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Originally Posted by: LWTCS Oaking and carbon filtering are 2 different techniques for what should be 2 different outcomes.
What recipe are you using?
Are you after flavored (oak) or nuetural (carbon) spirits
Did you strip before your spirit run?
Are you making cuts?
Pot stilling and oak indicates that you prefer a flavored spirit. Yes oak can polish and smooth your likker, but also adds nose and body. Something carbon can remove.
I bought The PSII from Brewhaus about 2.5 years ago and mostly use the black label turbo for ease of making, it actually makes a good 190 when cleared with sparkalloid and aired for 24 hours, I have no complaints on this. I did replace the PVC ball valve for the tower cooling to a brass gate valve and it controls the take-off perfectly.
I do not want to get involved with making any mashes and prefer sugar washes, I have made many different ones but the two that work best are the ""All Bran"" and the ""tomato Paste"" which I have a 4 gallon one going right now and is at 6% after 3 days. The All bran is more work though.
I always strip hard and fast to about 210F, gives me a little more than 2.5 gallons from a turbo and maybe 2 gallons from the others. I then let sit with about 4 tsp of baking soda until I get around to the spirit run. This is why I want bulk storage as I want to make about 30 gallons of low wines at a time so I can run later.
I spirit run in reflux mode slow 2 drops until the hearts hit then about 4+ drops, I smell dilute and taste my cuts. I do not collect tails and usually get 20oz of heads which is used for fire starting only. The near 1/2 gallon of hearts is all at 190, this needs no polishing excepting airing. Note I short the recipe on sugar to help keep this cleaner.
I have never pot stilled a turbo and don't intend to but have done the ""All Bran"" and with cuts got about 48oz of 140 from a 4 gallon wash. I had buddies from Florida drink it all a couple of weeks ago and said it tasted like tequila. This is the stuff I want to make in bulk and store for months on either carbon or charred hickory sticks, not for flavoring but just to polish and remove oils and such.
Making the charred sticks seems easier than making clean carbon, plus I have a ton of 1+ year dried hickory. I will try both but the results are months away and was just checking to see if anybody else has done this first.
I know it seems like I am a lazy sugarhead but am very busy getting this house ready to sell, my new cabin will be off grid and want to stock pile while I still have electricity and water."