Controlling Gin Flavor
Controlling Gin Flavor
Controlling Gin Flavor
7 8.
Nomenclature
A = surface area of wire, sq. om. (in Table 111, average of
initial and final values)
Crcapent,
M = concn. of reagent, gram moles/liter (unlessotherwise
noted)
c = specific heat, cal./gram, C.
D = diffusivity of reagent, sq. cm./sec.
C = rate of mass flow, grams/sq. cm. sec.
h = heat transfer coefficient, cal./sq. cm. sec. ' C.
j = Chilton-Colburn heat and mass transfer factors, dimensionless
k = dissolution rate coefficient, cm./sec.
K = thermal conductivity, cal./cm. sec. C.
O
final values)
1$~~&f'c.
Literature Cited
Bates, IND. ENQ.CHEM.,28, 494 (1936).
Brunner, 2.physik. Chem., 47, 56 (1904).
Cathcart, W. H., Thesis, New York University, 1936.
Chilton and Colburn, IND.ENQ.CHEM.,26, 1183 (1934).
Colburn, Ibid., 22, 967 (1930).
(6) Colburn, Trans. Am. I n s t . Chem. Engrs., 29, 174 (19331.
(7) Fage and Townend, Proc. Bop. ASOC.(London), A135, 656 ( 1,932).
(8) King, J. A m . Chem. S O C . . 828
' ~ ~(1935).
,
(9) King and Cathoart, Ibid., 58, 1639 (1936).
(10) King and Weidenhammer, Ibid., 58, 602 (1936).
(11) Langmuir, Phys. Reo., 34, 401 (1912).
(12) Nernst, 2. physik. Chem., 47, 52 (1904).
(13) Prandtl, Physik. Z.,11, 1072 (1910).
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(6)
RH~CH~IVED
November 12, 1935.
MECHANICAL
CONTROLLINQ
AND RECORDING
EQUIPMENT
ON A GIN STILL
H. F. WILLKIE, C. S. BORUFF,
AND
DARRELL ALTHAUSEN
Hiram Walker and Sons, Inc., Peoria, Ill.
'
JANUARY,1937
80
7-8
30-40
BDDISG
BOTANICALS
TO A
79
GIK STILL
80
The tools for use in the liquor industry are sadly lacking for
any specific determination for these impurities; consequently,
the indices developed for identifying pure spirits are still
somewhat relative. It is largely a matter of good taste
rather than intelligence that permits the discrimination between these various spirits. However, when the specifi-
A
12
f0
2 s
je
%t
2
0
0
FIGURE
1. Loss
IN
12
18
24
ACE IN MONTHS
30
36
42
48
VOLATILEOIL OF JUNIPER
BERRIEIS
(ITALIAN)
WITH AQE BY CLEVENGER
METHOD(STEAMDISTILLATION)
Juniper Berries
The following specifications for juniper berries have been
developed and found satisfactory by the writers for preparing a uniform high-grade potable gin:
1. Ri e berries of the Juniperus communis from the Chianti
region o? the Apennine Mountains of immediate harvest past;
maximum age, one year.
2. Not more than a total of 4 per cent unripe stock, oxycedrus
berries, damaged goods, dead berries, and other adulterants shall
be present.
. 3. The moisture content shall not be less than 7 per cent by
weight as evaluated by the Dean-tube method at 20 C. on a
sample previous1 dried in a desiccator for 16 hours over 66 BB.
sulfuric acid. d e total moisture as determined by the loss in
the desiccator and the Dean tube shall not exceed 14 per cent.
4. The acid number shalI be 13 to 17 when determined on
the fruit as calculated on a 7 per cent moisture basis and no
more than 3 when determined on the volatile oil steam distilled
therefrom.
5. The per cent volatile oil shall not be more than 1.6 or
less than 0.9 when determined by the Hiram Walker method.
6. The per cent volatile oil shall be 0.9 to 1.2 when determined
by the Clevenger method.
JANUARY, 1937
c.
20"/20"
10. Refractive index of the oil at 20' C. shall be 1.4840 to
1.4870.
11. One part of oil shall be completely soluble in 5 parts or
less of 90 per cent alcohol.
12. The unpurified natural oil is to possess "juniperol"
- bouquet, not a terebinthinate or turpentine odor. '
13. A distillate of an alcoholic infusion of the juniper berries
shall possess a type of flavor which checks with standards held
Specificationa
-Analysis of Commercial AlcoholSource
Grain
Molasses Ethylene Wine
Proof at6Oo F. (15.6O c.) 1 9 i l i 9 2 192.0
190.0
190.5
183,5
Bouquet
Neutral Neutral Neutral Objection- Fruity
able
KMnO4 time, min.
60 or
65
60
40
20
greater
Grams per 100 Liters at 100 Proof
<2.0
1.2
1.5
2.0
5.7
Aldehyde as AcH
3.7
2.6
3.2
45.0
Esters as Et acetate
<7.0
0.6
0.9
1.4
0.9
Acids as acetic
<1.2
(7.0
6.0
9.0
4.7
18.6
Fusel oil a8 amyl aIcohol
0.6
1.0
<0.7
0.5
0.8
Extract
TABLE11. STANDARD
TYPEO F GIN
81
a t 110" C., acid number of the fruit, per cent oil, nonvolatile
fraction in the oil a t 110" C., Dean-tube moisture, gravity,
and refractive index of the oil were measured, and a pilot
still distillation was made of each type of berry. Polarimetric
measurements were not made because of the large quantity
of oil required for this study and the limited amount of
samples available. The junipers studied included the following:
Variety of Juniper5
Locality of Origin
Tyrolean
Assling Valley at 1300 meters
Yugoslavian No. 4
Region of Maribor
Region of Maribor
Yugoslavian No. 5
Italian
Tuscany
Czechoslovakian
Carpathian Mountains
All berries of October, 1934, halvest.
Adulterants
These studies have shown that such specifications are
necessary because of the flagrant adulteration so prevalent
in botanicals shipped into the United States and subsequently
dispensed to the commercial trade. Juniper may be found
on the market today with as high as 40 per cent of unripe
fruit, oxycedrus, or other contaminants that are harmful to
good flavors.
Another reason for care in eliminating the unripe or adulterating berries is shown by the effect of various quantities
of these materials on certain physical constants:
25%
Adulteration
FORMULA"
TABLEIII. FLAVOR-CONTROLLED
GIN FORMULA"
(In pounds per charge of 3000 wine gallons at 100 proaf)
A
B
C
Volatile Calcd.
Lb. ?f
Volatile
Oil in
Lb. o!
Oil In Botani- Ingredient
Code
Date of Standard
cal,
per
No.
Ingredient"
Type
Source Purchase Charge
%
Charge
520
Juniper berries
Italian
W-1
5/4/36
1.0
1.2
83 3
K-1
6/10/36
Coriander seed
Moroccan
0.5
1.0
521
50.0
K-1
7/1/36
Cinnamon bark Ceylon
1.5
10.0
522
0.15
C-3
8/15/35
1.0
15.0
Angelica root
Saxonian
0.15
523
C-3
6/16/36
Lemon peel
Sicilian
0.001
0.2
0.5
524
Mysore
C-3
7/7/36
2.0
1.0
0.02
525
Cardamom
5 This formula is used purely for illustrative purpose and does not represent a true potable
gin production formula.
Austrian berries:
Per cent oil
Refractive index
Acid No.
Italian berries, acid No.
1.80
1.4817
21.27
38%
Adulteration
19.26
4%
Adulteration
1.20
1.4780
16.65
4%
Adulteration
13.89
Moisture Content
Obviously, unless the distiller is to consider
water as a variable in his scheme of assay, he
must select berries of the same range of moisture
82
I?
DISTILLATIONCORlUOllER
G-
A l e f o o w ComPnfsro@
FIQTJRE
2. CONTROLLED
CONDENSATION
GIN EQUIPMENT
6 mo.
Type
Tyrolean
Czeohoslovakian
Italian
Yugoslavian No. 4
Yugoslavian No. 6
Original Total
Moisture, %
12.98
15.14
15.11
17.61
14.00
Loss in Total
Weight, %
29.4
21.9
20.0
32.7
19.5
JANUARY. 1937
Acid Number
Naturally when the distiller seeks a beverage that is mild
and bland in taste he wishes to eliminate those tones responsible for the rasping top notes in bouquet and the astringent character. This is best done by selection of berries or
herbs low in terpenic constituents and low in acid number.
A low acid number is not always the entire story. Along the
forty-third and forty-fourth parallels of latitude in Yugoslavia and Italy grow very good junipers of the communis
variety. Northward near the forty-sixth parallel to the
Assling Valley, Tyrolean berries are found. Still farther
north, the German and far to the west in the tradition-infested Carpathian Mountains, the Roumanian, Polish, and
Czechoslovakian berries are found. The Tyrolean berries
are easily differentiated from these others because of their
high acid number:
Type
Age
6-18 mo.
6-18 mo.
6-18 mo.
6-18 mo.
Tyrolean
Czechoslovakian
Italian
Yugoslavian Nos. 4 and 5
German
-4merican
ZS??
R u a s i an
1-3 yr.
Calculated to 7.0% moisture basis.
--Acid
NumberaMinimum Maximum
17.6
19.0
14.8
16.3
14.9
16.7
13.5
15.8
10.0
13.0
6.0
8.0
2.0
4.0
Av.
18.3
15.5
15.8
14.7
..
..
..
Volatile Oil
From oil analyses (Clevenger method, 6) on old and new
stocks of berries held in warehouses and the reported data
on the distillation of fresh berries in Europe, an aging curve
has been constructed. This is shown as a "best straight
line" in Figure 1. This stock had an initial average total
83
Maxima
2.45
1.58
1.83
1.58
1.75
Variation
1.28
0.62
0.28
0.40
0.71
Origin
American
Italian
Yugoslavian
French
Swedish and Finnish
Russian
German (Thuringian)
Polish
German (West Prussian)
1: 2i' ' 1
1.1-1.0
0.6-0.9 (6)
0.5 (6)
4.0-5.0 6)
0.8-0.9 6)
0.6-0.9 6)
0 . 6 (6)
......
......
1.0-1.9
1.3-1.0
1.6-1.2
......
Studies indicate that unripe berries give high oil percentages. American juniper from the Rocky Mountains contains as much as 3 to 4 per cent oil, but it is quite turpentinelike in character. Thus, by assay limits on oil analysis, we
may exclude many undesirable types of berries as well as
old ones.
The foregoing studies, in addition to the fact that the
writers prefer Italian or Yugoslavian berries, led to the
specifications for volatile oils.
Refractive Index
The refractive index of authentic samples of juniper oil are
as follows:
Source of Berries
Tyrolean
Czeohoslovakian
Italian
Yugoslavian No. 4
Yugoslavian No. 5
......
......
......
......
......
84
Solubility in Alcohol
Even though alcoholic solubility aids in differentiating old
and new stocks and in differentiating one type from another
(9, IS), more emphasis is placed upon alcoholic distillation
for the selection of the desired berries.
Bouquet
To date, the writers have not felt it practical to make the
isolation or determination of the percentage of any particular
terpenic derivative found in juniper oil (such as alpha-pinene,
camphene, borneol, isoborneol, 4-terpineol, or cadinene)
the reason for discarding certain junipers, but they are well
aware of the possibilities and are conducting studies on the
subject. Oil from Juniperus phoenicia L., one of the common
species used to adulterate the communis, contains about 90
per cent terpenes, of which the bulk is alpha-pinene (IO).
The boiling point of alpha-pinene is 156.2 O C. The fractional
distillations reported on genuine Juniperus communis (13)
yield only 1 to 2 per cent of the total distillate boiling below
156 C.
To eliminate all possibility of chance, an individual alcohol
distillate of the juniper berries should be made in a laboratory
pilot still. This should be followed by preparing a complete
flavor-controlled gin in the same still. Seldom do constants
on the raw stocks fail to eliminate undesirable botanicals.
The bouquet of the pilot-still distillates should check with
standards that the distiller has collected and preserved in
his files.
The physical constants of oils may be adjusted by adding
adulterants, but it is very difficult to adjust several constants
of the berries.
Numerical analytical values are also important in case a
shipment is rejected, since it becomes possible to offer evidence
other than organoleptic properties, as to the authenticity
of the crude drugs.
Controlled Condensation
To obviate cutting heads (removal of low boilers) and to
secure a continuously identical series of gin distillations, the
writers have installed mechanical devices on the gin still to
control the temperature of the vapors in the condenser and
thus permit the venting to waste from the still of all lowboiling aldehydes and terpenic products derived from the
alcohol and botanicals. This method gives the advantage
of controlled temperature of condensation. In this operation also, the oils interact with the alcohol and with themselves to produce desirable flavors not secured by cold compounding or, in other words, in compounded gins. Likewise, automatic control of the quantity of reflux and rate
of distillation adds smoothness and uniformity to the final
product, This makes it possible to establish, through automatic steam controllers, the exact optimum time and rate
of distillation. Figure 2 shows the general scheme of these
two automatic controls.
Acknowledgment
The authors are glad to acknowledge the assistance of
Ernest Guenther, chief research chemist of Fritzsche Brothers,
in securing legitimate specimens of the botanicals for these
investigations; also the assistance of Paul J. Kolachov
of the Hiram Walker research staff, who collected many of
the analytical data on the authentic samples; and of C. H.
Rodgers, chief operating engineer for Hiram Walker & Sons,
Inc., for the technic of controlling the rate of distillation
and temperature of condensation.
Literature Cited
Allen, Commercial Organic Analysis, 5th ed., Vol. I, p. 135,
Philadelphia, P. Blakistons Son & Go., 1925.
Assoc. Official Agr. Chem., Official and Tentative Methods of
Analysis, 3rd ed., Washington, D. C . , 1930.
Baird, Midas Criterion, 36, 8 4 (1933).
Barlow, 0. W., and Collaborators, S.Pharrnacol., 56, 117 (1936).
Clevenger, J. F., J . Am. Pharm. Assoc., 17,345-9 (1928).
Debue, K. I., Agr. Technology (Russian), Vol. 11, p. 226
(1927).