Try this one http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/forum/diy-e-liquid/239733-coffee-flavor.html.
This might help as well.
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Try this one http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/forum/diy-e-liquid/239733-coffee-flavor.html.
This might help as well.
The cocoa is extremely good as an extract(I dipped my finger in), not overly strong, so I really had my doubts how it would taste when mixed. It's not as strong as I'd like. Also, I had to go to 20% to get an adequate amount of flavor. It is much lighter in color. It doesn't taste bad; it's just not that "in your face" kind of flavor. This also may change when it steeps, I dunno.
Yes, I would steep it. I still have 15ml of the coffee extract, when I first posted the recipe. I just tasted it right out of the bottle, and it tastes like Cuban Buche x 1000...I don't even taste the pg..Strong stuff...Let me say up front, I am a lousy dripper. I couldn't seem to get a good taste dripping, so I sacrificed a carto to test it. My base is 50%pg/50%vg.
Well, the cinnamon extract is very dark. I had to go up to 20% to suit my taste for a nice full bodied bakery cinnamon taste. Even mixed, it's a darkish liquid. I am going to strain it again through a clean coffee filter to be sure there are no particulates in the extract. It is absolutely yummy, just like this. I'd truly give it 5 stars. I don't know if it'll be a "clogger" or not, but it will be a very nice stand alone flavor, and definitely a wonderful complimentary bakery flavor. It may get stronger after steeping, I dunno.
The cocoa is extremely good as an extract(I dipped my finger in), not overly strong, so I really had my doubts how it would taste when mixed. It's not as strong as I'd like. Also, I had to go to 20% to get an adequate amount of flavor. It is much lighter in color. It doesn't taste bad; it's just not that "in your face" kind of flavor. This also may change when it steeps, I dunno.
Also, I added no other flavoring or sweetner to either one. Anyone else trying this?
I did both about a month ago but used a cin stick for the cinnamon. I also filtered both through several layers of paper towels for the strain (took awhile but NO particles, dark but clear). Also, I let my coffee, tea, cocoa and cinnamon steep for a couple of days in the pg before straining (in a sunny window). You get a much stronger extract that way![]()
Please keep us posted on this!
But I am curious, isn't the cocoa extraction the least bitter?
Every cocoa powder I've ever used (for baking or for real hot chocolate) absolutely *needs* some sugar to be palatable, at least to me. For drinking chocolate (with 1-3% milk) I need at least 1/4 teaspoon of sugar for every tsp of cocoa, and that is really more medicine than a treat. Typical mixes are usually something like 2:1 sugar/cocoa, I rather like 1:1 or just a tad more cocoa, but these are ratios developed when I wanted to maximize the cocoa. The 0.25:1 ratio was the absolute limits of what my tastebuds could deal with (in milk, in water this would probably have been quite impossibly bitter).
Or does the PG/VG (forgot which you used, sorry) supply enough sweetness to balance the bitterness?
(This is very interesting to me, because I only have one chocolate flavouring (supposed to be some kind of milk chocolate I think) and I tried mixing it with mint and it was epic fail. Sickly sweet, bland, just horrible. I also happen to have far more cocoa powder than I will ever use for baking or cups of weirdly strong hot cocoa.)
I started a cinnamon and a cocoa extraction today. I used ground cinnamon from the dollar store and Nestle 100% pure cocoa(the kind for baking). I followed the "EXACT" same instructions as to make a coffee extraction.
Yes, that's exactly what I did. I used a 30ml bottle. Also, if I had it to do over again, I would let the mixture steep in the bottle for a couple of days before straining through the coffee filter. On the previous page, someone mentioned that it helped to make her extract stronger.
So, what is a biscuit in FL then?
Needs fried chicken.It is like a free form plain muffin, preferably made with butter milk.
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