When I first started looking in this thread and saw so many of Bill's recipes, I was stunned at the percentages he was using (I was thinking that I could get away with a couple percent of flavor here and there) but I wasn't happy with how things were turning out. I'm pretty impatient when it comes to juice. When I want it, I WANT IT NOW
Using Bill's technique for higher percentages of flavoring in a mix gives me the ability to vape a mix immediately with great satisfaction. I've read all over the place that people "steep" (let sit) for days and/or weeks. It frustrates me if I don't have something that tastes good right away. From what I understand, you could do lower-percentage flavorings, but those need time to develop (hence, steeping.)
However, it's all about what works for you. I was wondering if there was some magical proportion of percentages used in higher-flavored mixes that I could do to back off the amount of flavoring I might need, but no one seems to have a formula for that![]()
Yeah someone gave me a recipe the other day, something strawberry, and then said "it has to steep at least 3 wks"...
And I'm thinking... "WHY?" (along with "how do you stay interested in something you can't even vape, for that long???") Then I looked at the percentages -- the total of all ingredients didn't even hit 20%. Then I showed them my strawberry and cream recipe -- just the strawberry flavoring is 16%, and all the creams and sweetener, another 16% -- and it's just about as good the minute I finish shaking it as it will ever be, though I've noticed that over the first few hours, it does continue to "develop" a bit, it gets a little richer-tasting. If I ever get to the point where I make a large quantity of it, more than 60ml at a time, I'd probably wait several hours after mixing, then add some citric acid.Andria