Nuphile said:
herbgirl said:
next time, try an old clean tee shirt wetted with plain glycerin to strain. it's less messy, won't break as easily and you won't lose your tincture to the cloth.
Hmmm...I'm having issues figuring this one out. At first, I thought it sounded good; but now I don't get it.
If you wet the t-shirt with plain glycerin, won't the plain glycerin just make its way into the tincture? Maybe I'm being a little too analytical here, I just like to understand processes to the fullest.
Thanks herbgirl for all your knowledge dropping!
My pleasure Nuphile,
i am an 'understanding the process' type person too in case you didn't notice
so the answer to your question is yes, the plain glycerin will make it into the tincture, but the amount is negligible - drops perhaps. exact strength is a tricky proposal in a home setting, with varied botanicals, but i feel that the amount is so small it will not make a difference.
I should have been more clear as to my instructions. You need to wet the cloth with your plain glycerin and wring it out to damp before using as a strainer. basically, this allows for the cloth to be wet with the plain glycerin so that the cotton fibers don't suck up as much of the actual tincture and make it impossible to retrieve, instead the fibers are full of plain glycerin. You'd be surprised how much solvent a dry filter will grab.
Your filter will still retain some of the tincture no matter what you do, just as the marc (plant material) will do - more so without a fancy squeezer thingie so anything you can do to cut that amount down will be helpful. keeping the filter material as small as reasonably possible will also help with this solvent retention - there simply isn't more fabric for it to saturate.
clear as mud eh?
I'm sure we all agree that this stuff is too precious to waste any!