Originally Posted by: whaler Yea it's going pretty good I guess. It put on a big head the first day, about half the second day and has been peaches and minor bubbling on top since the 3rd day. I'm sure it's going, just not aggressive. If I was going to worry about anything, it would be the 10 gallons of dextrose next to it that has nothing g but water, dextrose and yeast. That one just does what it wants. I stir it every now and again to make sure but Saturday will be 2 weeks and I don't think I will ever run anything straight again. I like a healthy mash.
I built these tables for my conical. Put a sheet around both and put a vortex heater under there. It holds any temp you want real good. Put a blanket over the top of the tanks and it's on!
Wow. That sounds like a good watch, that documentary. I generally quit watching TV cause it ain't worth Hill of beans.
Yeah about all I watch anymore is NCIS, NCIS:LA (it comes on right after NCIS does). On occasion I'll catch a documentary or something that pertains to WWII or distilling. Other than that, I really don't watch much tv. I do like watching Robert Irvine on Restaurant Impossible, but it's getting to be repeative these days.
Originally Posted by: epicdoom I would assume they used a large amount of yeast to consume the sugars pretty fast, really though any amount of ABV can be distilled just wont be rocket fuel, but hell that's pretty hard to drink anyhow. Even if they were able to distill it to 50-70 proof that would do the trick and would certainly go down easier. As I understand it back then it wasn't very pleasing to drink other then the after effect. lol I personally can drink just about anything, especially once I'm feeling pretty good same thing with eating. true story I used to get drunk to eat dinner with my in-laws, Man alive that woman cant cook a lick, good thing I moved my wife into my parents house for the first 2 years of our marriage.
No not really. My late grandfather was a kid back during prohibition and he said it was the nastiest stuff he'd ever seen or tasted in his life. They didn't have turbo yeasts that are finished in 72 hours or less like they do today and alot of them didn't care what went into the mash either. From start to finish, it takes 3 days for the corn to be converted from starches into fermentable sugars and that includes soaking the corn. Alot of the moonshiners that are in it for the money know this and mark up the price quite a bit because they added corn to the mix. In my humble opinion, it's the
wrong thing to do and it's dishonest from the word go because they truly don't break down their grains like they should. All you get out of the woods these days, is a poorly made sugar liquor that doesn't cost hardly anything to make and it's sold for a very high profit.
Originally Posted by: whaler Well my peaches are done. took 7 days at 80 degrees. maybe a few degrees higher during the day. I dont have a SG meter but it taste really dry. No peach taste. Just dry non carbonated beer flavor. Only drag is, I planned to run them off next weekend. ugh. I gotta seal it up in food grade barrels and wait several days. I guess Im gonna find out how that works.
Should be no big deal. I wonder if this recipe is any close to the peach stuff they make in Washington at Mt. Vernon?
Looking forward to running this one.....
It's going to be a little bit on the dry side so don't be surprised if you have to add a little water to tone down the dryness and to bring out the flavor after distilling.
Originally Posted by: whaler I dipped all the peaches off last night and it seems cloudy from the peaches. Milky white cloud mixed all in the peaches. I was going to drain the lees this morning, but I wanted to ask if it having a milky white cloudiness is normal.
Thanks!
That's normal. All you need to do is use a clearing agent which should help out alot.
Originally Posted by: heeler I bet that cloudy milky looking stuff is from the yeast carcasses, not the peaches, I know its all around them but nothing you can do about it really. Now if your gonna transfer it to something else thats fine, fill it really full so theres no air pocket even if you have to add a little water to get it full, no worries.
A good clearing agent will help, but I agree with adding a little water to the mixture before distilling. If you add a little bit of water to some of your aged whiskey, you can detect the flavors of your whiskey better. An englishman visiting the states told me to do that with some scotch and let me tell you, it made the world of a difference in flavor. It smoothed it out and you can taste the ingredients.