


Moderator: Site Moderator
I agree... My UJSSM is always aged to +18 months. I can now tell when I need to get a batch of mash going that I will need for drinking in the future.HellsWintr wrote:@rgarry I tried to stockpile thru the winter. I ran out about 2 weeks ago. I set up another batch and after 2 weeks, it just worked off. Damn cold weather. The lesson is, when you think you have enough, run a bit more
I see that you show 65% on your first jar. Is that what you started at? I am asking because I read the post about making cuts and I thought it was supposed to start at 82%. I am running my first batch and I started at 65%. Is this right?ProChargedHarley03 wrote:I got my first UJSSM run under my belt was very pleased with the recipeI ran about 12 gallons!! So i got up the next day to start the 2 batch, so pulled out the spent corn dumped in about 4 gallons of backset"that was still 100F from the night before
" It help with mixing the sugar in with the corn and pitched in the yeast, buy the time i got the lid on she was bubbling away!!!! 24 hours later its bubbling way more than the first batch. it also smelled way better than the first batch. "before i put the yeast in".Smelled kinda like banbana's....to me i guess
Can you help me find a good read on this? As you know, I put my feints into my ferment. Bad move. I split the ferment and added water and yeast. It worked. Here is my question. What do I do with my stripping runs? When do I add them into the pot? Can I add them in with the next run that I do in my pot? I read that some people collect all the feints and run them as one batch. Or, when you siphon your ferment into to pot, do you add the feints then? One last question. Are low wines and feints the same thing? I read that low wines were taken off the stripping run. I thought that is what feints were. I am also reading a few different things about what to keep. Some people say to toss the heads. Don't run them twice. I know I have a ton of questions. Maybe you can just point me in the right direction. I have no problem reading.Titus-a-fishus wrote:Hey Tuckeroach
You will be better off doing a few stripping runs and then doing a slow run using the low wines from the stripping runs.
It's faster and gives better results.
When you do the slow run even with a pot still you can get up to 89% abv.
Remember to break down your low wines to below 40% for safety and it helps remove unwanted flavours
Try it and you will see what I mean
TAF
Makes sense. Thanks. I will just keep collecting until I can make a spirit run. I take it you do not want to dilute the spirit run.Fastill wrote:Tucker, get the idea of using ABV to decide what you keep and what you rerun out of your head. every still is different, and you need to find what you want by using smell, taste, and feel. Uncle Jesse ran this in a detuned reflux still set up so that is the ABV he collected. I have set mine up like this but found the flavor is much better just running stripping runs and a spirit run without any reflux.
I Just run my wash as fast as my condenser will handle and save it all in gallon bottles until I have enough for a spirit run. This is the run that use my senses to make all my cuts, only using a proof hydrometer after everything is done to dilute to aging proof.
Yes. You dilute to 40% or less, for safety reasons.Tuckerroach wrote:Makes sense. Thanks. I will just keep collecting until I can make a spirit run. I take it you do not want to dilute the spirit run.Fastill wrote:Tucker, get the idea of using ABV to decide what you keep and what you rerun out of your head. every still is different, and you need to find what you want by using smell, taste, and feel. Uncle Jesse ran this in a detuned reflux still set up so that is the ABV he collected. I have set mine up like this but found the flavor is much better just running stripping runs and a spirit run without any reflux.
I Just run my wash as fast as my condenser will handle and save it all in gallon bottles until I have enough for a spirit run. This is the run that use my senses to make all my cuts, only using a proof hydrometer after everything is done to dilute to aging proof.
Now I understand what TAF meant. Thanks for the help. One last question. Dilute with distilled water or wash?Fastill wrote:Yes. You dilute to 40% or less, for safety reasons.Tuckerroach wrote:Makes sense. Thanks. I will just keep collecting until I can make a spirit run. I take it you do not want to dilute the spirit run.Fastill wrote:Tucker, get the idea of using ABV to decide what you keep and what you rerun out of your head. every still is different, and you need to find what you want by using smell, taste, and feel. Uncle Jesse ran this in a detuned reflux still set up so that is the ABV he collected. I have set mine up like this but found the flavor is much better just running stripping runs and a spirit run without any reflux.
I Just run my wash as fast as my condenser will handle and save it all in gallon bottles until I have enough for a spirit run. This is the run that use my senses to make all my cuts, only using a proof hydrometer after everything is done to dilute to aging proof.
People use both, I like using spring water, but wash will give more flavor, I feel that with my corn it is cleaner tasting using water.Tuckerroach wrote:Now I understand what TAF meant. Thanks for the help. One last question. Dilute with distilled water or wash?