"this is very intriguing...
i'm using cheap vodka now, as i didn't want to spend a bunch of money to produce poisonous garbage to start with. it's just 100 proof Mr. Bostons. i went looking for a neutral spirit that was greater than 45% ABV and this is all my local liquor store had.
my first three trials, i have had bad tasting ""absinthe"" with no louche, you hit it right on the head! and i've noticed the first part of the run tasting great and then tasting less and less like the herbs and more like straight alcohol as it goes on.
can you be more specific on the ""slow, steady collection"" part. does that mean the equivalent of medium heat or low heat? am i boiling the liquid? should i see a steady drip, drip, drip or a steady little stream? and then what am i looking for near the end? a cloudy liquid that tastes bad? once the temp. and still reach equilibrium (temp is steady and holding, distillate slows down and almost stops) should i turn the heat up in increments to get it flowing again?
i've been collecting at 50mL to 200mL batches, i just haven't been going long enough i guess. like i said, it sort of seems to just stop the way i'm distilling it.
thanks for all the help, this is great!
Originally Posted by: mtnwalker2 Consider a few things first.
If you use a quality vodka, there should be no or very few heads and tails in it.
Makeing absinthe, you want all or as much of the herbal flavors as possible. These will come out strongest in the first and last parts of the run. Also, for the louch to be effective, you need the oils that would come off in the tail part of the run. Without them, no louch.
Running a pot still, I never use temp. Run it for a slow steady collection, collect in small increments and later combine to taste. Run till you are getting about 20% ABV. Any of these parts you do cut, could be added to your next run.
Absinthe is different from most brews.
HTH
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