how to distill moonshine
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How to distill Moonshine
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WARNING!!!!!
this is for informational purposes only and should not be used for illegal activities. there are many
legal things one can do with a still including fueling cars (must register with the federal government)
as well as extracting essential oils from plants (not necessary to register). also, implementing the
following procedures could result in bodily harm from explosions, fires, burns, not to mention whatcould happen if you actually consume your final product. use your head, be careful and be safe.
Thank you to everyone who has made this a successful Instructable! I appreciate the views
and positive feedback. Please cut me some slack where I am lacking. I have recently
updated to include a few more specifics, but this does not take the place of doing your own
research. I am not an expert, though I play one on TV. I am also toying with a discussion
forum for all the numerous repeat questions. Please continue to check the comments
discussions before posting questions. Many have been answered before and plenty more
than once.
as a further note, i have decided to add this link to clear up any misunderstandings about what
United States law has to say about distilling. Hopefully this will make some of you think a little harder
about this and the rest to stop posting comments debating the legality of this. This is ONLY for the
US.
http://www.instructables.com/file/F6JLWVPF36FETHH/http://www.instructables.com/file/F6JLWVPF36FETHH/http://www.instructables.com/file/F6JLWVPF36FETHH/ -
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Distilling Code
let's begin.
anything alcoholic can be distilled. i've distilled everything from my own moonshine washes to jug
wine purchased at my local liquor store. distillation is actually quite simple. the hard part is making
sure you are getting ethanol and not methanol (or the like). in this instructable i will show how i made
a wash, fermented it, and consequently--the most important part--how i distilled it. i have added
more specifics in order to answer some of the most asked questions i've gotten in the comments. i
hope this helps. i might also mention that everything here is hypothetical and for informational
purposes only. hope that covers the bases.
and. . . let's begin. for real this time.
(if this doesn't make sense or you would like more info, check out my instructable--distilling basics--
for more detailed information on the distillation process or read through the comment strings before
posting a question. I get repeat questions constantly and I don't have time to answer the same
questions over and over. Sorry.)
Step 1Fermentation
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i used a sugar water solution to create a wash which i then distilled to a neutral spirit. i dissolved
about 5lbs of sugar in 3 gallons of water (not an exact formula, play around a bit) and then let it cool
to room temperature. this is about as basic a wash as you can get. many more options are available
for different flavor characteristics. for instance, if you ferment molasses you will end up with rum. if
you ferment blue agave you will end up with tequila. i was looking for simplicity for a beginner and
ran with this. it is the easiest to procure and make. unfortunately white sugar creates a decidedly
cidery flavor to the spirit, but much of that can be distilled out or masked by flavoring or blending.
the wash (fermentable solution, a.k.a. sugar water) was then poured into a clean carboy (big glass
bottle, see pic). after that i 'pitched' the yeast (dumped yeast into wash) and then capped the carboy
with an airlock (see pic). now we wait. depending on yeast, temperature, amount of digestible
materials, etc., a couple of weeks is usually good. at this point yeast is eating sugar, and excreting
carbon dioxide and alcohol. give it some time. let it work. when the bubbles stop (and look close) it's
done. if it is still bubbling, let it go. the two week time is just a very rough estimate. it will vary for
everyone.
if the bubbles have slowed considerably, taste a bit. if it is sweet, let it go a bit longer.
when it is done. we're ready for the next stage:
distillation.
Step 2The pot
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i
in this instructable i will be making what is known as a pot still. it is a very basic design, but can be
reasonably efficient. there are many variations on pot stills and many other types of stills. some more
advanced, some less. this will be fine for our purposes, though.
helpful hint: goodwill and other thrift stores are great places to scrounge parts.
you'll need:
a tea kettle
a medium sized thermos
a cork stopper that fits the kettle mouth(I used rubber, but cork is safer, use that.)
copper tubing
a pipe cutter
tubing couplers
http://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-make-moonshine/step2/the-pot/http://www.instructables.com/file/FBA60CKF36FETHL/http://www.instructables.com/file/FBA60CKF36FETHL/http://img.instructables.com/files/deriv/FLT/I4U9/F36FETHK/FLTI4U9F36FETHK.THUMB.jpghttp://img.instructables.com/files/deriv/FBA/60CK/F36FETHL/FBA60CKF36FETHL.THUMB.jpghttp://img.instructables.com/files/deriv/FLT/I4U9/F36FETHK/FLTI4U9F36FETHK.THUMB.jpghttp://img.instructables.com/files/deriv/FBA/60CK/F36FETHL/FBA60CKF36FETHL.THUMB.jpghttp://img.instructables.com/files/deriv/FLT/I4U9/F36FETHK/FLTI4U9F36FETHK.THUMB.jpghttp://img.instructables.com/files/deriv/FBA/60CK/F36FETHL/FBA60CKF36FETHL.THUMB.jpghttp://www.instructables.com/file/FBA60CKF36FETHL/ -
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a thermometer
various other tools and what not
okay, let's get down to business.
drill two holes in the stopper. one to fit the copper tubing, and one for the thermometer. i'm using a
digital cooking thermometer with a wire probe, but analog thermometers will work as well. drill the
holes just a bit smaller than the tube and thermometer probe to make sure you have a tight fit. you
don't want any leaks.
the stopper will fit in the spout of the kettle a la the photo. your tube should be out of the liquid to
capture the vapors and your thermometer probe should be immersed in the water, but NOT touching
the bottom or sides of the kettle. the kettle will get hotter than the liquid and skew your results. you
only want the temperature of the liquid.
the copper tube should be long enough to connect to the condenser (attach a coupler on the end).
ah, the condenser. on to thee!
Step 3The condenser
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the pot was easy. the condenser takes a bit of finagling. whatever the inside diameter of your
thermos is, you want to find something like a 20oz soda bottle or some suitable tube-like thing that is
a bit smaller and wrap your copper tubing around it to make a neat little spiral (careful, copper kinks
easily). tube benders are available. they are basically big springs that slide over the tube and allow
you to bend without kinking. filling the tube with salt, sugar, or even sand can work as well. i was
just really careful and bent slowly and it worked fine for me.
the bottom end of the spiral exits through a hole cut in the lower side of the thermos. the top will exit
a hole cut in your thermos lid (see pic). seal the area around the exiting tube at the bottom. seal it
well and let it dry completely before you use it. test it before you go full throttle, as well.
thread the top of the copper through the hole in the center of the lid (if it is a screw type, like mine,
you want to be able to unscrew the lid to fill and empty) and attach an appropriate coupler that
marries with the one coming from the pot. spend a little time in the plumbing department of your local
hardware store and i'm sure you'll find something that will work (look at the pictures). just do not use
anything that contains lead. very important!
anyway, let's learn how to use this thing.
Step 4Implementation
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fill your condenser with ice and water (a little salt wouldn't hurt either, lowers temperature - think ice
cream). attach the copper tube coming from the pot to the tube from the condenser with the
couplers. place something under the spout to catch your shine and go to town. it may be good to
have more than one receptacle. you will see why if you continue reading.
now we need some heat. back in the day people would use wood fires, gas stoves, basically
anything they could get their hands on. dangerous! play it safe. open flames are not good around a
still. alcohol vapors are flammable! as well, precise temperature control of your heat source is not
necessary. the solution will take care of that. electric heat is the best.
check the pic. i'm using an electric stove. works great. you can see how i have it set up and i hope it
all makes sense now. you load your wash into the kettle/pot, apply some heat, and condense the
results. how? i'll tell you if you'd just be patient. geez.
okay, pour your wash into the kettle. place the stopper into the spout. turn on the heat. watch the
thermometer. alcohol boils at a temperature lower than water. that's what makes distillation work.
exact temperature will vary depending on elevation and barometric pressure, but water boils at
around 212 F while ethanol boils at around 173 F. methanol, that can make you blind and is what
you really want to avoid, boils around 148 F. while running your wash, watch for plateaus (when the
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temperature stays the same for a while -- forms a plateau if you graph it) on your thermometer and
compare them to known boiling temperatures to ensure you get only what you want and leave the
rest. check out myinstructableto give you the basics of distillation.
basically if you begin to distill and the temperature reaches a certain point and remains there for any
length of time you have reached the boiling temperature for a particular liquid component of your
wash. check the temperature against the boiling point data you have researched and you can tell
what it is you are distilling at the time. using this information you can discard anything other than
ethanol. no matter what a solution contains, it will not boil at a temperature any higher than what the
level of the component with the lowest boiling temperature is until that component is boiled away.
check the comments or 'distilling basics' for a discussion or two on this.
as an example, if your solution contains methanol, ethanol and water it will happen like this: once the
temperature of your solution reaches around 148 F methanol will begin to boil and come out
through your tube as vapor into your condenser where it will convert back to liquid and exit into yourreceptacle. the temperature of your solution will not vary much beyond 148 F until the methanol is
gone and then will begin to climb again until it reaches 173 F, the boiling point of the ethanol. the
same thing will happen here. the temperature will hover around the same until the ethanol is boiled
off and then on to water.
in order to get ethanol and exclude the rest you get rid of what are called the 'heads' and 'tails.'
basically dump anything that boils lower than around 173 F and everything after the temperature
begins to climb again. this is why i mentioned having more than one receptacle. use one for the
heads, one for what you want, and one for the tails.
so once you've boiled off and then condensed your wash, you should be left with a solution
containing a much higher alcohol content than what you started with. you will still get a bit of water,
but that's okay. running the product through the still again will further extract ethanol and raise the
proof.
a bit of trivia: the Xes often seen on moonshine bottles in old cartoons, etc. represent the amount of
runnings, or how many times it was distilled.
i've achieved a blue flame from a wash after a first run with this set up. you may or may not need torun the wash more than once. anything over about 150 proof will burn. that's a pretty good result
from a single run.
i do not recommend doing anything i've talked about. it's not very legal (in the US), and it's not very
safe. i enjoy knowledge for the sake of knowledge, though, and just because i know how to do
something doesn't mean i will. so take this to heart, and take care.
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peace.