Tony Bones
Grundalier
OK, I bought a still, fermented five gallons of mash, and cooked her up yesterday.
1. Distilling at home w/ a 26 L still takes a loooooong time. About 12 hours. It takes for damn near ever to get stuff up to temp. using an electric hot plate. I'll pre-heat the still on the gas stove to boil next time, then transfer to the hot plate. Should cut the cook-down time in half.
2. I pulled about 3/4 of a gallon of good, drinkable product off.
3. Current alocohol content is about 50%. 100 proof.
In terms of taste, this is a different deal than what I've ever dealt w/ in terms of alcohol. It has almost no taste what-so-ever, except for a hint of corn and yeast. You could easily throw down a pint and think nothing of it...until you woke up on the garage floor of someone's home other than your own covered in vomit and urine.
From here, I will ferment another 5 gallons of mash (w/ a higher sugar content for more end product this time). I'll then cook it down, mix it w/ the first run, and cook it down again. This is where things get interesting.
After the second distillation you generally have an alcohol content of somewhere in the neighborhood of 80%. That's 160 proof folks. Two gallons of 160 proof liquor is enough to get you, your friends, and a couple of people you hate very, very drunken. Very.
Will provide an update sometime here next week.
1. Distilling at home w/ a 26 L still takes a loooooong time. About 12 hours. It takes for damn near ever to get stuff up to temp. using an electric hot plate. I'll pre-heat the still on the gas stove to boil next time, then transfer to the hot plate. Should cut the cook-down time in half.
2. I pulled about 3/4 of a gallon of good, drinkable product off.
3. Current alocohol content is about 50%. 100 proof.
In terms of taste, this is a different deal than what I've ever dealt w/ in terms of alcohol. It has almost no taste what-so-ever, except for a hint of corn and yeast. You could easily throw down a pint and think nothing of it...until you woke up on the garage floor of someone's home other than your own covered in vomit and urine.
From here, I will ferment another 5 gallons of mash (w/ a higher sugar content for more end product this time). I'll then cook it down, mix it w/ the first run, and cook it down again. This is where things get interesting.
After the second distillation you generally have an alcohol content of somewhere in the neighborhood of 80%. That's 160 proof folks. Two gallons of 160 proof liquor is enough to get you, your friends, and a couple of people you hate very, very drunken. Very.
Will provide an update sometime here next week.