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Winemaking (rec.crafts.winemaking) Discussion of the process, recipes, tips, techniques and general exchange of lore on the process, methods and history of wine making. Includes traditional grape wines, sparkling wines & champagnes. |
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On Sat, 27 Nov 2004 10:28:34 -0500, "J F" > wrote:
>> Have you ever heard of or tried making ice wine with the same method? >Apple jack is the product of frozen cider with the ice crystals removed. I tried it once, but my filtration procedure was too clumsy to make anything very nice. >I'd hazard a guess that high teens is about as far as you go as the >increased alcohol level will act as antifreeze and then if you cold enough >the alcohol is start to crystalize as well. The alcohol will NOT start to crystallize- the freezing point of ethanol (-114.1 oC) is well below any temperature you're going to encounter. Any time you cool a mixture of two compounds, the higher-melting one will start to crystallize (and precipitate out), rather than having the entire solution freeze. The remaining liquid will then be richer in low-melting component, and it will take a lower temperature to cause more of the first component to precipitate. So, to do this properly, you would have to chill the wine to the point where it -just- starts to freeze. If you cool it too much, then you have a bottle of slush, which is impossible to filter properly (in -this- respect, I'm speaking from experience). If you have a manageble quanitity of ice forming, you can filter off the wine, which will have a higher percentage of alcohol than it started with. To get ice to precipitate from this wine, you cool it a few more degrees. This gives you a liquor with a higher percent alcohol again. Repeat as required. I don't have a phase diagram for the ethanol-water system, but I do know that at -40oC, the remaining liquid will be 40% ethanol. As to its potability, I'm not going to hazard a guess. Cheers, ---The Mad Alchemist--- http://www.mad-alchemy.com Email sent to the above address, unless clearly marked as wine or heraldry, will be deleted unread. |
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