Originally Posted by: googe What sort of ABV were you getting at that rate?. A toothpick size stream is good for pot stilling. Don't try to make many ajustments, smearing.if you have a good toothpick stream at the start it will continue through to hearts, might decrease a bit when you hit hearts, if you have to, make very slight heat adjustments. It should stay stable through hearts, then it will go a bit crazy, output will be all over the place, ABV will drop, that's the sure sign of tails, turn the heat up to what your condenser can handle.and strip to 40~30% ABV.
Hi fella's.. Been away on business a few days...
Ok, googe, here tis - Frame of references - pint jars, fill point was 3/4 way (or so), so about 12 ounces per jar (?)
Ended up with about a 3.8 gal wash - that durn SF and barley really absorbed a lot and I did not siphon into my grain bed-any disturbance was causing a cloud - so I left about 3/4" of liquid over the bed.. I extracted what I could before the finish run, but it was a filtering challenge, and I tossed it because I didnt want to bung up the kettle by burning any sediments...
First Run - For that day, etoh boiling point in my locale was 166.124415, which I rounded up to 167f. I use a blichmann, so I brought the heat up slow (prob slower than I needed to). At 160f, I engaged the cooling water to the condenser (20 gal garbage can filled with twp 2.5 gal jugs of frozen water and 8 gals of loose cooling water - condenser was ICE cold, with almost a frost on it.
Unless otherwise noted, all my heat adjustments were
downward on the burner, I really tried to avoid seesawing back and forth.
( I heeded the advice of making a small adjustment and wating till I saw a result before making any more.)
- Temp 167f - Foreshots - collected about 200 ml, and introduced it to a fire ant mound
- Temp 168f - Jar 1 - abv 88-90% - Def heards - strong smell, heavy (hot) tastes
- Temp 172f - Jar 2 - abv 85 - Less heady an not so hot tasting
- Temp 175f - Jar 3 - abv 85 - Nice - seemed like hearts - taste was
- Temp 175f - Jar 4 - abv 83 - dropped a bit, still good aroma and taste
- Temp 182f - Jar 5 - abv 75 - still pretty smooth
- Temp 185f - Jar 6 - abv 70 - and here run 1 ended due to lack of heat source (In retrospect, I could have used the hot plate, but I wasn't keen on lifting the whole shebang onto it with it being hot and under pressure.
When I finished it out this past weekend, I got two more jars;
- Temp 187f - Jar 7 - abv 55 - starting to taste like a tail and hard smell too
- Temp 192f - Jar 8 - abv 39-40 - and I called it quits because temprature was all over on it's own, and I was having to make too many adjustments-next time I will fire it hard and strip the rest as suggested.
- Let the rest cool, and poured off in old water bottles for backset later on...
Originally Posted by: heeler IMHO...if you collect in smaller containers it will help with seperation of all the cuts no matter the stream or output size. Just something to contemplate.
Yes sir, pints was about the smallest thing wally world had, I know mason jars make an 8 ounce size, and I'll get some ordered for subsequent runs.
I left all 7 jars covered with a coffee filter over each and just the band to hold it on while I travelled, and my goodness, sakes alive, Jars 3-6 are really nice. Haven't decided yet if I'm gonna consume it dump it all back into a slow spirit run. Seems a shame to reflux it and lose that SF flavor and aroma
(When the missues says it smells wonderful-ya gotta stop and wonder-what's she want me to buy for her now?)
All in all, I really like the SF recepie - addition of the malted barley made a world of difference over the first time I tried it.