Good plan. But now you loose almost all the time benefit of the huge yeast amount. Bicarb treatment also needs time. Ok, some here say, it happens enough during the distillation, but probably more, if you give it time while stabilizing.hoochlover wrote: 1) Do a stripping run, don't add the heads, strip till most alcohol is gone (so most tails is in)
2) Treat result with base (bicarb, etc) and let it rest for some time.
3) Do another run this time making sure the entire rig is clean. So basically do a steam clean before you distil your low wines.
4) There will be barely any heads to compress, so there will be very little heads smearing in the hearts as barely any got in the rig. By the time tails comes along due to the excellent compression of the rig you stop collection here.
This maximizes yield and neutralness. You could add another pass or carbon if you are paranoid but with a good rig there really is not much need. The important thing is at least two passes, and treatment with base. That removes pretty much any crap from a dirty wash.
Carbon treatment also would need time. But ok, you don't have to supervise it the whole time like a still. If I do it, I need 2.5h per liter 40-50%. It has nothing to do with paranoia, with carbon you get a total different product. Better or worse? It depends on what you want.