Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi, I am thinking to start distilling spirits at home. Before investing in equipment I would be keen to talk with someone who has experience, so that I don't walk in blind. If anyone distills alcohol at home and is open to being asked some questions that would be very helpful, thanks.
Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/87966-home-alcohol-distiller/
Share on other sites

So hands up. As a chemistry undergraduate most of us tried it.


Pretty easy to get a pure product through double distillation.


And confirmed as such through gas chromatography.


But nobody would drink it, and with all the effort to brew the alcohol in the first place it wasn't worth the effort.


To do it properly, and get carry over of the other chemicals which give it taste is a skilled art.


Perhaps you could get a job where industrial quantities of illegal and probably quite dangerous liquor are produced.

Clnical distillation (ie that produces 97% or so alcohol) or freezing produces similar results. A super strength vodka. The only flavour is the alcohol which you then need to dilute and preferably add some flavour.


Various hooches can carry over methanol and other pretty horid higher alcohols, tasting nasty and possibly causing harm.


They add other stuff to meths, including the colour, to put you off drinking it and again this can be harmful.


The real stuff as said is an art to get the right flavours over - eg wood alcohols in Whisky and a complex cocktail in gin, from the juniper berries.


I read up alot about this when I was going through the motions. I even bought a bag of maize, ground it down and maleted it. A failure! As I said rights of passage.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • that is one cliche-ridden post headnun    it doesn’t mean a sack of beans in the real world  “old fashioned voters” meaning the ones dragging the country down this last 15 years just to laugh at the libs tears. Well done all  I’m not looking back at all. This is not a post Europe world in any sense. There are forces bigger than Europe but uk would be better aligning with Europe against, say, china, the pretending we live in some post Europe world.    and in case you hadn’t noticed, whoever you vote for, there are a LOT of ignorant racists feeling very happy with their resurgence - I would fight against them if I were you 
    • No they aren't. You're coming across as a smug, superior liberal, and that's what old fashioned voters (labour, Cons and now Reform) hate. That 'the deplorables' 'they're all ignorant racists' line is what's driving people away from the traditional parties and towards Reform.  You're as guilty of looking back as Labour. This is a new, post-europe world and we all need to come to terms with that, make do with what we have, and move forward.       
    • I have sympathy with any voter, anyone, who having witnessed the last 14 years and then Labour in the last year and wonders just how can things be this bad  unless a) they voted for brexit b) voted Tory after 2010 c) is thinking of voting reform  because anyone who thinks reform won’t make things a thousand times worse after voting for the previous?  It is they who are the problem.  They are the reason the country is in the doldrums with an embarrassingly-timid Labour government  Specifically Chris mason - a not very bright right leaning stooge - large part of why bbc news has become grok-level slop  
    • In what way? Maybe it just felt more intelligent and considered coming directly after Question Time, which was a barely watchable bun fight.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...