(This post was last modified: 01-18-2021, 04:48 PM by DanLaw.)
Pepper has huge impact on both feel and scent from my perspective (realizing you specifically asked Andrew).
While certainly no aficionado, would describe the impacts as:
Scent has sharp opening edge akin to the carbonation impact on sparkling wine vis-a-vis the equivalently blended noncarbonated wine in that it almost atomizes the underlying scents blended and exaggerates them with a subtle top twist.
Skin feel presents as a little bite anywhere sensative skin exposed otherwise has almost a subtle menthol feel on normal skin
While certainly no aficionado, would describe the impacts as:
Scent has sharp opening edge akin to the carbonation impact on sparkling wine vis-a-vis the equivalently blended noncarbonated wine in that it almost atomizes the underlying scents blended and exaggerates them with a subtle top twist.
Skin feel presents as a little bite anywhere sensative skin exposed otherwise has almost a subtle menthol feel on normal skin
(01-18-2021, 04:40 PM)DanLaw Wrote: Pepper has huge impact on both feel and scent from my perspective (realizing you specifically asked Andrew).
While certainly no aficionado, would describe the impacts as:
Scent has sharp opening edge akin to the carbonation impact on sparkling wine vis-a-vis the equivalently blended noncarbonated wine in that it almost atomizes the underlying scents blended and exaggerates them with a subtle top twist.
Skin feel presents as a little bite anywhere sensative skin exposed otherwise has almost a subtle menthol feel on normal skin
Thanks Dan, I appreciate the information however I get it. That's pretty cool and warrants experimentation.
I'd tend to agree with what DanLaw wrote, though that's why I went light with only 1tsp of the peppercorns.
neat thing to note: so far, the 2nd recipe is darker in color than the 1st, even though it was blended together 3 days later than the 1st batch. I'll take some more comparison photos once each jar hits 14 days of 'aging'....that'd be 1/20 for the 1st batch and 1/23 for the 2nd.
neat thing to note: so far, the 2nd recipe is darker in color than the 1st, even though it was blended together 3 days later than the 1st batch. I'll take some more comparison photos once each jar hits 14 days of 'aging'....that'd be 1/20 for the 1st batch and 1/23 for the 2nd.
Tu ne cede malis, sed contra audentior ito.
(This post was last modified: 01-19-2021, 09:56 PM by Marko.)
I’m going to get some ingredients this week. I need alcohol and a few other items. I’ve got bay EO. I have some juniper EO and some lime EO on hand from another planned project that I’d stalled. I think some lime might go well but on the fence on the juniper
On B&B there is a concocted "cocktail" that many swear by as the best bay rum extant:
Bootlegger's Bay Rum
1/3 Pinaud Clubman Virgin Island Bay Rum
1/3 Master Bay Rum
1/3 Superior 70 Bay Rum
I have never smelled it as I am not a real aficionado of Bay Rum, but here's the link:
https://www.badgerandblade.com/forum/thr...um.316714/
Bootlegger's Bay Rum
1/3 Pinaud Clubman Virgin Island Bay Rum
1/3 Master Bay Rum
1/3 Superior 70 Bay Rum
I have never smelled it as I am not a real aficionado of Bay Rum, but here's the link:
https://www.badgerandblade.com/forum/thr...um.316714/
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