Retired Santa Teresa Pot Still with a "Thumper"and Condenser |
The alembic has three basic parts namely,
the retort pot, the onion head and swan neck and, the condenser and coil. The lower part of the still, which is the
retort pot, is responsible for firing or heating. The pot resembles a cauldron
with a flat bottom to stand still on a heating surface, normally an electric
stove or a hot plate. This is where the fermented wash is boiled until alcohol
is vaporized, ahead of other materials in the wash because of lower the boiling
point relative to water and other components of the wash. The vapor rises into the onion head. As the wash is heated, the steam naturally
rises and swirls around the onion
head that sits atop of the pot. The vapors slowly pass through the swan neck pipe sometimes called
the lyne arm. This is the delivery tube
that connects the still to the condenser.
Hybrid Stainless and Copper Pot Still at Hemingway Rum Co. |
Classic Pot Still With Huge Lyne Arms at DUSA |
The lyne arm angle, diameter and material all
have an effect in the final distillate. The angle determines how heavy or light
the flavor of the rum, while
the diameter controls the amount of vapor that can swirl through the pipe. The lyne arm is usually made of copper, which
helps speed up the
moving vapors. It also helps to eliminate
undesirable sulfides and other chemicals
produced during fermentation while it helps improve the flavor.
From the
lyne arm, the vapors move to the worm or the coil that sits inside the condenser with a top and a bottom fitting. You simply put
the water supply
hose into the condenser near
the bottom and use the top outlet to prevent
overflow. The water-filled condenser cools the alcohol vapors and turns it
back into liquid, which then drips off through the tail box of the
condenser.
Modern Pot Still at St. Lucia Distillery |
This is
the basics of a pot still, the oldest and most common type of still used by
craft distillers, home distillers and even the old moonshiners. There is a reason for this, the simplicity of
it and the flavor that it leaves in the final product. A lot of your favorite rums are at least in
part still being made with pot stilled distillate.
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