- Joined
- 27 Jan 2008
- Messages
- 24,903
- Reaction score
- 2,877
- Location
- Llanfair Caereinion, Nr Welshpool
- Country
At last completed. Started 3rd July today 7th August so not that far over the 3 weeks stated on the instructions. And I tend always to leave it a little longer than required. The results are good I can't dispute that.
As with all the high Alcohol it does have quite a few stages, basic idea is make the alcohol, remove any flavour then add the flavour required. It was an out of date kit I considered the supplied yeast was likely past it, it did not froth up like most yeasts when added to water, so added a little yeast from a Prohibition kit, not really sure which in the end did the work.
The Package E (finings) did not seem to devolve at all, but it did the job, and one of the two Packages F (glucose) was solid had to break up with a hammer, how much of this was due to being out of date I don't know.
Slightly lower quantity than the Prohibition kits, so would fit into all of my demijohns, the Prohibition kits need 4.7 litre and some demijohns are not that big.
It claims 40° proof alcohol so between 20% and 23% ABV depending which "proof" they use. However no real way to measure as sugar added in stages. It requires some converting for Canadian measures to UK so there is some latitude as to the exact quantities added. So can't be sure exactly what the final ABV is.
However taste wise it is really good and seems well worth the effort. The kit cost £10 it was sold cheap because out of date, I would say nothing between this kit and the Prohibition kits. End results about the same.
I have done four high alcohol kits now, three were in the Prohibition kit range, two Orange, a Coffee and a Peach Schnapps. I did a wine kit and felt that the work involved was not worth it, the wine was good, but so is fortified wine from Lidi and £3 a bottle ready made compared with around £14 for 6 bottles with a a kit just did not seem worth the effort.
However the high alcohol kits at around 20% ABV are similar to buying Cointreau, Tia Maria, or Archers which are a lot more expensive, and the kits are around the same price for wine and the high alcohol so the high alcohol kits are well worth while.
I tried making high alcohol from scratch using some of the yeast from a Prohibition kit and reusing the charcoal, I added instant coffee at the end, to me it was a failure the instant coffee did not give the Tia Maria taste. However my local brew shop tells me he sells the flavours. In fact he sells all you need for a high alcohol brew.
A fermentor will hold around 6 demijohns so considering doing a whole fermentor of high alcohol and splitting it into 6 demijohns and adding a different flavour to each demijohn. However not sure what I would do with it all, it would last years the way I drink.
As with all the high Alcohol it does have quite a few stages, basic idea is make the alcohol, remove any flavour then add the flavour required. It was an out of date kit I considered the supplied yeast was likely past it, it did not froth up like most yeasts when added to water, so added a little yeast from a Prohibition kit, not really sure which in the end did the work.
The Package E (finings) did not seem to devolve at all, but it did the job, and one of the two Packages F (glucose) was solid had to break up with a hammer, how much of this was due to being out of date I don't know.
Slightly lower quantity than the Prohibition kits, so would fit into all of my demijohns, the Prohibition kits need 4.7 litre and some demijohns are not that big.
It claims 40° proof alcohol so between 20% and 23% ABV depending which "proof" they use. However no real way to measure as sugar added in stages. It requires some converting for Canadian measures to UK so there is some latitude as to the exact quantities added. So can't be sure exactly what the final ABV is.
However taste wise it is really good and seems well worth the effort. The kit cost £10 it was sold cheap because out of date, I would say nothing between this kit and the Prohibition kits. End results about the same.
I have done four high alcohol kits now, three were in the Prohibition kit range, two Orange, a Coffee and a Peach Schnapps. I did a wine kit and felt that the work involved was not worth it, the wine was good, but so is fortified wine from Lidi and £3 a bottle ready made compared with around £14 for 6 bottles with a a kit just did not seem worth the effort.
However the high alcohol kits at around 20% ABV are similar to buying Cointreau, Tia Maria, or Archers which are a lot more expensive, and the kits are around the same price for wine and the high alcohol so the high alcohol kits are well worth while.
I tried making high alcohol from scratch using some of the yeast from a Prohibition kit and reusing the charcoal, I added instant coffee at the end, to me it was a failure the instant coffee did not give the Tia Maria taste. However my local brew shop tells me he sells the flavours. In fact he sells all you need for a high alcohol brew.
A fermentor will hold around 6 demijohns so considering doing a whole fermentor of high alcohol and splitting it into 6 demijohns and adding a different flavour to each demijohn. However not sure what I would do with it all, it would last years the way I drink.