: don't crush, if you macerate for a longer time.
But if you can find ways to have berries & herbs in the boiler that would be perfect. Crush, macerate 12 to 24 hours, distill.
You thought taste was to strong and filtered herbs & berries out. Not necesairy. Yes, you may get over too many oils. And a cloudy drink when diluted to 45%. That means you were - in my opinion - not failing. You just got over too many tasty oils. Solution (litteraly): add 45% neutral (or 45% whiskey) until the haze disapears (at room temperature).
Often that means adding as much neutral/whiskey as you already had that base gin/genever. What you get like that? Maximum taste concentration in your gin or genever.
Odin
(e.d. electrical element in boiler ) have on the distillation
my boiler has an element in it and I distill my maceration
last run for the very first time I got a small amount of cloud and the flavour profile was different from the last time
this time I did and a half batch and thought i had been sloppy with the measurement , just decided to do full batches next time