Hard to believe that no one's put up a vid yet on YouTube about macerated tobacco extraction, but I didn't come up with anything either.
Not to worry, though. Most of us on this thread who do home-based extractions had little more than the most rudimentary instructions before starting, and I can tell you that I ignored much of it and simply adapted the simple instructions to fit what I had on hand. We're all just making it up as we go along. Some of what we do works, some doesn't, but we learn. After 47 extractions, I'm still experimenting. As I'm fond of saying, this isn't rocket science. There are no hard-and-fast rules, and common sense goes a long way.
On the extraction threads, some people who are considering maybe doing this ask all sorts of very specific questions, as if they're anxious about every little detail and scared to make a mistake. Sometimes I respond with "answers" from my personal experience, but most of the questions have no pat answers (i.e., "How much tobacco should I use?"). I always want to say: Don't worry. Read the threads, then jump in. Learn by doing. You'll know very quickly if home tobacco extraction is something you enjoy and have a knack for.
Read Scarf-ace's method (link below), and if a heat-assisted maceration is too daunting, read Johni's method (also linked below) for cold maceration (meaning room temperature with a long steep), which requires little more than patience and is very hard to screw up.
Scarfy's Method for Slow-Cooker Home Extraction of Tobacco
Johni's Easy Method for Cold Macerations
Thanks Bill,
As if i wasn't spending too much time on these threads, now two more threads to read !
I have about a 15 month inventory of liquid at my current vaping levels, and didn't plan to buy any more save the odd bottle or two reordering my favorites. So i have plenty of time to read up and then experiment with these methods while my inventory gets depleted. I think i will start with cold macerations. Seems a little less involved.
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