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Any one compared the 12 hour soak and all into the boiler method v's the 2 week mascerate then boil?
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I've done the 24 hour soak and also putting the botanicals into the boiler while I get set up (see NZChris's description of this, also in this thread). What I've found is that they both work great. Macerating for 24 hours will boost the juniper character, but also the dry quality from the botanicals.heyhaychapman wrote:I found Odins numbers for cuts spot on for the mascerate and boil technique. I just finished my 1 litre sample bottle and now I am back for a 4 litre run.![]()
Any one compared the 12 hour soak and all into the boiler method v's the 2 week mascerate then boil?
I've never done two weeks and wouldn't bother as I doubt there is much to be gained. Have you tasted the leftover bill after a run? There's not much flavor left in mine. I macerate everything overnight, then move peels to the basket. It is an Easy Gin method, and I like that, so I only complicate it by growing and processing what botanicals I can and experimenting with different botanicals, (e.g. I often use mango peel now).heyhaychapman wrote:I found Odins numbers for cuts spot on for the mascerate and boil technique. I just finished my 1 litre sample bottle and now I am back for a 4 litre run.![]()
Any one compared the 12 hour soak and all into the boiler method v's the 2 week mascerate then boil?
Mango ! Woo hoo that sounds tasty ! I put a kawakawa (pepper) leaf in mine just to see how that flies.NZChris wrote:I've never done two weeks and wouldn't bother as I doubt there is much to be gained. Have you tasted the leftover bill after a run? There's not much flavor left in mine. I macerate everything overnight, then move peels to the basket. It is an Easy Gin method, and I like that, so I only complicate it by growing and processing what botanicals I can and experimenting with different botanicals, (e.g. I often use mango peel now).
Juniper oils. They come early in the run. If you want to reduce them, make your first cut just a little later.heyhaychapman wrote:....I'm pretty sure its not Sea Monkeys. What do you reckon? (tails its gotta be tails)
Yeh you need to do that or their tiny crowns get stuck in your teeth. And what is chill filtering?buflowing wrote:On one batch (and only one), I've had sea monkeys hatch after about 3 to 4 weeks of sitting. I chill filtered them out. Taste improved.![]()
I know the haze. This isn't haze.NZChris wrote:If you don't like the haze, blend it with neutral till it disappears.
My recommendation is to follow the tried & true process if you want the same predictable results.Patching246 wrote:....My question is, if I macerate at a much higher ABV (say... 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 etc...) when I then dilute down to 30-43% for pot run, might I retain the profile that I would have lost if I'd just diluted?...
What I do most of my distilling in is a 1/2 barrel keg boiler with a 2" copper potstill head (for stripping), or a combination LM/VM head on a 30" 2" column (for reflux). That's what I use to make the neutral for the gin (sweet hearts).Patching246 wrote:I guess the only way for people with heating elements to do this then is to keep saving the backwash below the element until there is enough for a full batch. Going to end up with a lotta gin.
Could you post a picture of this? Sounds ideal.still_stirrin wrote:Patching246 wrote: a stock pot with a 1-1/2" potstill head. This boiler is heated by a modified Cadco hotplate (triac control circuit added). .
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This may sound insane, and possibly sacrilegious, but I have to wonder how that would taste with sugar water... Sweet steam passing through macerated hearts...S-Cackalacky wrote:I was planning on putting the macerated hearts in the thumper and charging the electric boiler with plain water - steamer style. Has anyone tried this?