The History and Evolution of Distillation

Distillation’s History and Evolution Distillation is the chemical process of isolating components from a mixture by changing their phases (liquid to gas) and then altering their relative concentrations. Distillation processes can be applied to virtually all liquids, from water and petroleum to organic compounds like essential oils. Distillation has its origins in Mesopotamia where archaeological excavations revealed crude methods of distillation through terracotta objects found there. The alembic was likely invented around AD 200 – 300 by Egyptian alchemists Maria the Jewess or Zosimo of Panopolis to produce finer essences for perfumes and convert base metals to gold. The Greek term for an alembic was initially translated into Arabic as al-anbiq and then into English as alembic.

First bench stills were thick blown glass retorts coated with clay to moderate the heat of vaporization and prevent cracking or bleeding of glass. They were placed into a boiler of sand, ashes or water bath to maintain optimal conditions for distillation; eventually passing their contents through a condenser separated those with lower boiling points from those with higher ones – collected into fresh collection vessels after which repeated for the remaining fractions.

After the American Civil War, commercial distillation began to emerge at an industrial scale. Rail transportation of grain made distilling more cost-efficient; Aeneas Coffey even created his still in 1830 as an early version of a column still, which allowed distillers to reach higher proof levels more easily than with pot stills.

Prestige Turbo Yeast and Instant Yeast

Prestige Turbo Yeast and instant yeast

Prestige Turbo Yeast and instant yeast are premium quality products featuring high fermentation rates, easy use and no proofing requirements – ideal for hobby distillers looking to increase alcohol content quickly in less time. Being osmo tolerant they can also be added directly to sugar solutions without first needing to soak them as is sometimes necessary with other brands of Turbo yeast.

Rum Turbo Yeast was specifically crafted to suit pure molasses fermentation, offering an extremely low volatile production strain with special anti-volatile producing agents and an optimal mineral/nutrient/vitamin blend designed to quickly reach 18% abv in as few days. Extremely temperature tolerant, it works great in all types of stills from simple Amazing Stills all the way up to advanced fractional stills.

Whisky Yeast with AG is a commercial distillery yeast strain containing amyloglucosidase enzyme, which aids in breaking down longer-chain sugars to increase yield and improve yield. Osmophilic in nature, this yeast works great with low nutrient mash feedstocks. Perfect for amateur and professional distillers seeking to craft top-quality whisky without using essences!

To use this product optimally, combine 6.4 kg (14.1 lbs) of molasses in 25L of water until all sugar has dissolved, then top up to 25L with cold water. Stir for one minute after which add one packet of yeast before leaving it sit at 19-23 degrees C air temperature until fermentation occurs.