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Q&A for How to Make Vodka
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QuestionCan I use honey to make vodka?Tom Blake is a Bartending Expert and the creator of the Crafty Bartending website. He has over 10 years of experience in the industry as a professional bartender, bar manager, and traveling bartender. Throughout his career, he’s worked in all sorts of venues & positions, and notably traveled his way through Europe, the UK, South-East Asia and Australia, all while bartending. He is the author of “The Bartender’s Field Manual”, which covers a myriad of topics, including bartending as a profession, the composition of alcohol and spirits, and craft cocktail recipes.Yes, you can use honey! As long as it’s distilled to be ‘almost’ without distinct charateristics, it’s considered vodka.
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QuestionDo you have to use white sugar for making vodka?Tom Blake is a Bartending Expert and the creator of the Crafty Bartending website. He has over 10 years of experience in the industry as a professional bartender, bar manager, and traveling bartender. Throughout his career, he’s worked in all sorts of venues & positions, and notably traveled his way through Europe, the UK, South-East Asia and Australia, all while bartending. He is the author of “The Bartender’s Field Manual”, which covers a myriad of topics, including bartending as a profession, the composition of alcohol and spirits, and craft cocktail recipes.No. I think the article explains this quite well. You can make vodka out of any type of sugar.
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QuestionAre any alcohol drinks made without sugar?Community AnswerNo. The sugar is like food for the yeast, which makes the alcohol. But the finished product doesn't contain any sugar.
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QuestionCan I use champagne yeast?Community AnswerYes, you can use champagne yeast. It is actually ideal, as it ferments to a higher alcohol volume than most other yeast.
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QuestionHow do I make vodka without a still?Community AnswerFreeze the wash with a nylon mesh in the container. When the wash becomes "mushy," lift out the frozen ice crystals with the mesh, leaving behind the unfrozen alcohol. Note: carbon filtering is still required.
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QuestionCan I only use distiller's yeast for this? It is not sold in my area.David SiegfriedCommunity AnswerYou can use ale yeast, wine yeast, or even baker's yeast.
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QuestionWhat kind of yeast should I use?David SiegfriedCommunity AnswerYou can use ale yeast, wine yeast or even a packet of dried baking yeast found at the grocery store.
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QuestionCan I use citrus fruit to make vodka?David SiegfriedCommunity AnswerCitrus fruits are very acidic and don't make a good starting material for vodka. You want to use a neutral tasting raw material like grain or potatoes.
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QuestionHow do I store and age my vodka?Community AnswerI store mine in glass so there will be no chemical taste leeching from the container. I use old wine bottles.
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QuestionWhat is the purpose of using refined sugar in making vodka?Community AnswerIt replaces the sugar made from the broken down starch; therefore, replacing the mash.
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QuestionWhat if I can't get a carbon filter?Community AnswerUse a Brita filter pitcher, they work great and improve the flavor of store bought vodka as well.
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QuestionWill the water source quality make a difference in the quality of the final product?Community AnswerYes, I use cheap bottled water from the supermarket. I believe if you're going to make a good product, you must use good water.
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QuestionHow much alcohol can be extracted from how many kilograms of potatoes?Community AnswerTheoretically, 10kg of potatoes can produce about 2.5 liters of 40% vodka. Real world results will probably be somewhat lower than that.
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QuestionCan vodka be made from watermelon, bananas, or pineapples?Community AnswerTechnically, you can make vodka with watermelon or bananas (pineapples are too acidic). You would need a lot of yeast nutrient if you wanted to ferment watermelon or bananas though.
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QuestionWhat can be observed during the fermentation process of raw and cooked potatoes?David SiegfriedCommunity AnswerYou can't ferment raw potatoes. First you have to cook them and then you have to convert the starches in the potatoes to sugar using malt or enzymes. During fermentation, you will observe bubbles of CO2 gas rising from the liquid.
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QuestionHow do I re-distill my alcohol to make the vodka pure?Daniel CourtneyCommunity AnswerSimply clean your still of the remaining backwash (what's left over after you get the hearts out), pour the alcohol back into the still, and heat to 168°F. Hold this temperature for about 10 minutes, you may or may not get a few more milliliters of methanol, but after 10 minutes there definitely will not be any left. So after the 10 minutes raise the temperature up to 180°F and collect the ethanol. You should get cleaner, purer vodka. Your proof will be higher too, so have some distilled water handy to cut it back down to between 80 and 100 proof. You can repeat several times, but I probably would not distill more than 3 times. Filter in a charcoal filter (a Brita filter works great).
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QuestionWhat equipment and amount of ingredients are needed to make a medium sized bottle of vodka?David SiegfriedCommunity AnswerYou need a kettle, a container to ferment in, and other basic kitchen utensils. The amount of ingredients depends on your choice of raw materials. If using grains, about 2 kg will probably be enough to make a liter of vodka. Figure about 1 kg of sugar.
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QuestionI tried potato. After fermentation it tasted very sour. I haven't distilled it yet. Is it rotten?Community AnswerIt probably isn't. Freshly fermented mash is supposed to be sour.
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QuestionHow do I create a flavor for my vodka brand?Community AnswerAfter the above process is complete, including filtration, you could cut up a few berries of your choice. Let the berries infuse with the vodka for a few days. Then, filter out the berries and drink or serve.
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QuestionI need to know how much sugar content is in regular vodka, because I am diabetic.Daniel CourtneyCommunity AnswerNone, unless you add it to the finished product yourself. Yeast eats the sugar and produces alcohol, which is mixed in with the water and remaining sugars in the wash once the yeast dies off (fermenting stops after 7 to 10 days if you did it right).
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QuestionWhat process do I use to redistill the first run? Is it mixed with anything and put back in the still?Community AnswerDo not distill higher than 45% (90 proof), as it is extremely flammable! Use distilled water to bring down the ABC and increase the the amount in your still to a comfortable level.
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QuestionHow much yeast should I use in a 5 gallon mixture?Community AnswerNormally yeast will come in a small sachet, and a single sachet should be enough.
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QuestionCan I redistill existing vodka to give it a higher alcohol content?Community AnswerSure, but it's an expensive way of getting a high ABV. You're better off with some dextrose, water and yeast, which is all very cheap.
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QuestionCan I drink fermented potato juice?Community AnswerYes. There are actually quite a few surprising health benefits. Go ahead and search for them if you'd like to know more, but it is perfectly safe for you to drink it, as long as you don't drink gallons at a time.
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QuestionIs it necessary to throw out the first 5 percent of the second and third distillations?Community AnswerNo, I don't think it's necessary. It might help produce a purer final product though.
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QuestionIn Part 5 Step 7, Double or Triple Distillation, do I pour the distilled spirits back into the mash and run it again or collect several distilled spirits and run them separately?Community AnswerPouring it back in would result in simply repeating the same process, so you should run them separately, remembering to deal with the heads and tails nastiness correctly. Good temperature control will help.
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QuestionWhy does my vodka taste sour?Community AnswerYou may have run it too fast or too hot, causing water vapor and other contaminates to enter the worm. This can be corrected by redistilling at a lower temperature. You may also need to run it through a carbon filter.
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QuestionHow much vodka will I wind up with at the end of the process?David SiegfriedCommunity AnswerThat depends on how much raw material you start with. Theoretically, 20 lbs of potatoes would yield about 1.5 quarts of 80 proof vodka. Real world results are going to be lower, however. After taking cuts and removing the heads and tails, one quart of vodka would be about what you could expect.
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QuestionThere is a smell in the vodka after it's made. How can I get rid of this smell?David SiegfriedCommunity AnswerCareful re-distillation and filtering through charcoal should get rid of the odor.
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QuestionDon't airlocks solve the problem of the fermentation apparatus building up pressure and exploding?Community AnswerYes, they also keep out wild yeast and other contaminates.
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