Moderators: Jenise, David M. Bueker, Robin Garr
Jenise wrote:Going to buy me some coffee filters!
Brian Gilp wrote:Done it many times. As Dale notes, I use unbleached just to be safe. Never tried a bleached one so no idea if there is a difference but why take the risk.
Steve Edmunds wrote:Did you say "Paper-Bridge?"
Jon Peterson wrote:Jenise wrote:Going to buy me some coffee filters!
Do you make coffee, Jenise? If so, how, French press?
Howie Hart wrote:FWIW - All my home made wines pass through a coffee filter before bottling. I have a filter that's designed to use specially made pads to clear the wine. However, they are expensive, so I cut coffee filters to fit the unit. Before filtering I circulate diataomceous earth (used in swimming pool filters) stirred into water to coat the coffee filters before filtering the wine. So, actually, it's the DE that traps the fine particles and not the coffee filter.
Carl Eppig wrote:We have relied on our decanter funnel in the past with good results. We use unbleached coffee filters for coffee, but my concern would be the residual coffee flavor in the plastic cone the filter goes into. We do wash it out every day, but there is still a coffee smell.
Carl Eppig wrote:We have relied on our decanter funnel in the past with good results. We use unbleached coffee filters for coffee, but my concern would be the residual coffee flavor in the plastic cone the filter goes into. We do wash it out every day, but there is still a coffee smell.
Jenise wrote: I'm just going to put the filter inside a stainless steel kitchen funnel.
Victorwine wrote:Hi Jenise if you think the “gravity” feed method through the coffee filter is to slow you could easily set up a “vacuum pump” set up it would go much quicker.
Salute
I was actually thinking of getting some polypropylene filter cloth and cut it to shape to use with the DE. Here is a link to the filter I use. It is a small filter press: http://www.buonvino.com/index2.html.Mark Lipton wrote:In that case, Howie, why not dispense with the filter paper altogether and use Celite™ (diatomaceous earth) in a fritted (sintered) glass funnel? We use this setup in lab routinely to filter reactions and it works a dream. Easy as pie to clean, too.
Mark Lipton
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