Maple Vodka and a new way of making cuts
I spotted some 1lt bottles of maple syrup for sale today in Costco, can't remember the exact price but they were about £8.50
I was searching around for a spirit I could make using the maple syrup as a base sugar and stumbled across this place that makes maple syrup into vodka.
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-cult ... 105229981/
Interestingly they discribe their distilling process as follows
To make the Gold, he starts with something between sap and syrup, since sap is only 2 or 3 percent sugar and syrup is at least 66 percent, while about 20 percent is best for fermentation. The distillery ran its own sugaring operation at first, but it was "a huge project," so now they buy syrup in bulk and dilute it with spring water. The mix is fermented with yeast in a temperature-controlled tank for roughly a week.
"At that stage it's about 9 percent alcohol, so we call it a beer, although it's not a particularly good one," he said. The first distillation stage separates the heart (ethanol) from the heads (other compounds) of this "beer," and the heart continues into a "fractionating-column still" for evaporation. The third and final distillation refines any remaining compounds (tails) out of the alcohol.
Seems they don't simply strip before a spirit run with all the cuts but make a heads cut during the strip, then run through a packed column, then make another run to cut the tails!
Sounds an interesting way of making cuts for a neutral, any thoughts?
I was searching around for a spirit I could make using the maple syrup as a base sugar and stumbled across this place that makes maple syrup into vodka.
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-cult ... 105229981/
Interestingly they discribe their distilling process as follows
To make the Gold, he starts with something between sap and syrup, since sap is only 2 or 3 percent sugar and syrup is at least 66 percent, while about 20 percent is best for fermentation. The distillery ran its own sugaring operation at first, but it was "a huge project," so now they buy syrup in bulk and dilute it with spring water. The mix is fermented with yeast in a temperature-controlled tank for roughly a week.
"At that stage it's about 9 percent alcohol, so we call it a beer, although it's not a particularly good one," he said. The first distillation stage separates the heart (ethanol) from the heads (other compounds) of this "beer," and the heart continues into a "fractionating-column still" for evaporation. The third and final distillation refines any remaining compounds (tails) out of the alcohol.
Seems they don't simply strip before a spirit run with all the cuts but make a heads cut during the strip, then run through a packed column, then make another run to cut the tails!
Sounds an interesting way of making cuts for a neutral, any thoughts?