I want to share one, or two, of my blogs with all of you about high flavor mixing vs. long steep times:
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...ime-try-high-flavor-percentages-time-mix.html
I also want to share an actual mix that I went through to create a chocolate covered cherries for a fellow member:
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...ade-chocolate-chocolate-covered-cherries.html
If you can't see these because you're using these on your phone, or what have you, they were all once, originally posted here:
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...entice-flavoring-thread-346.html#post14228238
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...entice-flavoring-thread-433.html#post14339663
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...entice-flavoring-thread-283.html#post14122827
Some of you may find these useful, particularly if you want to learn to make good juice, and want to vape it before Christmas, or this evening. Happy holidays everyone!
Your final 30% flavoring recipe;
1. Double Chocolate - 5%
2. Milk Chocolate - 5%
3. Vanilla Swirl - 6%
4. Bavarian Cream - 4%
5. Cotton Candy - 6%
6. Butter - 2%
7. Cherry (extract) - 2%
Then take each flavoring percentage and divide it by the total percentage to come up with a 100% flavoring mixture;
Vanilla Swirl - 20%
Cotton Candy - 20%
Double Chocolate - 16.7%
Milk Chocolate - 16.6%
Bavarian Cream - 13.3%
Butter - 6.7%
Cherry (extract) - 6.7%
Now, mix with PG and/or VG to the ratio you like or need, allow for nicotine if desired. (5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, etc. for total flavor inclusion)
Chocolate, Vanilla, and Creams all change over time, depending on your taste this change may be for the better or not so much, only you can decide what is or is not a good change. There is no doubt that they will change though.
The original recipe calls for 30% total flavor inclusion, and tastes just fine off of the mixing table (which is great if you vape it till it's gone). However if we fail to vape every last drop of this mix, because our ADD has us trying out 150 recipes that sound wonderful, and pick it up a few weeks down the road to enjoy it again, only this time the experience is simply too creamy, or too chocolaty, or overpowered by cherry, or possibly just too dense with flavor, you can say this is not a stable recipe. Basically its flavor is not fixed upon creation.
You can accept that the recipe is only good for a short time and never make more than what you will vape in the time it does not alter beyond your expectations or ...
You can accept that flavors need time to develop and become stable.
Each an every flavor has a different length of time it needs to stabilize in PG and VG, this isn't unlike knowing where to throw a football so that it reaches a player on the field who is running a pattern, the player isn't there now but will be at the same time the ball gets there.
Knowing how a flavor will change with time allows us to adjust ahead of time, much like a quarterback knowing the pattern the player will run and how fast that player can get there allows him to adjust where he will throw the ball so the ball an player are at the same point on the field at the same time.
Most flavors that change at all do so in under 6 weeks and then essentially stabilize. A notable long steep flavor is Black Honey Tobacco, tastes like crap prior to week 5, by week six it is ready to go. Then there is Kona Coffee, you can just about bring a closed bottle of the flavoring close to your base liquid and it's ready to go, LOL.
Steeping does not have a fixed directional effect on each flavor. In very loose terms, flavor increases or decreases, mouth feel increases or decreases, aroma increases or decreases, etc. all individual to the flavor. Some flavors don't change much at all, no matter how long they steep.
Your aim as a mixer is your own, if you vape what you mix right away, there is no point in steeping or even knowing what steeping does. As the length of time increases between mixing and vaping, so does the importance of understanding what changes will occur to your eliquids.
The following recipe is good off the table, but spectacular 3 weeks and beyond because the vanilla components need time to fully develop.
Opus R. by: Maurice
30ml 12mg/ml 60/40 pg:vg (Steep 3 weeks) 11% total flavor
12.0 ml VG
7.5 ml 48 mg/ml nicotine 100% PG
7.20 ml PG
3.3 ml (11%) Opus R. Flavor (PG) MP
I prefer the same recipe at 8.25% total flavor inclusion, 50:50 pg:vg, and 1mg/ml nicotine, mainly because when I vape this I'm using a RBA or RDA that has better flavor communication. The flavor ratios do not change just the total quantity of flavor used.
30ml 1mg/ml 50/50 pg:vg (Steep 3 weeks) 8.25% total flavor
15.0 ml VG
0.62 ml 48 mg/ml nicotine 100% PG
11.91 ml PG
2.47 ml (8.25%) Opus R. Flavor (PG) MP
To make either of these, or any other total flavor inclusion percentage I desire I mix the following;
30 ml Opus R. Flavor (PG) MP
13.62 ml (45.4%) Cinnamon Red Hot (PG) TFA
6.36 ml (21.2%) Vanilla Bean Ice Cream TFA
5.49 ml (18.3%) Vanilla Swirl TFA
1.83 ml (6.1%) Brown Sugar Extra TFA
1.35 ml (4.5%) EM 10% PG TFA
1.35 ml (4.5%) Pie Crust Flavor TFA diluted (0.15 PC in 15 ml PG)
So what is the difference between the steeped version and the not steeped versions with Opus R.? Smoothness and complexity come with time, where as the off the table version has more of a pronounced simplicity. The visual color change this recipe goes through as it ages if kept where light is able to get to it is interesting as well, though not really a huge taste factor modifier oxidation of the flavoring and nicotine does alter this juice to a small degree. At three weeks the flavor is stable and will not change greatly. The complementing flavors will have developed to their full potential and share in the spotlight ingredient Cinnamon Red Hot.
To the question of how long did it take to come up with this. I would say it took less total time to create this mix than it took me to type out the reply I am writing right now. A few minutes of contemplating what ingredients I want to use, a few extra to punch out the numbers, maybe a couple more in actual mixing. A few test vapes as the juice steeps gives me time to determine what modifications are in order. So all in all maybe 12 minutes per version, this is the result of 4 recipe versions each tested at 10 different total flavor inclusion percentages, so maybe an hour total time in actual development. I think if my job was to just design e-liquids, creating something this nice every 60 minutes would be something to be quite proud of, granted it will take a whole three weeks for that to start being realized, but that is the beauty of having just a little bit of patience.
Could it be improved upon by someone to better suit their own taste, I'm sure it could, yet for me it is exactly what I set out to create so for me it is done. Had it taken a few more alterations to get it where I wanted it, I would not have been bothered.
I make 4 30 ml bottles for my friend each month and a 30 ml bottle for myself, as long as there are 5 or more bottles steeping I'm in no rush to mix more.
Good things come to those who wait.