High Proof VODKA In A POT STILL?! Neutral Spirit Success😉

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024

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  • @BeardedBored
    @BeardedBored  3 года назад +10

    Special Sale! Get 30% off INTO THE AM Graphic T-Shirts May 28th thru 31st - intotheam.com/Bearded10

    • @josephbXIX
      @josephbXIX 3 года назад +1

      I will try this recipe, so far i was pretty satisfied with birdswatcher taste, even for my gin. Brobably gonna usthe carbonate from now on

    • @AgeWhiskey
      @AgeWhiskey 3 года назад +1

      Bought. That's a good deal. Thanks!!

    • @chrisjones1896
      @chrisjones1896 2 года назад

      What is the total volume of water & wash please? It’s not stated in the ingredients drop down - thank you

  • @tonyoliver4920
    @tonyoliver4920 3 года назад +64

    👨🏻‍🔬 chemist!
    I believe it’s akin to salt-induced phase separation. It alters the azeotrope points for non ethanol compounds in the wash
    The off flavours don’t want to boil off because they bind to the ionic solution

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +20

      This right here is the high quality nerding I was hoping for! Thanks for picking up the slack, brother!

    • @tonyoliver4920
      @tonyoliver4920 3 года назад +2

      @@BeardedBored any time!

    • @harveywallbanger2127
      @harveywallbanger2127 3 года назад +1

      I always thought it was mostly hydrolysis of the ethyl acetate and other esters in the heads, which produces more alcohol and less heads.

    • @tonyoliver4920
      @tonyoliver4920 3 года назад

      @@harveywallbanger2127 hydrolysis of esters are catalysed by acidity. Na carb is alkaline so would push the equilibrium in the opposite direction

    • @harveywallbanger2127
      @harveywallbanger2127 3 года назад +3

      @@tonyoliver4920 base hydrolysis is a thing too, and to my understanding not as reversible like acid hydrolysis. I think it also gets called saponification.

  • @StillIt
    @StillIt 3 года назад +36

    This is pretty interesting man. I have heard people talking about "reducing heads" in this way. But I have never tried it. Glad to see you have. Like always, when I get to this point for these kinda things I wish we had a freaking lab to take this to the next level of testing.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +15

      Yeah, I think the next step is going to be someone, not saying who, but maybe some Kiwi should do a side by side test on a T500 to see how much of a difference it really makes;-)

    • @Backdaft94
      @Backdaft94 3 года назад +2

      @@BeardedBored I agree 100%

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +4

      @@Backdaft94 Yes, if only we knew a guy who could do it¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • @jameskringlee8974
    @jameskringlee8974 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank You for this video. FYI Here is the invert sugar recipe referenced in the, at times bogus these days, well known online encyclopedia. Seems from problems some have making invert sugar it is important to follow this recipe ratio of sugar and water and citric acid and temperature reached. The wiping down sugar crystals and not stirring once the sugar is dissolved to prevent subsequent crystallization probably not so critical as you add more water right away.
    Invert sugar
    Yield: 2 lb 3 oz (1 kilo)
    4 Cups + 6 Tablespoon (2 lb 3 oz) Extra fine granulated sugar 1 kg
    2 cups (16 fl oz) Water 480 ml
    ¼ Teaspoon ( ¼ tsp) Cream of tartar or citric acid 1 g

    1) If you have an induction cook top or an electric stove use these options instead of gas. In a non reactive saucepan stir to a boil the sugar, water and cream of tartar (Or citric acid).
    2) Once the mixture boils wash away any sugar crystals stuck to the side of the pan with pastry brush dipped in water. Any additional water added to the pan from this process, has no effect on the final outcome.
    3)On medium heat without stirring boil the mixture to 236°F (114°C). Remove from heat and cover the pan. Let cool at room temperature. Store in a refrigerator. Invert sugar will last at least 6 months.

  • @jgibson5041
    @jgibson5041 2 года назад +6

    Thank you for introducing me to inverted sugar. It appears that inverting the sugar in my wash pleases the liquor fairy appropriately and she therefore delivers me better quality vodka, "hypothetically" that is. Great content man. Keep up the awesome work!

  • @johnhubbard6262
    @johnhubbard6262 3 года назад +7

    This is quite interesting from a pot still. That's just about the minimum proof I need for homemade shellac and wood dyes I use in restoration. I had to switch to Everclear from Denatured alcohol when Ca. banned it. Everclear gets expensive and hard to find, especially when your son is always drinking it.

  • @JamesMuri-ni2pv
    @JamesMuri-ni2pv 6 месяцев назад +1

    Sorry I'm responding to this so long after you made this, but I just saw it last night. The reason for the sodium carbonate is base catalyzed hydrolysis. Esters (flavorful molecules) are converted to their component organic acid and organic alcohol at high pH. These components have either little flavor or have much different boiling points than ethanol. So ethyl acetate (sweet pear smell) is converted to ethanol and acetic acid under these conditions and are easily separated out. You could also use caustic soda, but this is too hazardous for food purposes
    Also, I strongly recommend using a reflux column still for vodka. I easily achieve over 95%
    😁 when using my column packed with raschig rings.
    Your charcoal filter will be more effective on proofed down product as the water content improves the partitioning or organic components to the pores of the charcoal.
    Also, I love your content, no BS, just good advice and great variety of topics served up with a good helping of wry humor. I really like the liqueur topics. Please keep up the good work!
    Thanks Jim
    PS some states allow home distilling(in some form or other): Alaska, Arizona, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, and Rhode Island.

  • @Jose-hq5gv
    @Jose-hq5gv 3 года назад +11

    I love your videos man, you inspired me to get into this hobby and now I’ve been accepted into a brewing and distilling course in university because of it, thank you!

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +2

      Wow, congratulations brother!!! That's really awesome to hear. Good luck👍👍

    • @Jose-hq5gv
      @Jose-hq5gv 3 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored Thanks again!

  • @rocketsroc
    @rocketsroc 3 года назад +5

    Some notes on carbon filtering: Probably the best cartridge water filter is a ZeroWater filter system. I've found the cartridges can be reused several times if they are rinsed out after spirit filtering using distilled water. I run distilled water through till there is no longer any taste or smell of spirits, usually about a quart or two of distilled water does it. Distilled water has nothing in it which shortens the filter's effectiveness, but tap water does, so use only distilled water.
    Also, the proof of spirits to be filtered must be below 50% ABV or it will run through the filter too fast to be effective.

  • @rickmilkovic
    @rickmilkovic 3 года назад +9

    Hey B&B In a single word, interesting. Wow you are up to 51.6k subs, so happy for you bro. Keep up the great work, and love the content✌✌

  • @reformlabs8742
    @reformlabs8742 3 года назад +5

    This is the Chemistry of how the Bases work and much more on Ethanol Purification.. also if you don't have Sodium Carbonate, I wrote out a method to follow to make it yourself below.
    This may sound a bit insane... while Sodium/Potassium Carbonate or Bicarbonate will work, what can work as well too is Sodium/Potassium Hydroxide... but I don't recommend it very much because it can damage your still (especially if it's Aluminum, DO NOT use Hydroxides if you have an Aluminum still)... Carbonates are easy and cheap to make...
    When fermentation occurs, in this case, the fermentation being a sugar wash, the yeast can sometimes produce Ethyl Acetate which I've read is a major component of the heads. What happens here is a base (Sodium/Potassium Carbonate/Bicarbonate/Hydroxide) reacts with Ethyl Acetate to produce Sodium/Potassium Acetate and more Ethanol...
    There are other byproducts such as long-chain fatty acids in the tails, aldehydes, phenols, and other esters (Ethyl Acetate is a carboxylate [acetate] ester)
    Ethyl Acetate might form when Ethanol and Acetic Acid is distilled, so what you could do to prevent that is adding the Base (Sodium/Potassium Hydroxide/Bicarbonate/Carbonate) to the wash before distilling, this should neutralize any acidic compounds before distillation.. and after distillation, it wouldn't hurt to add more to the first distillation (assuming you're doing more than one distillation)...
    The Long Chain Fatty Acids in the tails can be Saponified by a base such as Sodium/Potassium Hydroxide ideally but Carbonate can also work, Bicarbonate too can probably work but I'd imagine it's extremely slow.. so you end up with a Sodium/Potassium Fatty Acid Salt which will remove the volatility of it... think of the Sodium/Potassium salt turning the Fatty Acid into a solid substance like table salt...
    Aldehydes and Ketones undergo Aldol Condensation if Sodium/Potassium Hydroxide is used, not too sure about Carbonates/Bicarbonates.. (maybe someone else can explain this more in-depth, I am not very familiar with this)
    I'll explain what I know regardless, what happens when a Hydroxide is used, the Ketones (Dimethyl Ketone/Acetone) reacts with the Hydroxide to produce Di-Acetone Alcohol which is much less volatile than Acetone... whereas the Aldehydes (Ethanal/Acetaldehyde) react with the Hydroxide to produce β-Hydroxybutyraldehyde which unfortunately has a higher boiling point than Ethanal/Acetaldehyde..
    Acetone Boiling Point: 56°C or 132.8°F
    Diacetone Alcohol Boiling Point: 166°C or 330.8°F
    Ethanal/Acetaldehyde Boiling Point: 20.2°C or 68.36°F
    β-Hydroxybutyraldehyde Boiling Point: 65-68°C or 149-154.4°F
    There's another thing too, the Diacetone Alcohol can decompose with heat into Mesityl Oxide which has a boiling point of:
    Mesityl Oxide Boiling Point: 129.5°C or 265.1°F
    The amount of the other products produced in a neutral spirit should be very low so there's no need to worry or be too picky about it.. just use Sodium Carbonate
    To get rid of the Ethanal (if there's any) you could probably pour the alcohol in a water bath at a temperature of about 40 Celsius for maybe half an hour.. Or if you've got access to a distillation set, probably reflux the mixture cooling it with room temperature water for about 1 hour (25°C or 77°F).. I've not tried this before, maybe it can work...
    The above listed are just the boiling points of each of these byproducts if Sodium/Potassium Hydroxide is used, overall you're better off using Sodium/Potassium Carbonate, if you don't have it, you can place Sodium/Potassium Bicarbonate in the oven for about maybe 30minutes to 1 hour at a temperature of 150°C or 300°F. A lot of CO2 gas will be given off so make sure and do this in a well-ventilated area. Once the CO2 gas isn't being evolved (you'll see puffs or if you shake the vessel it would be fluidlike) then it's done...
    Video on Making Sodium Carbonate by NileRed:
    ruclips.net/video/cpGEc-pLXN4/видео.html
    Note: Carbon Dioxide is toxic in concentrations >10% (this is no joke, by the way, make sure and have adequate ventilation, there was a village in Cameroon, Central Africa 1986 Lake Nyos had a lake which had Carbon Dioxide leaked out of it and killed the nearby villagers)
    Anyhow, I think I've said enough... if anyone else would like to add to my theory, please feel free. Or if there's someone more qualified in this field please correct me if I'm not fully accurate.
    Edit: There's a paper I've read on purifying spirits to an even more pure degree, this is using Ozone (ozone is very toxic, about 10x more toxic than Hydrogen Cyanide), Activated Carbon, CO2 Stripping and Noble Metal Catalysis (catalytic decomposition of congeners, but be careful if you decide to use this as Noble metals can cause fires if the Ethanol comes into contact with air and the catalyst).... this is not necessary unless you desire extremely high purity Ethanol for analytical research.
    Link to Paper: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/jib.295
    Be safe!

    • @kasmay4408
      @kasmay4408 Год назад

      hey thanks for explanation. if i want to use sodium hydroxide how much should ı use per liter of low wine

    • @reformlabs8742
      @reformlabs8742 Год назад

      ​@@kasmay4408 I've tested it out but in my case it hadn't worked out well...
      I've used laboratory glassware to make Ethanol and it always came out really bad
      To answer your question, i'd probably do half the amount that you'd use for Sodium Carbonate
      Just know Sodium/Potassium Hydroxide is corrosive and dangerous and will attack aluminum stills
      Also it's soluble in Ethanol.. so be careful

  • @jamesramey3549
    @jamesramey3549 3 года назад +6

    Inverting the sugar is the way to go. Nice tip with the sodium carbonate! Thanks

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +3

      I so glad the sodium carbonate worked out. Really was a surprise when the hearts just kept coming:-)

  • @theoptimisticmetalhead7787
    @theoptimisticmetalhead7787 14 дней назад

    I believe you can bake baking soda to create washing soda. Learned about it on an anti-laundry industry post, lol. Can't remember the temps and timings off-hand, but I do believe it was a low and slow situation.

  • @StillIt
    @StillIt 3 года назад +8

    Nice shirts!

  • @silveraven1
    @silveraven1 3 года назад +5

    I’m gonna “hypothetically” try this. Great, no amazing topic and technique you’re touched upon. You may have just saved me thousands on a column setup

  • @b9brutality
    @b9brutality 3 года назад +3

    Thank you for your videos! I've been making your cider for awhile now. Tweaked the recipe a bit and now I'm making blueberry cider and honey cinnamon cider. The guys at the station love it! Thanks for the knowledge!

  • @BanksBuilt
    @BanksBuilt 3 года назад +5

    I have a vodka experiment bubbling away right now. I love wheat flavor and also love the earthy flavor from potatoes so I'm trying to bring the best of both together. We shall see. :-)

  • @BrianGski34
    @BrianGski34 4 месяца назад +1

    I tried your method. It is the cleanest I’ve ever made.

  • @leahbonham9347
    @leahbonham9347 3 года назад +3

    So glad you shared this my fairy is coming this weekend with vodka so I'll have to let her know 😊

  • @MegaStalker11
    @MegaStalker11 3 года назад +2

    chemical engineer here
    I believe that the reaction is the reverse of what is used for high ester rums. With high ester rums dunder is cultured so that is produces high amounts of various carboxylic acids. these carboxylic acids then combine with the alcohol to form esters. Since the yeasts produce lots of different types of alcohols when they combine with the carbocyclic acids you get a lot of different combos that together give a rum, brandy, or whisky it's characteristic flavor. Now with high ester rums calcium carbonate (lime) is added to the dunder periodically to lower the ph. forming calcium salts of the various carboxylic acids. these will fall out of solution and just build up over time. while the dunder is free to make more. then when enough has accumulated. sulfuric acid will be added to the dunder to free up those carboxylic acids. the strong base and strong acid will form calcium sulfate which will fall out of solution. and you are left with a lot of free carboxylic acids that can be used to make esters.
    Ester formation is reversible reaction and happens spontaneously. the more alcohol and carboxylic acids the more esters will form conversely the more water the less esters. This is important for the sodium carbonate trick. the formation of esters can be boosted with catalysts. yeast have a natural catalyst that can be taken advantage of if the yeast are. Sulfuric acid works as a catalyst as well. The addition of sulfuric acid will push the reaction to form a lot of esters. I believe that the opposite is true where if we raise the ph with a strong base such as sodium carbonate the the reaction will favor de-esterification. it could also be that the strong basic carbonate ion in solution when a random de-esterification does take place a carbonate is there to snatch up that now free acid paring up to form a salt. this would only make sense if it fell out of solution. if this were true you would see the alcohol gradually get cloudy and a precipitate to form.
    The proposed reaction of the sodium carbonate is speculation but the reaction for ester formation is true.
    also thanks for the tip on the invert sugar! it seems to be just the thing i've been looking for to get a smoother tasting spirit!

  • @lilinguhongo2621
    @lilinguhongo2621 3 года назад +1

    summoning the liquor fairies... i hear the elders calling for offerings... saying the hidden cauldron demands vinegar and a sacrificial concoction... I'm a believer, I know my duties and they shall hear my creed...
    Thanks for preachin'!

  • @lorenbush8876
    @lorenbush8876 Месяц назад

    That's just what I want, thanks man and congratulations.

  • @edlibey8177
    @edlibey8177 2 года назад +3

    Good advice, thanks for the tip. The sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) should saponify the esters but, I wouldn’t think it would take out any fusel oil (heavier alcohols like n-propanol, iso- butyl alcohol, or iso-amyl alcohol) in the tails. Also not sure what sodium carbonate would do to any aldehydes or ketones (other minor flavor components).

  • @willcollis4544
    @willcollis4544 2 года назад +1

    You can make sodium carbonate by baking sodium bicarbonate in the oven at around 100c for an hour.

  • @clown192
    @clown192 Год назад

    With the sugar wash, I take cuts in 300ml jars so that I can smell them and see the difference. I find the first couple of jars smell sweet, actually smells drinkable but really aren't.
    Then the next few jars smell like nothing although will still zap your nose and make you take a step back since you are probably breathing in more trying to find the smell.
    Then near the end, it starts to smell salty like you have seasoned it with salt and pepper. That is a sugar wash and I have seen guys like George say you can use all of it but I usually sacrifice my first and last 2 jars to the feint gods to be boiled again later on.
    Then I filter it through the activated carbon again and again for a week to try to get some of that leftover chemical taste out.
    In my latest batch I actually replaced the carbon so is basically a double-filtered batch or if you count how many times I ran it through, a 10x filtered batch.

  • @tonyoliver4920
    @tonyoliver4920 3 года назад +6

    I tried the inverted sugar after you mentioned it, while it was fermenting Jesse released his video. I absolutely agree it really does help. I’m going try the sodium carbonate trick on my next run! You’re a wealth of top advice!
    Said it before, boiler plate is an inline thumper!
    Has brewbird reached out to you about a web cam interview? I joked she was interviewing all the channels I follow and she should contact you! (Well half joking)

    • @kevinpadoa4011
      @kevinpadoa4011 3 года назад +1

      Would love to see a BB / BB interview! :-)

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      Brewbird is great. I've been watching her channel and learning a ton. Very cool to see behind the curtain of the industries.

  • @workhardplayhard801
    @workhardplayhard801 Год назад

    Miss you bro hope all is well, thanks for your contributions 👍

  • @the_whiskeyshaman
    @the_whiskeyshaman 3 года назад +1

    Hypothetically of course the sodium carbonate attaches to the long chain esters and as the alcohol evaporates so does the carbonate. Ergo leaving less conjunors for a perceived heads like sharp bitey note.

  • @Ansis99
    @Ansis99 3 года назад +2

    Hi, Bearded! I use egg shells for ph +. I just wash them with hot water to remove inside parts and dry it out. Than I use coffee grinder for crushing. It`s always in your fridge. 🥃 P.S. Active charcoal filters after filtration if we reuse them with "fresh alcohol" will ruin new one. I personally use and reuse by cooking it +250C 1/2 hour.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +2

      Great tips, thanks!

    • @Ansis99
      @Ansis99 3 года назад

      @@BeardedBored :)

    • @Ansis99
      @Ansis99 3 года назад

      @@BeardedBored Yes, active charcoal is cheap at aquarium fish stores and maybe in Home Depot in USA? I bye mine 10 years ago in 1kg bag and use and reuse... I find something like mine here: www.amazon.de/-/en/Activated-Coconut-Carbon-Treatment-Granules/dp/B08DRLW2W1/ref=pd_sbs_2/258-2418437-6497745?pd_rd_w=sAryZ&pf_rd_p=b9e2e02e-b111-4e58-bf64-75121e223c50&pf_rd_r=SH24HYM6WMGD423316K3&pd_rd_r=4be05d51-8f33-4b7a-8bc3-68e01886f618&pd_rd_wg=L2YDL&pd_rd_i=B08DRLW2W1&psc=1

  • @hakaneroglu5010
    @hakaneroglu5010 2 года назад +1

    I found bi carbonate and it works very good. I will try carbonate next time. Many thanks for this great info

  • @clown192
    @clown192 Год назад

    I have the T500 and it consistently gets 95% ABV because of how it was set up but my next test will be a corn mash. That will change everything.

  • @kc-wj3nx
    @kc-wj3nx Год назад

    It’s a sugar wash with a little tomato paste for a yeast nutrient

  • @BEAVERDIY
    @BEAVERDIY 3 года назад +3

    Hi Brother,
    What if you fill the thumper with marbles or SPP maybe just halfway go you think that will bump the ABV higher, I my still if I fill the column with Packing it bumps the ABV with almost 20%

    • @kevinpadoa4011
      @kevinpadoa4011 3 года назад +1

      Hello Beaver, I use marbles in a 3L thumper on my pot still, for my sugar washes stripping and spirit runs (recently did a wine yeast with yeast nutrient and inverted sugar) for my Sinner Gin, using your homemade alcohol meter measured around ~88% abv after 2 full stripping runs and a spirit run. So should work for Bearded. P.S. That Sodium Carbonate idea sounds good, any idea where to get in RSA? Thank you both for your channels, I learn so much from them you oaks deserve millions of subs!

    • @BEAVERDIY
      @BEAVERDIY 3 года назад +2

      @@kevinpadoa4011 Hi Kevin, any poolshop will have, thanks for the feedback

    • @kevinpadoa4011
      @kevinpadoa4011 3 года назад +1

      @@BEAVERDIY Thanks mate, will get and try it.

    • @djshaman11
      @djshaman11 3 года назад +1

      @@BEAVERDIY Would it be safe to use HTH Soda Ash?

    • @BEAVERDIY
      @BEAVERDIY 3 года назад +2

      @@djshaman11 yes will be perfecr

  • @wesleyholland5747
    @wesleyholland5747 3 года назад +1

    huh huh, that's cool -- it's weird. Thanks for the fun video about hypotheticals

  • @terrydrew7002
    @terrydrew7002 3 года назад +1

    Ok you got me intrigued.... Doing the soda trick on a sugar wash before it goes in for reflux worst case it can just get rerun haha

  • @Miata822
    @Miata822 Год назад +1

    Starting this tomorrow. We'll see.

  • @mauistevebear
    @mauistevebear 3 года назад +2

    I have an extra 2" reflux column...you can have it if you like....

    • @moosebonsai
      @moosebonsai 3 года назад +1

      Awesome support! That would be cool. Your altruism is marvelous. I hope he takes you up on it.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      I'm grateful for the offer, brother. When I get to that point I'm going to try to build my own. I know my soldering skills make that a risky proposition, haha:-) Save it for a trusted friend to show them the hobby.

  • @douglasnapier5427
    @douglasnapier5427 2 года назад

    Bearded, I run a 6 plate column still, post condenser, I pass my liquor through a activated charcoal filter...my output from my parrot tastes like nothing also. I end up 188 to 192 proof hearts.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  2 года назад

      Column stills cut out all the extra work:-)

  • @scottclay4253
    @scottclay4253 3 года назад +1

    Great stuff Brother Bearded! Looking forward to what you and your “hypothetical fairies” and are going to do

  • @gavinbauer2807
    @gavinbauer2807 3 года назад +1

    Great Video, thank you. Deffinately going to try out the Sodium Carbonate trick.

  • @sparkyfromel
    @sparkyfromel 3 года назад

    don't need an Hydrometer , watch the mash , it bubble a lot then it slow down ,
    when you get to one bubble every two seconds , you're about good
    slowly siphon , avoiding the bottom inch , it's dead yeast
    then it's all slow distilling over the stove
    P.s. I've found that putting a couple of sliced lemons give good result

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      If it's still bubbling at all you still have sugar in the wash. If you let it sit for a few more days, the yeast will finish turning all the residual sugar to alcohol and increase your yield;-)

  • @jameshaulenbeek5931
    @jameshaulenbeek5931 3 года назад +4

    "I didn't retain anything from high school chemistry, and college was spotty at best..."

  • @StassBrewing
    @StassBrewing 3 года назад +1

    That's so cool!! Nice work! I'll have to get my liquor fairy to give it a go!

  • @ironmck9826
    @ironmck9826 3 года назад +1

    Always good tips brother! You are wealth of hypothetical inspiration!

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      Thanks brother!

    • @ironmck9826
      @ironmck9826 3 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored I'm hypothetically working on something you may appreciate as I type this. Started with local apple juice. Set a side 2 gallons that I pasteurized (poorly see below) then made dry cider s.g 1.050 fermemted with us05 1.004 ~6% bottled a gallon of this, then added inverted sugar (recipe from your channel) to bring the gravity back up to 1.050 and fermented to 1.000 with ec1118 ~13%? Kept a gallon of this Apple wine. Hypothetically the next step would be to have the fairies make brandy out of the rest of the wine....
      (the poorly pasteurized part is that one gallon of my starter juice decided to go wild and is currently happily bubbling so it is also something?...)

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      @@ironmck9826 Fun experiment. Wild fermentation can be amazing or not so much. Hope yours comes out great, and the hypothetical brandy.

  • @Luvguf
    @Luvguf 3 года назад +1

    You can make your own sodium carbonate by baking some baking soda at 350 degrees till it is 2/3 of its weight. Boom you have sodium carbonate. I know this because I do this to make a stronger soda for making pretzels.

  • @woodslinger003
    @woodslinger003 3 года назад +3

    Really enjoyed the video...I'm a pot distiller (hypothetically, of course) so I love the videos for us poor bastards that don't involve those uppity column stills.... nyuck nyuck

  • @BabyGirl-3588
    @BabyGirl-3588 3 года назад +1

    You’re so cute 😊. I know you’re married , so I’m absolutely not hitting on you, so it’s a compliment to your wife as well. 😂 Seriously, she’s blessed to have those eyes and lips to look at. On the other hand, that liquor fairy brought me that Apple Jack by following your instructions. She forgot to take the 1st reading though 😬. I haven’t got that “apple palsy” and I drank a little more each time. Like a Pepsi bottle full. I did feel a little hangover-ISH. I can tell it’s strong because it made me spin when I closed my eyes, and I haven’t spun in 42 years 😂.

  • @rknight1091
    @rknight1091 3 года назад

    You can make sodium carbonate from sodium bicarbonate by heating it

  • @jamesmorgan1327
    @jamesmorgan1327 3 года назад

    FWIW you can make sodium carbonate from sodium bicarbonate by baking it.

  • @toddbiskupiak4984
    @toddbiskupiak4984 3 года назад +3

    I want to applaud you for this video!!!!!! Your beard is great. Did your wife make you trim it? Mine did 😁

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      Thanks brother! I was trimming my beard and nicked too close on one side. Had to make the rest match. Wifey was a bit shocked to see it that short.

  • @lazyplumber1616
    @lazyplumber1616 3 года назад +1

    Bathtub Gin? Great info here, thanks for the share! Do you know if the Fairy uses any packing in the pot still column?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      The fairy recommends copper scrubbies;-)

  • @Miata822
    @Miata822 Год назад +1

    @ Bearded, Hmm. My Likker Fairy reports no sugar bowl, but everything up to tails tastes like soap. They say they measured carefully and it sat for about a day before they worked their magic on it. I'll have to go check myself and make sure they kept the right part. maybe the A&H "Super Washing Soda" linked in the description has extra flavors added.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад

      Mix the soda in water and see if it smells soapy to check. If not, might be something in your still?

    • @Miata822
      @Miata822 Год назад

      @@BeardedBored After sitting for 24 hours and mixing some samples down to 40% the taste is gone. Honestly, it tasted just like the soda, but now completely gone. Next time I'll use the pool stuff or just make some from bicarb on the stove. Maybe I should do that anyway just to compare flavors before adding anything in.

    • @Miata822
      @Miata822 Год назад

      @@BeardedBored Nope. My pallet must have been fried Tastes like soap, exactly like the washing powder when I mixed a little in water. Left a white residue in the bottom of my hypothetical as well.
      I measured carefully and on the light side. The only difference was that I let it sit 24 hours, then heated the mixture to 100f and let it sit a couple more hours before calling the likker fairy. I thought that might help. Nope. Scrapping the batch.
      There is a video here on YT that shows making sodium carbonate from bicarbonate by simply heating it in a pan. Has nobody else had this problem?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад

      Never heard of it happening before. Very odd. Yeah, try the baking soda oven trick to make your own.

    • @Miata822
      @Miata822 Год назад

      @@BeardedBored I did. It worked. The "washing powder" is actually pretty good for laundry though.
      Oh well.

  • @ajmarshall1021
    @ajmarshall1021 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for this one, definitely trying it

  • @ifell3
    @ifell3 3 года назад +1

    Nice information on the sodium carbonate! I've never had a taste from TPW run.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      I'm just glad it worked, LoL:-)

    • @mackemsruleFTM
      @mackemsruleFTM 3 года назад +2

      @@BeardedBored i keep all my heads and tails to redistill later when I have a lot and use Sodium carbonate, It's the alkaline that's in it neutralises acids so you get a bit more out lol

  • @glleon80517
    @glleon80517 3 года назад +1

    Bearded, I am leery about plastic water filters around high proof spirits. Do you notice any hazing of the plastic? I think there may be some alternatives made out of stainless with activated charcoal. Might be an interesting project…

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      Nope, no change in the plastic. I wouldn't store in plastic, but the 10 minutes in the filter didn't seem to have an effect.

  • @colinandthecrows
    @colinandthecrows Год назад

    You can bake sodium bicarbonate for about an hour at 375 f, and it will release a carbon and become sodium carbonate!

  • @robertfontaine3650
    @robertfontaine3650 3 года назад +1

    I love your fermenter.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      My wife hates it;-)

    • @robertfontaine3650
      @robertfontaine3650 3 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored Maybe so but I just realized I have a good 75 gallons of fermenters in my shed.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      @@robertfontaine3650 ;-)

    • @bartfris
      @bartfris 3 года назад

      @@BeardedBored How much water did you use with this recipe? Do you have any pics of your fermenter with the lid sealed and bubbler? I've grown tired of these buckets.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      @@bartfris It's a 10 gallon recipe. The fermenter doesn't seal up well enough for the bubbler to work. The CO2 just escapes out the sides. Strictly speaking airlocks aren't as critical for product that will "hypothetically" get distilled since oxygen spoilage doesn't factor in to the final product.

  • @reformlabs8742
    @reformlabs8742 2 года назад +1

    Anyone knows if sugar washes go bad? I accidentally forgot my sugar wash out for about 14 weeks after fermentation and it smelled kinda bad, the yeast did settle out and I poured the clear stuff in the still and ran it.
    It was a sugar wash and no matter how many cuts I took, all smelled bad. Like a burnt odor.
    Alcohol came out smelling like a bad sugary sour candy with a rank odor. I did a lot in an attempt to purify it:
    Failed attempts:
    - Added Sodium Carbonate and waited a week
    - Passed it through Activated Carbon
    - Passed it through Brita Filter
    - Diluted and redistilled (three times)
    - Distilled it with copper mesh in column
    Somewhat successful attempts in order: (mostly laboratory methods of purifying Alcohol)
    - Adding Sodium Hydroxide & Potassium Hydroxide and refluxed it in that, then distilled
    - Added Sulphuric Acid to distillate and distill
    - Added Sodium Bicarbonate to the distillate to remove any trace acids (with overnight stirring)
    - Filter Sodium Bicarbonate off and Distill
    - Run through the new Activated Carbon filter
    - Dilute to 40% and Redistill again to 95.6%
    My successful attempts made the alcohol have absolutely no taste whatsoever with juice & sodas. But with water, it tasted absolutely horrible and for some reason, a smoky smell comes back when it's diluted with water.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  2 года назад +1

      Scorch smell never comes out. No idea where it came from in your wash, but once it's in there it's basically only good for sanitizer or fuel.

    • @reformlabs8742
      @reformlabs8742 2 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored It did go away when I added sulphuric acid and distilled it but when I proofed it down the taste was the worst taste I had ever tasted.
      There's no taste when you add it to Juice and Sodas but with water, it's the worst.
      With water, it tasted as if I bubbled exhaust fumes from a truck into my alcohol and stirred it with a dead fish.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  2 года назад +1

      @@reformlabs8742 Yikes!

  • @kevinbaxter2578
    @kevinbaxter2578 3 года назад +1

    Liquor Fairy LLC is a pretty good group of folks. Lol I really gotta try that inverted sugar.

  • @moosebonsai
    @moosebonsai 3 года назад +1

    Dude! Hold my beer! I've got a hella idea. Since you like to experiment, I want to see you make distilled dandelion wine (Dandelion Brandy?). First, make some dandelion wine and then distill that stuff in a pot still. Taste it and tell us how it goes! Okay, can I have my beer back?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +2

      I'll have to see if my weedy yard has enough dandelions;-) Sorry, I finished your beer.

    • @moosebonsai
      @moosebonsai 3 года назад +3

      @@BeardedBored That's perfect, and I can brew another beer! Your episodes are the best.

  • @delpurslow1180
    @delpurslow1180 3 года назад +1

    Great job and super interesting!

  • @jacob106106
    @jacob106106 3 года назад +1

    Good Job Bearded.

  • @YpsyGypsy
    @YpsyGypsy 2 года назад

    You can make your own sodium carbonate by putting baking soda in the oven for a while

  • @nunovyobeeswax4177
    @nunovyobeeswax4177 3 года назад

    Tried a Brita filter once, turned my stuff black, had to re-run it, and will never try that again.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      You can build a filter pretty easy if you ever need to. If you get carbon dust in your stuff, you can let it settle out and filter again with a coffee filter.

  • @2StrokeSmoke544
    @2StrokeSmoke544 3 года назад +1

    Take them three liters and go streaking with will farrell lol

  • @arturocm9758
    @arturocm9758 Год назад +1

    What configuration do you recomend me for making a pot still (30L) . I want to make whisky and tequila , cheers!

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  Год назад +1

      Go to reddit.com and look in the r/firewater subreddit sidebar. They have a bunch of good designs:-)

    • @arturocm9758
      @arturocm9758 Год назад

      @@BeardedBored thank you very much!!

  • @justinestell7932
    @justinestell7932 3 года назад +1

    I wonder if anyone has thought about distilling a Cabernet Sauvignon

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  2 года назад

      I have. Got a proper brandy on my list for this coming year. Using white grapes to get a baseline flavor, but I want to try out several varietals.

  • @Rev-D1963
    @Rev-D1963 3 года назад +1

    Ish not booze aweshifer, ish windshield wiper fluid, don you no anyshing?????? :) Sounds like it worked out pretty well. Love the vids brother, thanks again for sharing them. Rev. D.

  • @stewartmcewen
    @stewartmcewen 3 года назад +2

    love your videos! Bit of a side question about inverted sugars, does dissolving sugar in the backset of a UJSSM achieve the same result? or is the required acidity different? - hypothetically :-)

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      You need to boil the sugar in an acidic environment to get the inverting process. My hypothetical advice is to invert the sugar separately, then add it to backset;-)

  • @bryanbrunk1186
    @bryanbrunk1186 3 года назад +1

    Now you need to figure out how easy it is to make it take flavor after the fact.

  • @sydthegoat88
    @sydthegoat88 3 года назад +1

    Chrz man this was extremely good info.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      Hope it works for you...hypothetically;-)

    • @sydthegoat88
      @sydthegoat88 3 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored I can read between the lines man, good stuff

    • @sydthegoat88
      @sydthegoat88 3 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored Reading between the lines, nice

  • @martinsteflik1329
    @martinsteflik1329 3 года назад +1

    Great content, just subscribed. Trying to turn whiskey feints into a neutral. Will sodium carbonate work with feints?

  • @chrisjones1896
    @chrisjones1896 2 года назад +1

    What is the total volume of water & wash please? (It’s not in the ingredients list) Once I have this info, Do I just reduce ingredients to a 5gallon wash (mathematically speaking) thank you

  • @Flat_Milk
    @Flat_Milk 3 года назад +1

    Is there a specific on what the plastic container has to be made of, I was gonna go to Walmart and buy a Rubbermaid or similar but wasn't sure on whether or not that would be okay for the wash?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +2

      HDPE plastic is safe for fermentations:-)

    • @Flat_Milk
      @Flat_Milk 3 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored thank you very much!

  • @smntsn
    @smntsn 3 года назад +1

    Hello:) thanks for the video. Can you add yeast nutrient while boiling?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      I suppose, but it dissolves at room temperature too.

  • @gorethegreat
    @gorethegreat 2 года назад +1

    I’m glad I watched this one.
    The Brita filter.
    It’ll help me,
    I want to make a gin.

  • @qwaqwa1960
    @qwaqwa1960 3 года назад +2

    Hmm, I just tried two simultaneous batches, one with plain sugar, the other, invert. The invert had a much harder time fermenting... Perhaps I did something else wrong??

    • @timg2776
      @timg2776 3 года назад +1

      Was your ph the same. I have had too much acid left over and my ph was down around 3. Baking soda & pitching more yeast made it take right off.

    • @qwaqwa1960
      @qwaqwa1960 3 года назад +1

      @@timg2776 Hmm, I didn't check. Good point. I probably did put more acid in the invert batch...

    • @44RobC
      @44RobC 3 года назад +1

      If you boil the sugar solution for too long it won't ferment easily. It needs to be a light yellow straw color not caramel.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      Check the pH first to make sure it isn't too acidic.

  • @rhinenio
    @rhinenio 3 года назад +1

    hi, ive followed the recipe to the letter
    but i can't get a good reading because my mash is fizzy.
    is this normal. it smells ok and smells like there is alcohol.
    it is only 1 week old.
    what have i done wrong

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      You haven't done anything wrong. It's not done fermenting yet. Sometimes it takes longer. Give it another week.

    • @rhinenio
      @rhinenio 3 года назад

      @@BeardedBored cheers

  • @pandakingpin9521
    @pandakingpin9521 3 года назад +1

    hey bearded & bored, i was curious if you could do a hypothetical video on reverse pot stilling and how one could get the most (hypothetically of course) from distilling that way? im asking for a friend

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      I don't really like that method. You can't make cuts of the heads or tails with much accuracy so the product ends up fairly harsh. Whats4Chow did a video on it a while ago and it's fairly common in Finland I think, but it's not a method I want to promote. Sorry Kingpin.

    • @pandakingpin9521
      @pandakingpin9521 3 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored thats truly alright and i can understand why you wouldn't want to promote the method, it was worth asking but i'll check out whats4chows video. thank you either way and hope you have a fantastic day :)

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      @@pandakingpin9521 Thanks so much for understanding. Good luck and have fun experimenting:-)

  • @madisenmus2135
    @madisenmus2135 3 года назад +1

    Do you have a link for those pH strips I like that it was concentrated & more color variation than the typical 4 color pH strips

  • @erossi490
    @erossi490 3 года назад +2

    This is great, I’m so new to this it’s not funny. I have a pot still for 3 years without using in (no tumper) this year I need to do this I have the sugar the daddy yeast and most of the ingredients I just need the balls to move forward. I’m so afraid of not getting it right especially with the hearts tails etc. any words or thoughts would greatly be appreciated
    Manny

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +2

      Watch Jesse's video on making cuts on his Still It channel. Really solid info. Cuts are the hardest thing to get right. Good news is that if you mess up, you can just dump it all back in the boiler and rerun it:-) Best practice for starting out is to collect in 200ml increments, so get a lot of jars, at least 2 dozen just to be sure you have enough. You won't be using the stuff that you collect in the last half of those jars, especially in a sugar wash, but it's good practice to help you smell the transitions and funky stuff in the tails.
      Air out the jars with paper towel over them for the night. That helps sharpen the aromas around the transitions. Heads are more chemically smelling, acetone, etc. and they make the tongue prickle. There's a ton of info so watch Jesse's videos to get a clear understanding of what you're looking for in the flavor and aroma.

    • @gavinbauer2807
      @gavinbauer2807 3 года назад +3

      The best way to learn, is to just go ahead a do it, you'll soon realize that maybe that other way of getting that step done is easier, and then you try and learn from it.
      I got my pot still just over a year ago, and was forced into starting due to an alcohol ban (6months of it), and still learn something new every-day, and get better and better at it.

  • @manlymannysmanymediocremem7026
    @manlymannysmanymediocremem7026 3 года назад +3

    You can turn baking soda into sodium carbonate by heating it up on the stove or in your oven!

    • @edlibey8177
      @edlibey8177 2 года назад

      Interesting. Do you get about half as much washing soda as the starting baking soda?

  • @silver-hy6mi
    @silver-hy6mi 3 года назад +1

    Would you get the same spirits if you ran it through bubble plates instead of a thumper?

  • @anilmalik5111
    @anilmalik5111 2 года назад +1

    Hey B & B nice information. I was wondering If I use Sodium Carbonate in flavored low wines like UJSSM would it effect the flavor of final product ???

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  2 года назад +1

      It will remove the flavor. Only use it for neutrals spirits with no flavor.

    • @anilmalik5111
      @anilmalik5111 2 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored thanks for the response. It will help me. Is there any other way to reduce heads and tails for flavored recipes????

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  2 года назад

      @@anilmalik5111 Cooler temps in fermentation.

    • @anilmalik5111
      @anilmalik5111 2 года назад

      @@BeardedBored thanks for the information 👍

  • @mustavertwang
    @mustavertwang 3 года назад +1

    Producers of activated carbon filters claim that in order for them to "clean up" alcohol the a.b.v. must be 50% or lower.I wonder if their claim is accurate?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      Probably, but something definitely worked. No idea what the science is on how the last of the flavor got stripped out, even at 83%, but it seemed to do the job. You can always proof it down first, then filter, but I need the highest proof I can get for my next project, so I just went for it.

    • @mustavertwang
      @mustavertwang 3 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored Thank you for the information, most helpful.

  • @rayfox212
    @rayfox212 3 года назад +1

    Haha Bearded this is heresy your going to upset the purists... Love it great job. Thanks for the hard work you put into your research to share with us.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      Hope I get that much attention, LoL! Thanks buddy:-)

  • @drhydeofficial7445
    @drhydeofficial7445 2 года назад

    I've had jalapeno tequila I'm curious what about jalapeno vodka?

  • @deeprespect665
    @deeprespect665 3 года назад +1

    I'm curious about the reason for changing the filter on the brita after every use. Would this apply to a brita used exclusively by the fairy? Love your videos by the way!

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      I think George did a video on making a charcoal filter for polishing spirits and talked about replacing the media...maybe not? Probably should have looked it up again, but I felt so confident before you asked me that, haha:-)

  • @esposb6710
    @esposb6710 4 месяца назад

    Can you put sodium carbonate in the low wines if you use a myvodkamaker Plus?
    Does it do its magic after you mix it in?
    Is the mix in need of heat to work?

    • @esposb6710
      @esposb6710 4 месяца назад

      BTW thank you for sharing your knowledge. Wish you the best.
      -from a bearded guy in the Nordic countries

  • @ekaos5099
    @ekaos5099 3 года назад +1

    Curious. Where might one find a Hypothetical Still Fairy with a Hypothetical Still to assist someone that might want to have some Hypothetical Vodka run for themselves?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад

      You have to entice them with shiny copper.

    • @rickmilkovic
      @rickmilkovic 3 года назад

      You might try blinking three times, snapping your fingers twice and clicking your heals together one time. Not sure if it will work or not, but I'd pay to watch you try...lol

  • @micahcluck5550
    @micahcluck5550 2 года назад

    So I made this. Stripping run came out great. After I hit about 35% on the spirit run, I cranked the heat up beings the flow had slowed and I was running out of time. Totally scorched the rest of the run. Only thing I can think of is the sodium carbonate scorched?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  2 года назад +1

      Dude, that is weird. Never heard of scorching low wines, even with the SC. No idea how much your temp jumped, but make sure you're only going up in temp 1 or 2 points at a time. All I can guess is it was maybe too much too fast?

    • @micahcluck5550
      @micahcluck5550 2 года назад +1

      @@BeardedBored oh I'm sure that it was more than a few points. Had no good way to turn it up beings I was using a hot plate and I tried to switch to the internal burner that was currently off. Only did it beings I had 1 hour before I had to leave for work.
      Appreciate the reply and all you do on RUclips.

  • @MultiTut69
    @MultiTut69 3 года назад +1

    So....what happens if you add the sodium carbonate to the wash before the first run?

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      Nothing significant. You've got to get it to low wines first before you notice any difference. So I've read, anyway.

  • @dougshelton69
    @dougshelton69 3 года назад +1

    I drank a lot of pool water as a kid..soo I can do this😛

  • @eriks3910
    @eriks3910 2 года назад

    How do you know how much of the “head” (toxic stuff) you should discard? I haven’t distilled yet but I have a 1 gallon mash I just started 2 days ago 1/8/22. Any advice will be appreciated. And what’s that cotton string called on the worm tub?- Big Eazy 🍻cheers

  • @kc-wj3nx
    @kc-wj3nx Год назад

    Do I have to run my sugar wash to low wines before I treat it with the sodium carbonate? Or can I treat the wash with a ratio relative to the abv ?

  • @oleksandrmirza
    @oleksandrmirza 3 года назад +1

    damn... tnx for the promocode

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      Whatever you get from them will probably be the softest clothes you own;-)

  • @allenhilley
    @allenhilley 2 года назад +2

    I have pot still but no thumper can u do striping run then spirt run without thmper

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  2 года назад

      Yes.

    • @itsprobablyonyoutube
      @itsprobablyonyoutube 2 года назад +1

      Yes. It's called double distillation. And note it's common practice to proof the spirit back down to 40% abv before starting the second distillation. For safty.

    • @allenhilley
      @allenhilley 2 года назад

      Ok thanks

  • @HisVirusness
    @HisVirusness 3 года назад +1

    The liquor fairy you know sounds pretty cool.

    • @BeardedBored
      @BeardedBored  3 года назад +1

      It's nice to have magical friends:-)

  • @jasonb7947
    @jasonb7947 3 года назад

    Gday Bearded. This is probably a stupid question but I'm going to ask anyway. If I use straight dextrose in my sugar wash can I skip the citric acid trick? Big bags of dextrose are easy to get and cheap where I am and I thought it may save me time.

  • @ronfussell8244
    @ronfussell8244 Год назад

    I do not know if you can use inverted sugar for cornmeal wash? Would it do anything?