Allow me to be the first on this thread with a cheesy joke.
SWMBO walks into your brew area and says "what are you doing?"
You reply "Jacking my wee heavy."
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Many lols
Allow me to be the first on this thread with a cheesy joke.
SWMBO walks into your brew area and says "what are you doing?"
You reply "Jacking my wee heavy."
![]()
I have a small sample of a cider freezing right now actually to try this out.
My wife is enamored with the idea, and is pushing to start doing this more often with more beer styles.
I'm very interested to see how it comes out.
Chri5, did you try your Apple Jack yet? If not, please come back and share. If so, please detail the tasting.
Regards,
dlester
It was as hot tasting as the original.I had a feeling it would be though. Concentrating a bad flavor can only make it worse right? Lol
Ive made numerous beers that abv that were drinkable in a few weeks. Looks like I need to tweak this some more. I still have 3+ gallons of this on the yeast. I'm moving it to secondary this week for aging, I'll try again with 2L of it when I think its ready for bottling.
I'll update this thread when I try it again.
The drink is just young. You may have fermented it too hot. Give it a year. Pull out the bottle next xmas.
Cheers
I turned 500-ml of my cider recipe into 200-ml of apple-jack a ways back.
To my suprise the flavor was subdued instead of `in your face concentrated` like i was expecting it to be.It didn't burn going down at all.
Now the cider started close to 20% ABV before concentrating.
I'm not sure on the math but i think it was nearing bourbon range ABV.
I can see that becoming pretty deadly as a person could be very tempted to down an entire 5th of it in a sitting rather quikly.
Reminds me of a quote somebody on here has.
I don't remember exactly how it went but it was something like.
`a man on too much wisky might kill his wife and burn his house down but a man on apple jack could burn the whole town down."
or something to that effect.I can see that happening.
I turned 500-ml of my cider recipe into 200-ml of apple-jack a ways back.
To my suprise the flavor was subdued instead of `in your face concentrated` like i was expecting it to be.It didn't burn going down at all.
Now the cider started close to 20% ABV before concentrating.
I'm not sure on the math but i think it was nearing bourbon range ABV.
I can see that becoming pretty deadly as a person could be very tempted to down an entire 5th of it in a sitting rather quikly.
Reminds me of a quote somebody on here has.
I don't remember exactly how it went but it was something like.
`a man on too much wisky might kill his wife and burn his house down but a man on apple jack could burn the whole town down."
or something to that effect.I can see that happening.
This sounds like a great idea. I will have to give it a try soon. Is there any specific temperature that I need to freeze the liquid in question? Also how long is a good amount of time to let it sit upside down while it thaws?
I've been freeze distilling for awhile. I got the idea after reading about how the pioneers would make Apple Jack. They would let barrels of apple cider sit out in the winter.. every morning they would go out with a spoon and scoop off the ice that had formed on top. What was eventually left was Apple Jack.
When ever I make apple wine, I usually take about 2 gallons of it, freeze it and make Apple Jack. Just put it in a water jug, freeze it, and turn it upside down over a pitcher.
Good stuff..
I watched videos on youtube... one a guy put the liquid in a plastic bottle, froze it solid, turned it over and let it drip out until the ice was white.
With the low freezing point of the alcohol, I feel like the slushy method would take forever... as soon as you start to strain it, it'll melt before all the ice is separated.
Whoa, lots of misinformation after I posted the link to the chart on temperature vs. alcohol content possible.
Volume remaining after concentration does not determine alcohol content. You can't freeze concentrate a liquid/beer down to 50% alcohol without super low temperatures. Read up on how difficult it was for Brew Dog to make their super high alcohol beers, for example. 40% alcohol vodka won't even freeze in a conventional freezer to be able to concentrate out the water further, so how could you freeze concentrate your beer beyond that?:rockin:
I agree Chri5 that trying to freeze an alcohol at that percentage would require a a much lower temp. However, I think the initial extraction doesn't require that low of a temp.
True .. but "living on the edge" to let's say have a fling with a gorgeous blond is one thing ... living on the edge to have concentrated crap is another. If jacking fermented spirits was a good product we'd still be doing it. It lacks the ability to refine the alcohol content (remove higher and lower esters) that fractional distillation does.Good idea to have some water with your booze anyway, I say. Reconstitute it in your stomach!
Really though, unless you are selling this or sharing it on a massive scale, you are not going to have feds at your door.
You can go to jail for hosting a poker game, too--but you don't, unless you're doing it for profit, because it would be ludicrous. If you call an ATF tipline (or whatever they have) and report your neighbor for putting milk jugs full of cider in a snow drift, you'll be laughed off the line.
I'm a fairly experienced reader of ATF regulations...
If jacking fermented spirits was a good product we'd still be doing it. It lacks the ability to refine the alcohol content (remove higher and lower esters) that fractional distillation does.
Allthough you are correct about jacking not being able to remove the heads and the tails (higher/lower esters) I disagree that places stopped jacking because it makes a `bad product`. I think it has more to do with efficiency/speed of production.Jacking a large quantity of cider would be a huge PITA vs cooking it in an enclosed pot with a heat exchanger coming out the end of it.
With any luck in mid 2014 i will be getting a distillers license or perhaps a local brandy makers license and will produce true to form apple-jack using the big PITA method of freezing it.
Legality-----this is probably the 6th millionth debate on wether or not jacking is legal. Nobody here is a lawyer and state laws may vary so please everybody let's not argue over its legality & stick to what these forums are for.
I'm a fairly experienced reader of ATF regulations - being a pyrotechnics person, but I am not a lawyer. I have spent a good deal of time across the table from ATF Investigators as well as with my own attorneys to make sure I stay a free man. I read 94-3 as well as 27 CFR 25.11 and here's what I take away from it:
Removing a "small quantity" of water (stated as no more than 0.5%) is "ice beer" and legal. Concentration of beer is what you are talking about and is only legal if you reconstitute it again. "Production" is not a commercial term, and is the only stipulation in the regulations (i,e, "you may produce ...").
So, removal of water from beer is not the same as removing alcohol from beer and thus not distillation - cool...
You will probably at this point not exercise your right to STFU and incriminate yourself for something. If this happens the rest of this "it happened to a friend of mine" story doesn't even apply to you. You will be convicted, lose your job and a lot of nice things. Oh and if they happen to see a drill press or grinder and an AR-15 while looking for other things, you will also be charged with possession of tools and equipment to make an automatic weapon. Yes, seriously.
If you did STFU, hopefully you can afford a smart lawyer, experienced in all this, because a public defender will advise you to plead it out. That lawyer will be expensive and doesn't even want to hear about "I can sue them for false arrest and get your money that way". Nope, he wants cash. He makes his money whether you were too cute by far or not. You also likely can't sell your house or car for that cash because one of those was posted as collateral against your bail bond.
Months will drag by, you will become a raging ******* because of the stress, your wife will leave, your job (if you kept it this long) will eventually grow tired of being nice about it and find some other reason to fire you. Now you are broke, indicted, separated from your family, have no place to call home and no car to drive there.
Fast forward two years (this was a quick process this time) where said friend was acquitted. Would you believe his wife, kids, car, house, money, and job were not handed back to him? The nerve! But he was right all along, surely that means something. At this point you might have the stomach to try to file papers to get back all your things which I am sure have been stored safely in some federal locker somewhere. You still want that fridge back with all the food in it, right?
So, you were right, I was wrong. You can make your crappy "hard beer". That was definitely worth it.
First and foremost, go back to the beginning of this thread where I discuss that this is not distillation, or "freeze distillation." In fact, freeze distillation is a term used only in the brewing community, and therefore, is not a term used correctly.
I have contacted the the TTB because ATF no longer regulates this. They specifically stated that this is not distillation, but rather, concentration. And, there is no limit to the amount of concentration, or ice removed. Therefore, is not illegal. That is why you will never be able to prove your argument that your friend was arrested for concentrating beer.
I invite you and anyone else reading this post to contact the TTB. In addition, I would like to present a video from Basic Brewing, where they too, contacted the TTB, which stated it is not illegal. I will give you the link and repost it for everyone else.
Basic Brewing Barley Wine Ice Beer and letter from TTB:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nnR4trUKVo
It's not illegal to concentrate it and there is no limit, but you must reconstitute it before consuming it (or in the case of a commercial brewery, selling it).
Also, there is even confusion among TTB employees, one will tell you it's legal and the next that it's illegal.
It's funny to me that you could fill a warehouse with this stuff, but if you taste it without putting water in it you are committing a violation. Basically the definition of unenforceable.