How did it turn out? I hope the top of the stove wasn't too hot.
As it turns out the stove was indeed too hot.

How did it turn out? I hope the top of the stove wasn't too hot.
I don't know if there's a "secret" to hitting the sweet spot, but water baths only (rather than direct heat) and long, slow application of minimal heat (just below a simmer) work very well for me. My opinion---and my experience---is that macerations can be "cooked" almost indefinitely with no harmful effects as long as I'm very gentle with them.
Sounds like you had a good extract there! I filtered and bottled mine today -- it was very relaxing even to do the lab work! It has a very inviting aroma--I'm vaping mine later today!
I decided to increase the % extract in the juice to about 60% after some initial testing.
I started my second batch of room temperature PG soak: Tobacco from 7 American Spirit Organic cigarettes in 70 mL of PG. This is 50% more concentrated than my first batch.
Chinook,
60%!!!! I've never heard of anyone DIYing an NET at that percentage before. I have read a couple of posts that mentioned 50%, but yours takes the prize.
I generally use two extract percentages for my heat-assisted home-brews: 13% for subtlety and nuance, and 18% for more in-your-face flavor. 25% is as high as I've ever gone, and that wasn't as tasty as 18%.
Now, don't let my shock about 60% deter you. I don't mean to rain on your parade. if 60% works for you, ignore my reaction, by all means.
To the extent that we can generalize from anecdotal experience (always a bit risky), the implication of your post seems to be that lower-concentration cold-process maceration produces a much lighter extract (in all the ways we use "lightness"---lighter in flavor, lighter in color, lighter in body).
The caveat I need to add is that, even though my extracts produce about average gunking for macerated NETs, I've never cared about it much. I do dry burn my 28 ga. microcoils and change cotton/hemp wicks fairly often on my rebuildables, but not religiously or fanatically. I simply haven't experienced the dreaded flavor loss and degraded vapor production that many people talk about, at least not as quickly nor as severely. Maybe I'm not paying attention, but I think it must be something else, like a temperamental insensitivity, perhaps. I understand that I'm in a small minority on this issue, so I imagine that your efforts to discover how to maximize flavor while minimizing gunking will be appreciated by many Netizens.
For my gentle-heat-assisted maceration of American Spirit Organic last July, I used an entire fresh pack of 20 cigarettes in 150mls of 75%pg/25%vg. That's about 1/3 more tobacco per ml of extract than you used for your second batch, so it's logical that my extract would be more concentrated (and probably darker, too, since it was heat-assisted rather than cold-processed).
Are you doing any room temperature macerations these days? It'll be good to get your observations too since you have quite the experience.
Maybe you should put aside a cold maceration aside and forget about it for a monthIt'll be great to get your input and comparison between the cold and heat extractions.