Friday, October 22, 2010

Distill Rose Oil At Home

While you'll never get rich distilling your own rose oil---it can take up to 10,000 pounds of rose petals to produce an ounce of pure essential oil---making small quantities is a charming way to preserve your rose garden. The process of making rose oil begins with distilling the petals into a product called rosewater, also known as rose hydrosol, and removing the essential oils that form on top. You can buy a professional still, but for the beginning fragrance maker a homemade version can be put together with minimal difficulty.


Instructions


1. Pick enough roses to fill your kettle loosely. Gently cut or pluck the petals from the roses.


2. Put smooth river stones at the bottom of the kettle; this keeps the botanicals from scorching on the bottom of the kettle. Fill, but do not pack, the kettle full of rose petals, and gently crush them.








3. Use spring or distilled water to cover the rose petals.


4. On a counter next to the stove top, use a cake stand or overturned pot to elevate a bowl to the same level as the teapot spout.


5. Fill the bowl with ice water.


6. Place a jar next to the raised ice-water bowl so that the ice-water bowl is between the jar and the stove top. Ideally this jar, called the "receiver," will sit a little lower than the ice-water bowl.


7. Attach the plastic tubing to the end of the teapot spout, and put its other end in the receiver. The tube's middle section must rest in the bowl of ice water.


8. Cover the kettle, boil the water and then turn the burner to low. Continue simmering until the water in the pot reduces by half. This may take several hours, depending on the size of the kettle.


9. Examine your receiver. It should have collected up to a pint of the condensed droplets of the vaporized steam from the kettle. This is your rosewater, and can be used as is or further separated into rose hydrosol and essential oil.


10. To collect the essential oil, place the receiver jar into the freezer. The liquid part of the hydrosol will freeze while the essential oil will remain liquid and separate.


11. Pour the unfrozen part of the mixture, the essential oil, into a small vial and store in a cool, dark place.

Tags: ice-water bowl, rose petals, bottom kettle, rose hydrosol, teapot spout, your rose