StillSmart Home distillation made easy! 2013-08-27T19:10:35+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/feed.php?f=3&t=2644 2013-08-27T19:10:35+00:00 2013-08-27T19:10:35+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2644&p=15862#p15862 <![CDATA[Re: extracting flavor from cognac, rum, etc...]]>
Expensive brandy would be relative.....I know of a bloke who had a double jereboam of a good vintage, I just didn't have the £87000 he sold it for.....

Vacuum distillation works well, and at much lower temperature than normal distillation so shouldn't affect the flavour too much.

Then as Myles suggests, some freeze distillation of the alcohol free residue would, I'd have thought, do the trick. But you'd need to play to find out whether it concentrated the flavour enough to be of use......

Statistics: Posted by Phantom — Tue Aug 27, 2013 7:10 pm


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2013-08-23T12:24:36+00:00 2013-08-23T12:24:36+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2644&p=15832#p15832 <![CDATA[Re: extracting flavor from cognac, rum, etc...]]>
Lower efficiency distilling carries some of the flavour from the wash into the product. Yes you could subsequently remove the alcohol, but in the process the flavour also changes.

Just pour a shot of spirit and leave it out overnight, no heating, just allow the alcohol to evapourate. The flavour changes, and it will still not be concentrated enough for you.

You would probably need to remove the alcohol and then further process (freeze distilation possibly) to remove some of the water. Slow freexing would probably be more effective at not removing the flavour by allowing the formation of bigger ice crystals.

There is a lot of flavour left in the wash - but how to get it out is a problem.

Statistics: Posted by Myles — Fri Aug 23, 2013 12:24 pm


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2013-08-22T01:18:14+00:00 2013-08-22T01:18:14+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2644&p=15821#p15821 <![CDATA[Re: extracting flavor from cognac, rum, etc...]]>
Do a little googling ...

Statistics: Posted by FullySilenced — Thu Aug 22, 2013 1:18 am


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2013-08-22T00:56:34+00:00 2013-08-22T00:56:34+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2644&p=15819#p15819 <![CDATA[Re: extracting flavor from cognac, rum, etc...]]> Statistics: Posted by danielhjeffery — Thu Aug 22, 2013 12:56 am


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2013-08-20T18:26:42+00:00 2013-08-20T18:26:42+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2644&p=15812#p15812 <![CDATA[Re: extracting flavor from cognac, rum, etc...]]>

Alcohol free Brandy, Whisky, Gin etc, or Synthahol, would be a huge seller around the world but I guess someone would have made that connection if it was that easy :D

AM 8)

Statistics: Posted by Almanac — Tue Aug 20, 2013 6:26 pm


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2013-08-20T17:08:25+00:00 2013-08-20T17:08:25+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2644&p=15809#p15809 <![CDATA[Re: extracting flavor from cognac, rum, etc...]]>
Why not just reduce it on the stove, boiling off the alcohol and leaving the a concentrated reduction like you would for a recipe.
Be careful not to burn your house down ;D

Statistics: Posted by Capt-Cudellez — Tue Aug 20, 2013 5:08 pm


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2013-08-20T10:09:25+00:00 2013-08-20T10:09:25+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2644&p=15806#p15806 <![CDATA[Re: extracting flavor from cognac, rum, etc...]]>
If not heat and remove the ethanol... see what you got left..

*****second thought vacuum extraction of the ethanol will induce no heat to the product destroying the flavors or aromas that you may truly want...

This is all I have thinking off the cuff...

have fun,

FS


Edit, you may want to look at the perfume industry and see how they save the aromas of specific herbs and flowers while using ethanol as the extract mechanism again off the cuff thinking..?

Statistics: Posted by FullySilenced — Tue Aug 20, 2013 10:09 am


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2013-08-20T01:21:56+00:00 2013-08-20T01:21:56+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2644&p=15804#p15804 <![CDATA[extracting flavor from cognac, rum, etc...]]> After extensive googling and searching forums with no success, I have decided to join this forum and ask the experts. I need to extract flavoring from cognac, and potentially others such as rum and brandy. I work with flavors for a living and could certainly replicate it, but I would prefer to use the real deal. Is there any distillation procedure to concentrate the flavor? Maybe distilling at a low temp for a long period of time? I have access to much lab glassware and tools.

Any and all help is appreciated!

Statistics: Posted by danielhjeffery — Tue Aug 20, 2013 1:21 am


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