StillSmart Home distillation made easy! 2011-05-18T15:25:33+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/feed.php?f=6&t=563 2011-05-18T15:25:33+00:00 2011-05-18T15:25:33+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=563&p=5039#p5039 <![CDATA[% ABV seems a bit strange - Help?]]> Statistics: Posted by phlogiston — Wed May 18, 2011 3:25 pm


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2011-05-17T03:22:43+00:00 2011-05-17T03:22:43+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=563&p=5034#p5034 <![CDATA[% ABV seems a bit strange - Help?]]>

Is it reasonably safe to assume it will be pretty similar to the starting strength?

If it\'s biting back at you then probably. I\'d take a teaspoon of it and try to light it. If it burns immediately you know it\'s over 57%.
I have a small (20ml) measuring cylinder I use for mixing essences which is very accurate so I\'d take 2ml of spirit and 1ml of water and see if it still lights, then try again with more or less water until adding a small amount of water means it won\'t light. As long as you know how much spirit there is and how much water you added to stop it lighting you can work out the orginal ABV.

Statistics: Posted by MrCat — Tue May 17, 2011 3:22 am


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2011-05-17T01:08:05+00:00 2011-05-17T01:08:05+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=563&p=5033#p5033 <![CDATA[% ABV seems a bit strange - Help?]]>
If you take 75% alcohol and add grapefruit juice the hydrometer might go to 40% because all your doing is messing with the specific gravity. Specific gravity is effected by more than just water or alcohol.
In drag racing we must do a hydrometer test to prove we haven\'t been tipping anything into the gas. Same principal. No matter what you add to a liquid the SG will vary by percentage and type of liquid.

Statistics: Posted by goinbroke2 — Tue May 17, 2011 1:08 am


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2011-05-16T18:12:24+00:00 2011-05-16T18:12:24+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=563&p=5027#p5027 <![CDATA[% ABV seems a bit strange - Help?]]> Is it reasonably safe to assume it will be pretty similar to the starting strength?

Statistics: Posted by lyonacre — Mon May 16, 2011 6:12 pm


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2011-05-15T21:11:53+00:00 2011-05-15T21:11:53+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=563&p=5024#p5024 <![CDATA[% ABV seems a bit strange - Help?]]>

An Alcometer (as apposed to a Wash, Wine & Beer Hydrometer) is used to test the strength of your spirit. Additives such as flavouring and Liquid Glucose will distort the hydrometer readings. Alcometers should only be used to test spirit in the following conditions: before any additives such as flavouring or liquid glucose are mixed.

You might be able to try a flame test though as the spirit should still burn. If you take a small sample and add water until it won't light you should be able to calculate the original ABV (by knowing how much water you added.)

Statistics: Posted by MrCat — Sun May 15, 2011 9:11 pm


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2011-05-15T20:45:04+00:00 2011-05-15T20:45:04+00:00 http://www.stillsmart.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=563&p=5023#p5023 <![CDATA[% ABV seems a bit strange - Help?]]> Last year as the sloes were coving the world we decided to make some sloe gin.
Followed the \"recipe\" that the Plymouth Gin Distillery talks about on their tours in terms of not adding any sugar but soaking the sloes in strong spirit - 76 ABV - and then cutting it back once the sloes have \"infused\".
Did that, all went well - the taste is terrific BUT it takes the top of your head off, I assumed because it is 77%.
When I check it with the spirit hydrometer it is nothing like 76%, more like 30!
What am I missing?

Statistics: Posted by lyonacre — Sun May 15, 2011 8:45 pm


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