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Snuff mix squeezed out. The idea of placing a small amount of the mix (half a teaspoon) in the centre of a piece cloth and gathering this up to make a leak-proof bag for the garlic-crusher is a good one. Worked well and I now have 8 fairly dry briquettes (waste).

Nice work.

How pale are the remnants and how dark the oil ?
 
I guess super fine particulates or something is crystalizing out. Or a suspension of alkaloid liquid droplets, fat or water even. Nothing to worry about I think. But worth noting.

Hopefully the acidic extraction goes well.

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btw : after shake, let it separate a bit - say 5 mins. See how much color is transferred and repeat 2 or 3 times or until the colors no longer change.

What i found is that most colored stuff transfers to the acidic water but a little yellow color remains in the oil, yet the original green tint of the oil can be made out. The acidic water layer should become much darker than the oil - at least that was my experience (5 shake ups over 1/2 hour).

If after several shakes the color has not mostly transferred, it could be because the acid is too weak.
 
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I think one could make some ph indicator paper like this:

Get some fresh red cabbage or beetroot (not the stuff in vinegar). Cut through and press the cut edge onto some paper. Let the paper dry.

One could then use a toothpic to put a drop of liquid on the paper.

Violet / purple to red indicates acidic. Blue to green indicates alkaline (basic).

pH.png


Note that these colors are colors of the indicator (anthocyanins in the vegetable juice). The colors of a liquid itself are not necessarily indicative of pH.

A pH of 7 is neutral - neither acidic nor alkaline.

Low numbers are acidic. Higher numbers are alkaline.
 
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Well the water is looking to be a deep orange (when back-lit), and the silt seems to be staying up in the oil layer. This is good, yes? BTW, the water added is about a quarter that of the oil.

Sounds great. I do the back lighting too, with the base of a lava lamp.

How about the ratio of colors now? Is the oil still quite dark ?
 
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