Brewhunter wrote:
Thunderbird having reread your post may I suggest that you rely less on the smell when trying to find tails and more on your tasting, I know what you mean about the smell from airstill tails but I find with the T500 is it's easier tasting it.
Also as a rough guide you can pinch some spirit between your fingers as you reach the tails you'll notice it feels slightly more greasy.
Brewhunter, I've been working hard over the past week. Did the strip using the T500 reflux column, then did the spirit run. I used a bit of a combination of info from GinBob over at Home Distiller (Making cuts with T500 Reflux) and George from Barley and Hops on YouTube (How do we separate foreshots, heads, hearts and tails?).
I had 2 lots of strip from 48 litres so chucked the first 300ml of foreshots, then I collected 2 x 100ml of heads and a further jar of 200ml. GinBob was right and the first 200ml went into my feints bottle (there's no way it was going into my hearts as it tasted terrible). He doesn't bother with further heads and again, he was right and the next 200ml were blended in with the hearts as it tasted absolutely fine.
George reckons there's a definite temperature change between heads and hearts and yes, I watched this happen. Spirit stopped running, the temperature climbed slightly (I know the thermometer is on the cooling water but it did happen) and sprit recommenced running. This was the hearts and GinBob says to collect approx 2/3 of what you put in in it's undiluted state. 6.6 litres at 91% went in (diluted with 13L water) so I collected 4 litres at 93% then started collecting 250ml tails jars. I collected 5x 250ml tails and the first 500ml went back into the hearts as they tasted fine (after airing) and the final jars went into the feints as they were a bit rank by comparison.
So yes, I now seem to know how to find the tails with the T500 and it worked. It was one of the easiest spirit runs I've done with the T500 and produced 4.7L @93% of fabulous neutral.
Today I used the alembic setup along with the SS botanical basket. It's on the small side so I used a sputnik for some of the juniper. I upscaled Gaza's Plymouth gin recipe for the AS (the one with bitter orange peel) and have just made the most incredible gin. It is so smooth and it is completely unfiltered or air-stoned. Diluted to 42%abv I can drink it immediately with barely any trace of a bite so in a week or so it should be fantastic. I honestly put it down to the Vodka Star wash, it came out so clean and even tasting it after the strip it tasted good. It's going to be my sugar wash of choice from here on in.Statistics: Posted by Thunderbird — Tue Jul 17, 2018 12:26 am
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