I'm going to revive this thread because I was looking on my local homebrew shop's website and they've started selling hard seltzer kits made up of dextrose, yeast, nutrient, and flavoring. I don't think I've ever had hard seltzer and was a little surprised that it wasn't just carbonated water with vodka and flavoring added. I'm actually even more surprised that it seems to basically be carbonated, flavored sugar wash. As many of us know, sugar wash is pretty gross.
I happened to have had a party a few weeks ago and have a few cans in the fridge. I cracked one open and I'm drinking it now, you really couldn't tell that it's a fermented product and it goes deeper than the flavors just masking it. That sent me down a rabbit hole on seltzer filtration, some info can be found here:
https://www.filtrox.com/applications/fi ... d-seltzer/
I've never filtered my spirits, I've done the reading to know this forum has an aversion to the practice and I'm sure the mere sight of this post will trigger anti-filtration sentiment. I find the loss of proof the biggest reason why and I'm generally pretty happy with what I can pull off my VM where I'm usually feints for neutral.
HOWEVER my thinking is that if we filtered the wash in line with the protocols in the link above, the proof problem goes away and it also makes the idea of a sugar neutral more appealing, which I've moved away from because I find my feints neutrals are better. You can get something ultra clean that goes into the still with lower levels of non water, non ethanol compounds which presumably is going to cut down on our heads and tails and potentially increase yield.
I have no idea if this can be done at our scale but I'm thinking of actively researching it. I did want to ask if anybody since this post has considered a filtration treatment to their wash and how that's translated to their final spirit? Cheers.