• Members of the previous forum can retrieve their temporary password here, (login and check your PM).

vinegar not needed durring boiling acacia bark...

Migrated topic.

starway6

Rising Star
Joined
Jul 10, 2012
Messages
1,523
Merits
72
Ive been using thick lights [acid boiling method] combined with [heating and shaking soup] in several hot water baths from another method.. ..[minus vinegar and the freeze and thaw part].. aut i just did a bark boil [using only water].. turbo blender.. and a little salt and I pulled almost two thirds of the alcaloids on the first napatha pull...

I got very very milky napatha.. .. very quickly!.. producing almost two thirds od total product from ...
[100 grams] of finely pulverized acacia bark on first napatha pull..

Not shure how much acidity ..[non iodide table salt].. in water can produce?
But it released the goodies fast without any vinegar thought i might share this...
 
starway6 said:
Ive been using thick lights [acid boiling method] combined with [heating and shaking soup] in several hot water baths from another method.. ..[minus vinegar and the freeze and thaw part].. aut i just did a bark boil [using only water].. turbo blender.. and a little salt and I pulled almost two thirds of the alcaloids on the first napatha pull...

I got very very milky napatha.. .. very quickly!.. producing almost two thirds od total product from ...
[100 grams] of finely pulverized acacia bark on first napatha pull..

Not shure how much acidity ..[non iodide table salt].. in water can produce?
But it released the goodies fast without any vinegar thought i might share this...
Do you test the water's pH before and after adding sodium chloride?
 
[/quote]
Do you test the water's pH before and after adding sodium chloride? [/quote]

Nope...

I used filtered drinking water...

I never test PH...maybe i should?
 
It was said in jest. Table salt changes salinity, not pH.
I'm not sure I understand your process..
You didn't use any acidification or basification, simply boiled acacia in saltwater and added naphtha?
 
That's interesting starway. A few ???s, of course:

Have you extracted off the same batch of bark, if so does this reflect similar yield?

How long, how many boils? I'm familiar with EWs tek- 3/45 minute boils, yeah?

Maybe some experiments are in order.
 
the bark itself will usually bring the ph down a little as it is mildly acidic.. often my brews have been brought to a little above 5 before adding any vinegar.. acids not a neccessity but I'd say reduce time needed to boil.. i never add more than a lid full of vinegar anyways
 
null24 said:
That's interesting starway. A few ???s, of course:

Have you extracted off the same batch of bark, if so does this reflect similar yield?

How long, how many boils? I'm familiar with EWs tek- 3/45 minute boils, yeah?

Maybe some experiments are in order.


First off ..I used only 100grams ofaccia bark expecting no more than a little over one gram of product...
i ground the bark fairly fine.. then i tryed just adding a little salt and boiled the ground bark in filtered drinking water then i used a two speed kitchen ..[turbo blender].. in the pot of boiling bark.. [as it was boiling]..several times which further pulverized the bark to a much finer texture..

I think its simply the heat and water and the fine choping action of high speed blender thats superior to just stirring the mixture with spoon...the salt may have had a minor acid effect?

I wasnt shure it would work without freez thawing and using a light acid.. but it worked fine for me..

I noticed the diference by comparing the..[ water and salt extraction] and the water salt and vinegar extraction] i had in two equal containers..

The first bottle [using water and salt] almost all the goddies were removed from the bark i could see a darker thicker color in it..

I then re boiled the bark for the second bottle using [vinegar water plus salt].. and it came out lighter in color and after basifying and removing the napatha it produced only about one third of the total crystals compaired to the water and salt only boiled bark..

Simply put.. only boiling about 90 minutes ..the first boiling using ...water and a little salt.. took most the goodies all out of the bark compaired to the second acid boil this process removed most of it quickly without using the stinky vinegar..

Heat and superior agitation works fine without freeze thawing and using acids..

I just figured that the natives in south america boil out the goodies using water bark leaves and stirr it for hours in their ceramonies and it works fine..
 
LibertyforAll said:
It was said in jest. Table salt changes salinity, not pH.
I'm not sure I understand your process..
You didn't use any acidification or basification, simply boiled acacia in saltwater and added naphtha?


I did use basify using lye and salt then let my napatha solvent seperate sorry if i didnt put this fact in...
 
I forgot to add...

I used about three times more napatha than most tecks say to use...

The larger amount of solvent may have made it posible after seperation..to pick up more product on each pull...
 
starway6 said:
LibertyforAll said:
It was said in jest. Table salt changes salinity, not pH.
I'm not sure I understand your process..
You didn't use any acidification or basification, simply boiled acacia in saltwater and added naphtha?


I did use basify using lye and salt then let my napatha solvent seperate sorry if i didnt put this fact in...
Ahh that's very important lol that's why I was confused. As for that no salt won't change the pH, if I remember correctly salt was used to help bind the fats and oils into the bark soup.
 
Back
Top Bottom