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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling*
apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to distil some ginger beer. |
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john wrote on Tue, 21 Dec 2010 18:12:54 -0000:
> Does anyone have any information about making a simple > *distilling* apparatus that they can share? My friend is > thinking of trying to distil some ginger beer. Ground glass joint chemical glassware tends to be rather expensive but setting up a flask and water condenser couldn't be simpler. -- James Silverton Potomac, Maryland Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
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![]() "john robinson" > wrote in message ... > Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* > apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to distil > some ginger beer. > > HM Revene and Customs would be very interested to hear were your friend to be doing this. Illegal without a licence and duty to pay were a licence to be granted, (which is very unlikely). AWEM |
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On Dec 21, 10:46*am, "Andrew Mawson"
> wrote: > "john robinson" > wrote in message > > ... > > > Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* > > apparatus that they can share? *My friend is thinking of trying to > distil > > some ginger beer. > > HM Revene and Customs would be very interested to hear were your > friend to be doing this. Illegal without a licence and duty to pay > were a licence to be granted, (which is very unlikely). > > AWEM Fer christ's sake...go tell the net cops. Let's put this guy behind bars for life! |
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On 21/12/10 18:46, Andrew Mawson wrote:
> > "john > wrote in message > ... >> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to > distil >> some ginger beer. >> >> > > HM Revene and Customs would be very interested to hear were your > friend to be doing this. Illegal without a licence and duty to pay > were a licence to be granted, (which is very unlikely). > > AWEM > I believe that freeze-distillation is OK - but needs checking. It is also reckoned to be safer - regular distillation done wrong can produce a bottle with high concentrations of less desireable alcohols - these can occur naturally as part of the fermentation and are OK if spread around 8 bottles of wine, but less good if concentrated into the first small bottle of distilled output. But I'm sure google will turn up lots of info on making a simple still. Boiling pot, lots of soft copper tube and a cooling bath. -- Tim Watts |
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Not so long ago you could buy small stills in France in places like Gamme
Verte (Countrywide) |
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On Dec 21, 6:12*pm, "john robinson" > wrote:
> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* > apparatus that they can share? *My friend is thinking of trying to distil > some ginger beer. try these guys : http://www.stillspirits.com/ - look for a local distributor to you. Most UK home brew shops sell these. HMRC have let these pass (they were good enough to admit they were caught on the hop). So you can distill in peace - just don't sell it. Not sure how you'd go about distilling ginger beer ... the potential for off flavourings and yukky heads/tails would be enormous. |
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![]() "Tim Watts" > wrote in message ... > On 21/12/10 18:46, Andrew Mawson wrote: > > > > "john > wrote in message > > ... > >> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* > >> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to > > distil > >> some ginger beer. > >> > >> > > > > HM Revene and Customs would be very interested to hear were your > > friend to be doing this. Illegal without a licence and duty to pay > > were a licence to be granted, (which is very unlikely). > > > > AWEM > > > > I believe that freeze-distillation is OK - but needs checking. > > It is also reckoned to be safer - regular distillation done wrong can > produce a bottle with high concentrations of less desireable alcohols - > these can occur naturally as part of the fermentation and are OK if > spread around 8 bottles of wine, but less good if concentrated into the > first small bottle of distilled output. > > But I'm sure google will turn up lots of info on making a simple still. > Boiling pot, lots of soft copper tube and a cooling bath. > > -- > Tim Watts The first distillates to come over in a still are ketones iirc at arround 79deg C, and it is these that are the nasties and to be avoided. If the first few drops are rejected it's probably safest. I think it is producing spirit that attracts taxation, and HMR&C don't mind whether it's done by distillation or freeze separation. AWEM |
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Andrew Mawson wrote:
> "john robinson" > wrote in message > ... >> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to >> distil some ginger beer. >> >> > > HM Revene and Customs would be very interested to hear were your > friend to be doing this. Illegal without a licence and duty to pay > were a licence to be granted, (which is very unlikely). Cue Dennis.... -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
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On Tue, 21 Dec 2010 18:46:28 +0000, Andrew Mawson wrote:
> "john robinson" > wrote in message > ... >> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to > distil >> some ginger beer. >> >> >> > HM Revene and Customs would be very interested to hear were your friend > to be doing this. Illegal without a licence and duty to pay were a > licence to be granted, (which is very unlikely). And no doubt dennis would report you...it's what he does. -- Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning protection* - a w_tom conductor |
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john robinson expressed precisely :
> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* apparatus > that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to distil some ginger > beer. Isn't doing that slightly illegal? -- Regards, Harry (M1BYT) (L) http://www.ukradioamateur.co.uk |
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On Dec 21, 1:12*pm, Harry Bloomfield
> wrote: > john *robinson expressed precisely : > > > Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* apparatus > > that they can share? *My friend is thinking of trying to distil some ginger > > beer. > > Isn't doing that slightly illegal? > > -- > Regards, > * * * * Harry (M1BYT) (L)http://www.ukradioamateur.co.uk Do you really care? |
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![]() "john robinson" > wrote in message ... > Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* > apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to distil > some ginger beer. > A problem with distilling is that if 'successfully' done, one ends up with alcohol and no flavour, so you would not get ginger spirit from your still. The flavour in gin is added afterwards, and that in whisky comes from the barrels it is aged in. That said, there was a Food Programme, on Aqua Vitaes, which described the vast quantities of fruit required to get real fruit flavoured spirits, and I don't quite see how that works. On the other hand, if you ever make sloe gin - ie with gin that the tax has already been paid on - you may want to recover some of the spirit that remains in the fruit after you have decanted the bulk of the liquid. I was surprised at how much I had been throwing out with the fruit. Got a fair bit back by using 2 big 'champagne' bottles, a cork and a length of flexible plastic tube. Tubed and sealed the first bottle with fruit in, and then heated it in a saucepan of boiling water. The tube trails down into a second bottle, on the floor, cooled with ice. You have to get a good seal, and take care not to melt the tube if you are on gas. S |
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![]() "Bob Eager" > wrote in message ... > On Tue, 21 Dec 2010 18:46:28 +0000, Andrew Mawson wrote: > >> "john robinson" > wrote in message >> ... >>> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >>> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to >> distil >>> some ginger beer. >>> >>> >>> >> HM Revene and Customs would be very interested to hear were your friend >> to be doing this. Illegal without a licence and duty to pay were a >> licence to be granted, (which is very unlikely). > > And no doubt dennis would report you...it's what he does. Is he intimidating someone else by doing it? Is it actually illegal? I don't think it is. It depends on what he does with it. Would I report someone for ignoring part P, no. would I report someone charging for a job that needs part P, probably. It depends on how it affects others and who the victim is. |
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Harry Bloomfield > wrote in
. uk: > john robinson expressed precisely : >> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to >> distil some ginger beer. > > Isn't doing that slightly illegal? > Not everywhere. In the US it's illegal to concentrate alcohol by any means (including freezing) without a license. Part of getting a license to run a still in the US is having a separate building, which must pass inspection as adequate for operatoin of a distillery. Setting up a personal distillery has been compared to starting your own restaurant, in terms of paper work, inspections, taxes, etc. This PDF is a collection of articles that might be useful. http://www.distilling.com/newsletters/AD0101.pdf B. |
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On Dec 21, 10:12*am, "john robinson" >
wrote: > Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* > apparatus that they can share? *My friend is thinking of trying to distil > some ginger beer. Considering ginger beer consists of ginger, sugar, and water, distiling ginger beer would at best produce some ginger-flavored rum. Why not just macerate some ginger in rum, and call it a day? |
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john robinson wrote:
> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* > apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to > distil some ginger beer. Go to your local home brewing store - I went past mine today and had a look in, they had a sign in the window which read 'distill your own spirits' and underneath this sign was a stainless steel contraption, but I was in the car and didn't really have time to investigate further, but i doubt it is illegal as they had lots of these things in boxes in the window, and part of the name was 'still' - it's obviously intended for distilling and must be legal - this shop's on the main road through the town centre. -- Phil L RSRL Tipster Of The Year 2008 |
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On Tue, 21 Dec 2010 21:21:36 +0000, dennis@home wrote:
> "Bob Eager" > wrote in message > ... >> On Tue, 21 Dec 2010 18:46:28 +0000, Andrew Mawson wrote: >> >>> "john robinson" > wrote in message >>> ... >>>> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >>>> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to >>> distil >>>> some ginger beer. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> HM Revene and Customs would be very interested to hear were your >>> friend to be doing this. Illegal without a licence and duty to pay >>> were a licence to be granted, (which is very unlikely). >> >> And no doubt dennis would report you...it's what he does. > > Is he intimidating someone else by doing it? Is it actually illegal? I > don't think it is. It depends on what he does with it. How gracious of you to make any distinction. > Would I report someone for ignoring part P, no. would I report someone > charging for a job that needs part P, probably. > > It depends on how it affects others and who the victim is. Now you're trying to tell us you're capable of judgement. -- Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning protection* - a w_tom conductor |
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On Dec 21, 7:09*pm, "newshound" > wrote:
> Not so long ago you could buy small stills in France in places like Gamme > Verte (Countrywide) Every time I've seen a still for sale, I could buy a lifetime's supply for the same price. Except in Jugoslavia(sic). There it's a little bloke with a handcart wheeling around something built by his great grandfather. You give him firewood and a tithe of the end results, he distills your home-brew for you. |
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On 12/21/2010 11:12 AM, john robinson wrote:
> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* > apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to distil > some ginger beer. > > There is so little involved, and so many ways it can be done. I think I would use an insulated hot/cold beverage container (5 gallon or bigger), an immersible beverage heater attached to some kind of float to boil the liquid, and some copper tubing to capture and cool the vapor. Figure out how to pass the wires and tube through the top and seal around them, so vapor escapes only into the tube, which rises a few inches, then falls so that liquid can run out. It is best to have a thermometer and watch the vapor's heat rise, discarding the early fraction while the temperature is rising, save the fraction beginning when the temperature holds steady, and stop when the temperature starts climbing again. That way you don't collect any of the nasties. You want to start with the highest alcohol concentration you can obtain. Think ginger wine, not ginger beer. Don't forget that the vapor and distillate can be flammable and explosive. And you might end up with nothing more than the equivalent of strong vodka (which you can dilute and flavor to your liking). |
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![]() "Paul Arthur" > wrote in message om... > On 2010-12-21, Spamlet > wrote: > >> "john robinson" > wrote in message >> ... >> >>> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >>> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to >>> distil some ginger beer. >> >> A problem with distilling is that if 'successfully' done, one ends >> up with alcohol and no flavour, so you would not get ginger spirit >> from your still. The flavour in gin is added afterwards, and that in >> whisky comes from the barrels it is aged in. > > Sorry, that's just wrong. Raw whisky has plenty of flavour; some of > the flavours come from the barrel, but others (like the peatiness in > some Scotch) is there from the get-go. You only get no flavour if you > distill it several times (a column still does this internally, while > with a pot still you would have to do multiple runs). > > As for gin...gin is made in several ways. "The flavour is added > afterwards" is a good description of compounding, which is the least > popular. London gin is the most popular type of gin and is required by > law to be produced in a more traditional manner, where the flavour is > added before the final distillation. > > I believed or read that the difference was that compounding means "dump it in" whereas distilled means more like infused with vapor of |
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Western expats at Saudi Aramco published a how-to manual on home
distillation "The Blue Flame" It's easy to make bad spirits. http://www.expats.org.uk/features/al...blueflame.html Roger |
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On Dec 21, 11:08*pm, rgb > wrote:
> In article >, > says... > > > Go to your local home brewing store - I went past mine today and had a > > look > > in, they had a sign in the window which read 'distill your own spirits' and > > underneath this sign was a stainless steel contraption, but I was in the car > > and didn't really have time to investigate further, but i doubt it is > > illegal as they had lots of these things in boxes in the window, and part of > > the name was 'still' - it's obviously intended for distilling and must be > > legal - this shop's on the main road through the town centre. > > I believe it's illegal to distill in Canada and the US (without a > license) , but I do remember a shop in Canada selling a small still as > an "essential oil extractor" > > I know it's legal in New Zealand to distill your own spirits for non- > commercial purposes, and frankly it *should* be legal anywhere in the > civilized world. I can understand state control over the sale of > alcohol, but the production of it for personal use should be fair game. The US is overly paranoid about distilling - I read an article a while ago, on a still manufactures site, that advised US customers to never use the word "still", but "water purifier", and to order them in separate boxes to avoid confiscation by customs. New Zealand accidentally legalised home distilling in the 90s, by removing the need for still operators to continue to pay the $100 annual license, which cost a lot more to collect (inspectors were required to travel to each still). By the time they realised, every man and his dog had bought, built, begged or borrowed their own still. Hence New Zealand is the home distilling capital of the world. (Notice where the www.stillspirits.com website leads). From what I have learned, home distilling in the UK (IANAL, and there may be English/Scottish variations here) has never been illegal per se. However there was a requirement for still owners to register their stills, and declare and pay duty on what they distilled. Obviously this is not what home distillers are going to do, and where the breach of law comes in. However it's not *criminal*, it really is "a civil matter sir", so HMRC have no enforcement capability for home distillers. I met the UK rep for Still Spirits, and he showed me a letter from HMRC confirming this. Apparently HMRC never dreamt that commercial manufacturers would make and sell a device *capable* of distilling alcohol (the actual still spirits still is designed primarily as a water purifier), and by the time they had realised, like in New Zealand, every man and his dog had one. They decided that discretion was the better part of valour, and not to enforce the requirements for registration and duty payment for people home distilling. Judging from most peoples reactions, when I mention I home distill, their centuries long campaign of FUD has permeated the publics mind, so it will probably remain a minority pursuit. The basic still spirits still is a pot still - the most basic form. It is less effective at isolating the ethanol from the higher fusels, but the result is certain very palatable, as long as you follow all instructions *precisely*. If you want to start making purer stuff, you'd need to look into reflux stills, which is where copper tubing and the likes starts to play a part. |
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On 21/12/2010 21:19, Spamlet wrote:
> > "john robinson" > wrote in message > ... >> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to >> distil some ginger beer. >> > > A problem with distilling is that if 'successfully' done, one ends up > with alcohol and no flavour, so you would not get ginger spirit from > your still. The flavour in gin is added afterwards, and that in whisky > comes from the barrels it is aged in. That said, there was a Food > Programme, on Aqua Vitaes, which described the vast quantities of fruit > required to get real fruit flavoured spirits, and I don't quite see how > that works. > > On the other hand, if you ever make sloe gin - ie with gin that the tax > has already been paid on - you may want to recover some of the spirit > that remains in the fruit after you have decanted the bulk of the > liquid. I was surprised at how much I had been throwing out with the > fruit. I rub them through a metal sieve to get the stones out and have them with a dollop of cream. Looks like it was a good year for sloes but I just didn't get round to picking them. Waited for a hard frost and then got overtaken by events. Got a fair bit back by using 2 big 'champagne' bottles, a cork > and a length of flexible plastic tube. Tubed and sealed the first bottle > with fruit in, and then heated it in a saucepan of boiling water. The > tube trails down into a second bottle, on the floor, cooled with ice. > You have to get a good seal, and take care not to melt the tube if you > are on gas. > > S |
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On 2010-12-21, Phil L wrote:
> john robinson wrote: >> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to >> distil some ginger beer. I've heard that _The Alaskan Bootlegger's Bible_ is good. > Go to your local home brewing store - I went past mine today and had a look > in, they had a sign in the window which read 'distill your own spirits' and > underneath this sign was a stainless steel contraption, but I was in the car > and didn't really have time to investigate further, but i doubt it is > illegal as they had lots of these things in boxes in the window, and part of > the name was 'still' - it's obviously intended for distilling and must be > legal - this shop's on the main road through the town centre. I think they're sold for purifying water. Similarly, I've seen signs in shop windows that say "These products are sold for tobacco use only." ;-) -- Do you know what they do to book thieves up at Santa Rita? http://www.shigabooks.com/indeces/bookhunter.html |
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In message >, john robinson
> writes >Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to distil >some ginger beer. > > Have you any Irish contacts who could advise on the making of poteen? I've drunk a bit a couple of times, and it's interesting to say the least. -- Peter Ying tong iddle-i po! |
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"Spamlet" schrieb :
> <snip> > A problem with distilling is that if 'successfully' done, one ends up with > alcohol and no flavour, No. It depends on what you distill. Pure alcohol is double distillation. > so you would not get ginger spirit from your still. The flavour in gin is > added afterwards, and that in whisky comes from the barrels it is aged in. > That said, there was a Food Programme, on Aqua Vitaes, which described the > vast quantities of fruit required to get real fruit flavoured spirits, and > I don't quite see how that works. > It works by letting the mash rest for some months. We did the last of mashing in November; in April we'll distill the mash. Cheers, Michael Kuettner |
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On Dec 21, 4:44*pm, Andy Dingley > wrote:
> On Dec 21, 7:09*pm, "newshound" > wrote: > > > Not so long ago you could buy small stills in France in places like Gamme > > Verte (Countrywide) > > Every time I've seen a still for sale, I could buy a lifetime's supply > for the same price. > > Except in Jugoslavia(sic). *There it's a little bloke with a handcart > wheeling around something built by his great grandfather. You give him > firewood and a tithe of the end results, he distills your home-brew > for you. In France are les bouilleurs de cru, who operate similarly to the handcart man. Historically they could distill up to ten liters of alcohol tax-free, per year, from their own fruit, but supposedly they will distill yours as well for a tithe. |
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On Dec 21, 9:21*pm, "dennis@home" >
wrote: > "Bob Eager" > wrote in message > > ... > > > > > On Tue, 21 Dec 2010 18:46:28 +0000, Andrew Mawson wrote: > > >> "john robinson" > wrote in message > ... > >>> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* > >>> apparatus that they can share? *My friend is thinking of trying to > >> distil > >>> some ginger beer. > > >> HM Revene and Customs would be very interested to hear were your friend > >> to be doing this. Illegal without a licence and duty to pay were a > >> licence to be granted, (which is very unlikely). > > > And no doubt dennis would report you...it's what he does. > > Is he intimidating someone else by doing it? > Is it actually illegal? I don't think it is. It depends on what he does with > it. > > Would I report someone for ignoring part P, no. > would I report someone charging for a job that needs part P, probably. If you think there's something wrong in paying someone to do a job that needs part P, and it's beyond your DIY skills, how do you propose to get the job done? MBQ |
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![]() "Paul Arthur" > wrote in message om... > On 2010-12-21, Spamlet > wrote: > >> "john robinson" > wrote in message >> ... >> >>> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >>> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to >>> distil some ginger beer. >> >> A problem with distilling is that if 'successfully' done, one ends >> up with alcohol and no flavour, so you would not get ginger spirit >> from your still. The flavour in gin is added afterwards, and that in >> whisky comes from the barrels it is aged in. > > Sorry, that's just wrong. Raw whisky has plenty of flavour; some of > the flavours come from the barrel, but others (like the peatiness in > some Scotch) is there from the get-go. You only get no flavour if you > distill it several times (a column still does this internally, while > with a pot still you would have to do multiple runs). Which is what I meant by distilling *properly*. As a chemist I would have equipment that generally separated the individual fractions quite well by their boiling points. In practice, I would throw out the first fractions as likely to contain methanol, even if this meant throwing out some of the flavour compounds. The stillers for booze must all have their own techniques for keeping a mixture of flavour compounds in the distilled product (Keeping everything that distills over between a range of temperatures, instead of just at the boiling point of alcohol), but to a chemist these would all be ways of producing impure alcohol. And even the best stills don't prevent the water that is bound up with the ethanol molecule distilling over, so that to get pure alcohol extensive drying processes have to be carried out. As a long time home wine maker and lab tech, I did test the alcohol content of some of my wines chromatographically. They can exceed 20% so, in many ways, no point in distilling, but when I did try, I decided it was easier in the long run to buy gin or vodka and add fruit to it, rather than distill from a fruit ferment and try to keep the flavour. S > > As for gin...gin is made in several ways. "The flavour is added > afterwards" is a good description of compounding, which is the least > popular. London gin is the most popular type of gin and is required by > law to be produced in a more traditional manner, where the flavour is > added before the final distillation. > > -- > You mean you didn't *know* she was off making lots of little phone > companies? |
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dennis@home wrote:
> "Bob Eager" > wrote in message > ... >> On Tue, 21 Dec 2010 18:46:28 +0000, Andrew Mawson wrote: >> >>> "john robinson" > wrote in message >>> ... >>>> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >>>> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to >>>> distil some ginger beer. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> HM Revene and Customs would be very interested to hear were your >>> friend to be doing this. Illegal without a licence and duty to pay >>> were a licence to be granted, (which is very unlikely). >> >> And no doubt dennis would report you...it's what he does. > > Is he intimidating someone else by doing it? > Is it actually illegal? I don't think it is. It depends on what he > does with it. > > Would I report someone for ignoring part P, no. > would I report someone charging for a job that needs part P, probably. > > It depends on how it affects others and who the victim is. In the case under discussion "how it affects others" - you hoped it would damage my ability to earn a living & feed my family. The "victim" in this case was a woman deliberately trying to avoid payment. You grassing spineless little ****. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
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I tasted more bad spirits in Saudi Arabia than good ones. Distilling
on the sly, in a hurry to get results, is not conducive to quality. if you read their recipe for beer at end of document, it is pretty vile stuff. Another home brewed beer was made by dumping sugar and yeast into non-alcohol beer, fermenting for 1 week, and drinking the turbid slop. http://www.expats.org.uk/features/al...blueflame.html |
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We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the
drugs began to take hold. I remember John Rumm > saying something like: >To be fair, they would be particularly interested if you were selling >the stuff, but in all liklihood far less so if just doing it for >personal consumption. Several years ago, someone posted up here an interesting link to a C&E page where it laid down the quantities you could legally distill for personal use in the UK. Fubberd if I can find any sign of it. Iirc, you can do some, but it's not a lot and most certainly not for sale. |
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On 21/12/2010 21:19, Spamlet wrote:
> > The flavour in gin is added afterwards Not according to "Oz and Hugh Raise the Bar" on the Beeb earlier this week - see http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode...Bar_Episode_1/ about 48 minutes in. -- Reentrant |
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On Dec 22, 7:47*am, "Michael Kuettner" >
wrote: > "Spamlet" schrieb : > > > > <snip> > > A problem with distilling is that if 'successfully' done, one ends up with > > alcohol and no flavour, > > No. It depends on what you distill. > Pure alcohol is double distillation. > > > so you would not get ginger spirit from your still. The flavour in gin is > > added afterwards, and that in whisky comes from the barrels it is aged in. > > That said, there was a Food Programme, on Aqua Vitaes, which described the > > vast quantities of fruit required to get real fruit flavoured spirits, and > > I don't quite see how that works. > > It works by letting the mash rest for some months. > We did the last of mashing in November; in April we'll distill the mash. > How much fruit for how much liquor? What fruit did you use? Apples, plums, grapes? |
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![]() "Steve Bonine" > wrote in message ... > wrote: >> Western expats at Saudi Aramco published a how-to manual on home >> distillation "The Blue Flame" >> >> It's easy to make bad spirits. >> >> >> http://www.expats.org.uk/features/al...blueflame.html > > Thank you for sharing this. I found it fascinating in more ways than the > technical details for building a still. > > If you believe the document, it's pretty easy to make good spirits, too. Yes, I know, I think that is great. I really like it |
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"spamtrap1888" schrieb :
> How much fruit for how much liquor? Depends on the sugar content of the mash. Can be anywhere from 15 to 40 liters of mash for one liter of Schnaps. > What fruit did you use? Apples, plums, grapes? Apples and pears. It's not a good idea to mix stone-fruit (like plums) with seeded fruit (like apples). Somehow the result doesn't turn out well. Cheers, Michael Kuettner |
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Try freeze distilling for a start to save outlay. Alcohol doesn't freeze,
water does ;-) Just scoop the ice out and (eventually) enjoy the rest. Instead of ginger beer, try making ginger wine with a high alcohol wine yeast like chanpagne yeast, water, ginger and sugar. That will get you to 18%. I did this years ago with about 2kg of ginger root minced up into a 25litre batch. Put the result into P.E.T bottle into the freezer. After a few days, take them out and give a good shake. Squeeze the "toothpaste" out and suck the "goodness" for a fairly good hit. Must have been a good 30% or more. If you like ginger then you'll love this! :-) "Adam Funk" > wrote in message ... > On 2010-12-21, Phil L wrote: > >> john robinson wrote: >>> Does anyone have any information about making a simple *distilling* >>> apparatus that they can share? My friend is thinking of trying to >>> distil some ginger beer. > > I've heard that _The Alaskan Bootlegger's Bible_ is good. > > >> Go to your local home brewing store - I went past mine today and had a >> look >> in, they had a sign in the window which read 'distill your own spirits' >> and >> underneath this sign was a stainless steel contraption, but I was in the >> car >> and didn't really have time to investigate further, but i doubt it is >> illegal as they had lots of these things in boxes in the window, and part >> of >> the name was 'still' - it's obviously intended for distilling and must be >> legal - this shop's on the main road through the town centre. > > I think they're sold for purifying water. Similarly, I've seen signs > in shop windows that say "These products are sold for tobacco use > only." ;-) > > > -- > Do you know what they do to book thieves up at Santa Rita? > http://www.shigabooks.com/indeces/bookhunter.html |
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