White Sugar Doesn’t Come From Where You Think It Does

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Can I extract pure, raw, sugar from beets? Check out today's episode as I get to the root of this process.
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  • @htme
    @htme Жыл бұрын

    Get 20% off your first monthly box when you sign up at bespokepost.com/htme20 and use promo code HTME20 at checkout!

  • @nurajannattaslima9853

    @nurajannattaslima9853

    Жыл бұрын

    yo sup 1st reply good work

  • @wouterdevlieger1002

    @wouterdevlieger1002

    Жыл бұрын

    Even the sugar industry struggled for a long time to get the color of beet sugar as white as cane sugar. That's why cane sugar was so popular even though it had to be imported from an ocean away. Even my grandmother considered light brown sugar inferior even though it makes no real difference today anymore. I think the trick to get the rest of the residue out is activated carbon, but creating that with primitive tools may do more harm than good.

  • @victoriaeads6126

    @victoriaeads6126

    Жыл бұрын

    The first time I was aware of eating beet sugar was when I lived in Russia. It was far cheaper, since it could be produced domestically. It had a slight umami flavor and a hint of pink-but it worked just the same as white sugar once added to anything. I would expect the total removal of umami to involve some pretty harsh processing.

  • @michaelm6597

    @michaelm6597

    Жыл бұрын

    they have a bleaching step in there to make the sugar white

  • @morrigankasa570

    @morrigankasa570

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in Minnesota as well and you can easily find and buy actual Cane Sugar! I always buy C&H Brand Sugar and it is Cane Sugar!!! Then there are Raw Sugar that you can buy and is also Cane Sugar.

  • @borninator
    @borninator Жыл бұрын

    You should definitely not shy away from DIY without going full primitive technology. This was really enjoyable.

  • @Wolvus1

    @Wolvus1

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed, I even think it could help allot to figure out how to things with primitive tools if there tried with modern tools first. As long as both versions are somewhat contained as different parts of the process i dont see how anyone could have an issue with it.

  • @Silveraga

    @Silveraga

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes

  • @The_Flying_Yeti

    @The_Flying_Yeti

    Жыл бұрын

    I personally disagree. I would prefer it on a second channel. Great content, and I would 100% watch it, But I cant deny that I was disappointed seeing the drill press in the intro. Either way, Great content! Im nit picking.

  • @Killerhurtz

    @Killerhurtz

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed

  • @seanyackley3700

    @seanyackley3700

    Жыл бұрын

    @@The_Flying_Yeti I'd like it, *just* for chemistry it would make it far better to have a lower number of variables, sometimes it's just downright depressing to fail and not know which of many things to even start to fix

  • @derrickthewhite1
    @derrickthewhite1 Жыл бұрын

    As a note: beet sugar is used in the United States rather than cane sugar because of tariffs. The US subsidizes its agricultural products as a matter of national security. Cane sugar is actually very cheap to make: I've lived in places where its cost is equivalent to flour. But the tariffs push the price of sugar way up. If you're looking for a place where obscure laws from decades ago effect your daily life, this is the place to be.

  • @Elijah-eg1xt

    @Elijah-eg1xt

    Жыл бұрын

    Corn syrup is used in most processed foods in America

  • @Lawman212

    @Lawman212

    Жыл бұрын

    Tariffs also protect the domestic US cane sugar industry in Florida. The U.S. Sugar Corporation, based in Clewiston, Florida, is owned by the Fanjul family who are very active in Florida politics.

  • @yoo571

    @yoo571

    Жыл бұрын

    Here in Argentina sugar is mostly from sugar cane and it's cheaper than flour

  • @Drew-in-NoDak

    @Drew-in-NoDak

    Жыл бұрын

    Beet sugar supports the US economy. If they allowed in cane sugar the whole upper half of the United States would struggle. MT, ND, SD, MN, MI all rely on beet sugar to help support their economy.

  • @NeverSuspects

    @NeverSuspects

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Drew-in-NoDak Sure dude. Most people in the upper half of the US are sugar farmers and there is nothing of value those people exchange to anyone anywhere in the world that would drive a broader economic interaction with the rest of the world in order to not be 'struggling' to pay taxes and costs imposed on them by government that exceed the value they get from the currency when the government spends it relative to spending it themselves without the government waste of resources and idiots running them that break the rules that make systems stable we all use making them un stable by the declaration of politicians and dissolving wealth being exchanged in the market for the region so that total in circulation drops and people can't manage to maintain the baseline needs for daily trades for food and rent by loss of value of currency relative to the milk that is just as valuable to a person today as 100 years ago but in practical production is 100 times cheaper to produce tied to resources so government breaks currency's function to exists as representation of value to make the exchange of our goods and services convenient and setting rules that overtime trend the population toward higher rates of poverty and lower economic output due to the forced incentive structures. If sugar supported the US economy then sugar would be the most valuable substance on the planet and the rest of the world would be not capable of providing enough to meet their own demands for sugar and the us would exceed its own allowing for export of sugar from the US to EVERYWHERE to make the US the world largest economic market you can buy from or sell in. Economies are supported by human activity and actions. Unless you think a government is a god and should be the thing that decides what humans see value in and how they decide to exchange what they offer to others with the intent of both parties seeing it beneficial should be decided in permanence by some asshole legislator with relationships to printing what should by kept precious as a container to hold value we use in representation we can hold on to and not see it suddenly worthless. There is a reason you can't have socialist or communist economies and loss of property rights that will be a stable system for long in the world without it being parasitic to a wealth generating source. They will just make that source your savings overtime by spending it themselves on what they want calling it public spending and do so on massive scales that exceed what is even collected from the already high amount of taxes annually the longer you hold onto currency the less its worth and normalizing that action of those in government to simply 2% of the worlds total wealth as value by deficit spending consistently making the currencies ability to store value as savings rather inconsistent though what is called inflation.

  • @dablakh0l193
    @dablakh0l193 Жыл бұрын

    My grandmother used to grow sugar beets, and hers were huge compared to the ones you had grown. Her secret was a 50/50 sand to topsoil mix in her garden in the area where she had her beets. That way when they were growing, they were able to push the soil away, and the sand allowed the soil to hold on to the water longer (her words, not mine). Her beets were about the size of medium cantelopes.

  • @davidgraham2673

    @davidgraham2673

    Жыл бұрын

    When they showed the conveyor belt, it had huge beets like you described. Did your grandmother make sugar from her beets?

  • @dablakh0l193

    @dablakh0l193

    Жыл бұрын

    @@davidgraham2673 Yes, she lived during the depression and she said that was when she learned how to do it. Up until the late 70s, she always made her own sugar at home from her beets. I wasn't really interested to learn how to do it, and so, I can't offer much in the way of help for you. The only thing I do remember is that she peeled the beets and then cut them into chunks and then ran them through her hand grinder into a bowl of water that had some powder mixed in that kept the ground up beets from turning brown. What the powder was, I don't know. I just remember that it came in a can like McCormick spices did. It was a tall white can, but that was all I remember. Sorry I can't be of more help.

  • @davidgraham2673

    @davidgraham2673

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dablakh0l193 , I'm the curious type, and when I read comments that I find interesting, I try to learn new things. I believe we've lost so much concerning knowledge from the ways people used to make do with common, or even uncommon things. I do know that sulfur (of all things) is used in sugar production, but I don't know if home applications/methods used it as well as commercial companies. You can never know too much of the old ways. Thank you for the response, and your original comment. Have a blessed New Year!

  • @waynesundergroundadventures

    @waynesundergroundadventures

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dablakh0l193 Remembering from my mothers days in the kitchen in the 60's and 70's my guess would be that the powder could well be citric acid. It was commonly used in jams and preserves to stop the browning, and comes in a tall white can.

  • @simonesmit6708

    @simonesmit6708

    Жыл бұрын

    @@waynesundergroundadventures I was thinking the same think. And you can still get it at speciality jamming stores.

  • @bundiesel8472
    @bundiesel8472 Жыл бұрын

    I remember in science class we used a jar with highly saturated sugar water in it with a string dangling from the lid into the water. After a few days in the window, the string started producing sugar crystals on it. You should try this with your creation and see if it makes crystals. Good luck 👍

  • @holemajora598

    @holemajora598

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s the way to do it I hope he goes for it.

  • @iteerrex8166

    @iteerrex8166

    Жыл бұрын

    Cool idea, see if the molasses and other contaminants are filtered out naturally 👍

  • @beardlyinteresting

    @beardlyinteresting

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah it's a fun science experiment, did this to create salt crystals. It's really cool.

  • @iteerrex8166

    @iteerrex8166

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve actually seen this in Middle Eastern stores sold as candy.

  • @Nono-hk3is

    @Nono-hk3is

    Жыл бұрын

    You have to supersaturate the water with sugar, by dissolving sugar in very hot water, so that when it cools, there's more sugar in the water than it wants to hold dissolved at room temperature

  • @TwoFaceScarface
    @TwoFaceScarface Жыл бұрын

    For your final products, honestly a pretty close result. One thing I noticed was during the centrifugal process, in my plant, it's washed while spinning with above-boiling water (held under pressure so it doesn't boil), that gives you the white sugar and helps spin off all the impurities. Molasses is actually a byproduct of a byproduct. And for full disclosure, I work at a sugar beet plant

  • @falcondark5338

    @falcondark5338

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't work in a sugar plant, but I think his centrifuge is set up wrong. It's basically a rotating strainer, that separates according to size, whereas a centrifuge is meant to separate according to specific gravity. So you need a slightly cone shaped can, and when it spins, the heavier part of the liquid climbs higher on the sides, and escapes first.

  • @TwoFaceScarface

    @TwoFaceScarface

    Жыл бұрын

    @@falcondark5338 I'm not sure on the geometry of our centrifugals but I believe they are just basic cylinders and layered screens. Fine enough where crystals won't pass through, but washings will. I have a Short I uploaded if you want to see it in action. Easier to see it that way

  • @greggv8

    @greggv8

    Жыл бұрын

    Would that plant be the one in Nampa, Idaho?

  • @marcezs08
    @marcezs08 Жыл бұрын

    I'd love to see a Collab with NileRed to see if he could do better by having more experience

  • @JD200_

    @JD200_

    Жыл бұрын

    He's too busy making chocolate

  • @Wyi-the-rogue

    @Wyi-the-rogue

    Жыл бұрын

    They should make fancy chocolate together then

  • @dbseamz

    @dbseamz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JD200_ Chocolate needs sugar, a collab would be helpful

  • @cjcj9062

    @cjcj9062

    Жыл бұрын

    Would like to see. 👍

  • @ooooneeee

    @ooooneeee

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah let them Collab on chocolate with self made beets sugar.

  • @nazamroth8427
    @nazamroth8427 Жыл бұрын

    "We wont have sugar, we'll have caramel" I see this as a clear win

  • @PacesIII
    @PacesIII Жыл бұрын

    If your sugar say "cane sugar" it can only be sugar cane. If it just says "sugar" it could be corn, beet, or cane, or a combination of those and a host of other sugars.

  • @radomircita9420
    @radomircita9420 Жыл бұрын

    Sugarbeets are quite common source of sugar here in central Europe. To be honest it is the first source I think of when it comes to sugar

  • @irissupercoolsy

    @irissupercoolsy

    Жыл бұрын

    my town of 6000 people in Belgium was known for making sugar from sugarbeets!

  • @theyoten1613

    @theyoten1613

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah. Big in Czechia and Austria.

  • @irissupercoolsy

    @irissupercoolsy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@370.y no? Belgium uses mostly beet sugar. I wouldn't call Belgium a poor country...

  • @yumatom

    @yumatom

    Жыл бұрын

    @@370.yI used to grow sugar beets in Germany.

  • @yumatom

    @yumatom

    Жыл бұрын

    @@370.yGermany and France are two of the biggest sugar beet producers in the world. Like in the top 5

  • @davebeech236
    @davebeech236 Жыл бұрын

    When I was a boy, there was a huge sugar factory not far away. I still remember the distinct, quite pleasant smell of the process, which always started at the start of winter. To this day, that smell (which I haven't smelled in over 30 years) will always be associated with the changing seasons.

  • @mariawiertel6123
    @mariawiertel6123 Жыл бұрын

    My family actually owns a sugar beet plot!Beet sugar is extremely common in my country,and I've always associated sugar with beets instead of canes.We also use birch sugar but is consudered more "alternative".Up until I was 12 I didn't even know sugar could be made from different plants.

  • @frankcooke1692

    @frankcooke1692

    Жыл бұрын

    For a long time I kind of assumed sugar cane plants just grew ready made sugar crystals and they just threshed it and bagged it. And by a long time I mean until I was 30. In fairness - they do call it RAW sugar.

  • @tigertoxins584

    @tigertoxins584

    Жыл бұрын

    That's really cool, thanks for sharing!

  • @patrikvavro1611

    @patrikvavro1611

    5 ай бұрын

    by “birch sugar” do you mean xylitol? it’s actually an artificial sweetener, not sugar, but in my country it’s also marketed as “birch sugar”

  • @MrDowntemp0
    @MrDowntemp0 Жыл бұрын

    Glad Lauren's still part of the team after the fire and rebuild. Hope we see her participating in projects again as things start to return to normal.

  • @jaminboomershine9643
    @jaminboomershine9643 Жыл бұрын

    If you were ever to attempt this experiment again, there is a simple method to increasing the amount of sugar in root crops that has the added benefit of removing the bitter flavor. Leave your beets in the ground until after a frost or two. The plant naturally converts some of its starches into sugar to protect itself from freezing. I am convinced many of our root crops are supposed to be harvested in early winter before they freeze but after the cold weather sweetening has occurred.

  • @simrock_
    @simrock_ Жыл бұрын

    The sugar you made looks actually pretty legit, considering the tools used and it not being a "professional" set up. Historically there used to be huge variations/gradients in the quality of pretty much any ingredient, from flower to salt and sugar between what "peasants" and "nobles" used, where the work and cost invested would be vastly different. Exploring these differences might also be an interesting avenue, though for food that might cross over with Townsends or Tasting History, but who knows, might be an interesting crossover to make different "products" and see what i.e. Max Miller makes of/with them.

  • @Hwyadylaw
    @Hwyadylaw Жыл бұрын

    The biggest (or at least most iconic) brand of white sugar here has the word sugar beet printed on the front of the bag along with a drawing of a beet, so it's hardly an obscure fact. Cane sugar is a speciality in Northern Europe

  • @xlerb2286
    @xlerb2286 Жыл бұрын

    I suspect your experiment was made extra hard by the small size of those beets. Sugar beets have many layers of meristematic tissue that are the cells that as the beet grows expand and store sugar. The number of layers is pretty much fixed. So a small beet doesn't have fewer layers, it has many layers that have not expanded and store very little sugar. I'd guess that most of the volume of your beets was contributing more to the impurities you had to remove than to the sugar. But I agree, sugar beets are miserable things. I worked with them when I was a horticulture student at a university in a region of the country where many sugar beets are grown. The sugar content is ok these days but beets also have more protein in them compared to other sugar sources and that makes the refining process difficult. And as you say the molasses, without more refinement, has an off flavor. Much of it is used as a cattle food supplement. Cows love it.

  • @irissupercoolsy

    @irissupercoolsy

    Жыл бұрын

    That's why the sugar beets that grow in the fields in the town I live in absolutely massive? 😲😲

  • @yumatom

    @yumatom

    Жыл бұрын

    Cows love the beet tops too. We would also boil small beets with potatoes in an industrial pressure cooker for the pigs.

  • @xlerb2286

    @xlerb2286

    Жыл бұрын

    @@irissupercoolsy Yup. In a good year they get huge. And a lot of that volume is the sugar-rich tissue. If the northern part of the world had to grow it's own sugar crops sugar beets would be hands down the way to do it. But compared to sugar cane they are a distant 2nd place.

  • @xlerb2286

    @xlerb2286

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yumatom Agreed. Around here cattle get the beet tops, and the spent beets themselves once the sugar has been extracted. Nothing of the beet goes to waste, except the refined sugar, that mainly goes to the waist ;)

  • @irissupercoolsy

    @irissupercoolsy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@xlerb2286 I live in Belgium. So all beets, carrots, potatoes grow here wonderfully haha.

  • @alexnoman1498
    @alexnoman1498 Жыл бұрын

    In Germany, beet molasses called Zuckerrübensirup is a staple breakfast food, usually served on a buttered slice of bread, like jam. You can also make delicious drinks or cakes with it, because it brings flavour along with sweetness :)

  • @nichevo1

    @nichevo1

    Жыл бұрын

    I think Dutch may have been leaders in this field

  • @leandervr

    @leandervr

    Жыл бұрын

    In the netherlands we have apple syrup, which is named that because it is partly made from apple juice, but the main component is actually beet molasses too and it's eaten in the same way.

  • @martialme84

    @martialme84

    Жыл бұрын

    The Germans created the sugar beet in silesia back in ye olden days. So they may have been leaders in this field.

  • @KenzertYT

    @KenzertYT

    9 ай бұрын

    You guys are so happy. It makes me sick. LOL

  • @graup1309
    @graup1309 Жыл бұрын

    This is very fun. I'm from Germany and my grandpa was a farmer who grew sugar beets. I have distinct memories of helping him to weed one of the fields he grew them on.

  • @Valravna
    @Valravna Жыл бұрын

    We grew sugar beets at the farm i grew up at! It was so tasty. I loved eating them during harvest time. Raw, ofc! (Not in the US, though)

  • @jacksidr6182

    @jacksidr6182

    Жыл бұрын

    Also not in the US. When I was younger I used to visit my grandma in the village, during harvesting season she always used to put sugar beets into the furnace ashtray with skin on it, so they were slowly cooking, and even kinda caramelized inside.

  • @Aoderic

    @Aoderic

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in south-east Denmark, and I suspect you might be from somewhere nearby, as this part of the country is the sugar beet central of Scandinavia. I remember when there was a Sugar factory in every major town, now there's only two left. After harvest the sugar beets were left in big piles at the edge of the field, and as boys we used to steal a few to cut and eat 🙂

  • @computerfis

    @computerfis

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Aoderic From Denmark too. Remember a school mate had a sugar beet with him in his lunchbox and i had a taste. It was surprisingly sugary, like there were sugar crystals in it. (:

  • @WintrBorn

    @WintrBorn

    Жыл бұрын

    My dad used to grow these and rhubarb when we lived in NY. That was over 30 years ago, so I don’t remember much about it.

  • @tookitogo

    @tookitogo

    Жыл бұрын

    I tasted sugar beets on a farm here in Switzerland, and it was inedible. Sweet, yes, but also had an extremely unpleasant astringent quality that made your mouth tingle.

  • @LivingTreeCarpentry
    @LivingTreeCarpentry Жыл бұрын

    You could always add a crystallization and recrystallization step which could help with the consistency. Using some lab equipment couldn't hurt.

  • @Tasarran

    @Tasarran

    10 ай бұрын

    I think even the primitive process of growing 'rock candy' from a supersaturated solution would work to mostly purify it...

  • @MrAllmightyCornholioz
    @MrAllmightyCornholioz Жыл бұрын

    Neighbor: Excuse me, but may I borrow a cup of sugar? Andy: Sure, I have some homemade in my workshop.

  • @TheNexusChan
    @TheNexusChan Жыл бұрын

    I live in Louisiana where we mainly cultivate cane sugar. But, I like how sugar is produced from different sources. Beats are also used in sweet dishes, such as red velvet dessert's!

  • @ommsterlitz1805

    @ommsterlitz1805

    Жыл бұрын

    You should thank Napoleon, flooding the European market with affordable sugar. By 1806, cane sugar had virtually disappeared from the shelves of European shops because of the british. In 1811, French scientists presented Napoleon with two loaves of sugar made from sugar beet. Napoleon was so impressed he decreed that 32,000 hectares of beet should be planted and provided assistance to get the factories established in his Empire. Within a few years there were more than 40 sugar beet factories, in now today Northern France, Germany, Austria, Russia, and Denmark. One of the many great thing the Emperor made in his life, he also wished to discover the new world and live in Louisiana.

  • @richardfarrer5616
    @richardfarrer5616 Жыл бұрын

    My grandmother lived in Essex. I stayed with her for holidays on many occasions, There was a local farmer growing sugar beet. At around 9 or so i got to 'help' with the harvest then go to the processing plant and see the crop be delivered. I may also have been allowed to sit in the tractor seat as it harvested the beet but clearly I'm not admitting to that as it may not be technically legal. Disclaimer: this was 50 years ago in the UK so things were different back then.

  • @bboylalu
    @bboylalu Жыл бұрын

    No. I have no other original recollection of sugar sources except beet. I've known this all my life. I found out sugar can come from cane or honey or other sources waaay later.

  • @nubreed13

    @nubreed13

    Жыл бұрын

    Depends on where you live. On the west coast it's all Cane sugar

  • @5roundsrapid263

    @5roundsrapid263

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nubreed13 The South, too.

  • @UtahSustainGardening
    @UtahSustainGardening Жыл бұрын

    Beet sugar was a big deal in Utah for many, many decades. It was hard to grow up in my area without realizing its impact the U and I sugar company provided much of the area's sugar into the 1980s. And the beet plant that processed much of the sugar in the early days was just down the road from the towns I grew up in. The smoke stack is still there and know functions as a cell tower. Feel free to contact me next time you are in the area and I will make time for a visit and tour!

  • @brianjones9780

    @brianjones9780

    Жыл бұрын

    hey neighbor! here in Idaho my grandfather retired well from one of their last factories in Nampa. it's actually still running to this day though I actually don't know who owns it. ever since I was a kid I've seen mounds upon mounds of sugarbeets being fed into that thing. it's quite an interesting process to say the least

  • @regularrock8637
    @regularrock8637 Жыл бұрын

    Here in Australia, cane sugar is extremely common, while beet sugar is virtually unheard of and unused. We've the perfect climate for growing massive sugar cane plantations in Queensland, and as a child, I remember ash raining down on the town every year during the pre-harvest sugarcane field burnings. Bonus, we get access to honey-like golden syrup. Perfect as a binder when making tasty Anzac biscuits.

  • @memoegz0187
    @memoegz0187 Жыл бұрын

    Man I miss the weekly uploads of how to make everything.. especially the ones that you get threw the early stages of how we used tools primatively

  • @RocketChild
    @RocketChild Жыл бұрын

    I've been watching for years and to see Andy going from "trying to recreate something" to succeeding and refining the methods is really amazing. Congratulations!

  • @KainYusanagi
    @KainYusanagi Жыл бұрын

    Really like this look at answering the question of, "can I attempt this without just primitive tech?". Think the only way this could have been better would have been something like a crossover with Nigel over on NileRed for the chemistry analysis of what's going on and what needs to be done to separate things.

  • @Wisconsin.pikachu
    @Wisconsin.pikachu Жыл бұрын

    They make vacuum blenders that remove the air before blending to help prevent oxidization

  • @oasntet
    @oasntet Жыл бұрын

    Look at any of the chemistry channels, you'll see purifying stuff is extremely hard. Getting from a natural-ish turbanado sugar (spun) all the way to a perfectly white sugar requires more than a centrifuge, it requires a great deal of filtration. Bone char is often used in that step, combining both the calcium carbonate and activated charcoal steps in one. But it likely only works on very large scale...

  • @inthenightandy4616
    @inthenightandy4616 Жыл бұрын

    I really enjoy these intermittent diy/info episodes. It’s a pleasant change to the typical schedule. Also love the typical schedule!

  • @scottyork8831
    @scottyork8831 Жыл бұрын

    To increase the sugar yield of the beets wait until after the first frost to harvest. Also there is a two step process that is used to get the sugar out leaving the molasses as a by product that can then be reprocessed to get a lower quality sugar. The Thick Juice, what they make the white sugar out of, is also bleached with chlorine to get that crystal white color.

  • @TwoFaceScarface

    @TwoFaceScarface

    Жыл бұрын

    I work at a sugar beet processing plant, and can confirm, there is no chlorine used. Thick juice is boiled to speed the crystal growth, along with an injection of fondant (powdered sugar in an alcohol solution). After the boiling process, the, now called, White Massecute is dropped into batch centrifugals and washed with extremely hot water. Then cooled, dried and stored for sale.

  • @TwoFaceScarface

    @TwoFaceScarface

    Жыл бұрын

    For further disclosure, I work at Southern Minnesota Beet Sugar Cooperative.

  • @Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming

    @Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming

    Жыл бұрын

    They might use a bleeding agent in the US, but in Europe they certainly don't. It's a 99.8% pure product, they keep it white by washing it in boiling water.

  • @ooooneeee

    @ooooneeee

    Жыл бұрын

    Molasses and brown sugar made from it contain vitamins and minerals and are more nutritious than white sugar.

  • @TwoFaceScarface

    @TwoFaceScarface

    Жыл бұрын

    Naturally but we pull so much sucrose by the time we make a molasses cut, that it's below food grade for people. Farmers usually buy it to spray over feed of some sort to sweeten it just a touch.

  • @geckoman1011
    @geckoman1011 Жыл бұрын

    What a fascinating journey. I love the DIY approach. It really brings the process down into an understandable process.

  • @lenalyles2712
    @lenalyles2712 Жыл бұрын

    Sugar cane is grown all over SW Texas and we have a sugar mill 2 miles from our house. Sugar beets has been used for hundreds of years in Europe.

  • @clayton97330
    @clayton97330 Жыл бұрын

    I've been to a sugar processing facility. They do drying steps under vacuum so that it can be done at low temperature. Heating steps use jacketed vessels rather than electric so that heating is uniform heating rather than charring "hot spots" where the heating elements touch the cooking vessel.

  • @shibasurfing
    @shibasurfing Жыл бұрын

    Oh no, I definitely think of sugar beets. I thought that this was incredibly common knowledge? I remember getting some pure cane sugar from Thailand when I was a kid and being delighted.

  • @CoolAsFreya
    @CoolAsFreya Жыл бұрын

    Here in Australia where we farm a lot of sugar cane in the north, almost all of our sugar is cane sugar. It's interesting that elsewhere in the world other plant sources are used, namely beets and corn in the USA!

  • @trex70
    @trex70 Жыл бұрын

    The Sugar Beet molasses is for baking or on buttered bread. We use it for decades in Germany for breakfast. (since 1904 Grafschafter Zuckerrübensirup)

  • @Kevin.odonnell
    @Kevin.odonnell Жыл бұрын

    This was excellent and I’m really pleased with how your skills in processing and fabricating has progressed. I hope you feel proud of this, because you’ve come a long way and it shows :)

  • @Sientir
    @Sientir Жыл бұрын

    This was great! I enjoy the whole "building up the tech tree" thing you've been primarily doing, but I'd love more of these deeper dives in topics related to what you've been exploring in the main series.

  • @ToxicMothBoi
    @ToxicMothBoi Жыл бұрын

    Ive had sugarbeets as a kid and they were delicious. Got them fresh off a field too. I could realy taste that they later get turned into sugar. Also the farmer told me a lot about it too which was so cool to me back then

  • @joshyoung1440

    @joshyoung1440

    Жыл бұрын

    "I could really taste that they later get turned into sugar" So... the sugar tasted like sugar? I'm just not sure I understand what you're saying there... the ones you tasted _specifically did not_ get turned into sugar... if you're saying they tasted sweet in general, well, yeah, there's um... there's a bunch of sugar in sugar beets...

  • @dominatorandwhocaresanyway9617

    @dominatorandwhocaresanyway9617

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joshyoung1440 "ekchually"

  • @currentliveoccupant

    @currentliveoccupant

    Жыл бұрын

    Funny. We had sugar beats growing all around us, I once sliced one up expecting it to be super sweet and it was terrible. Like a Super dry taste I could not get rid of. The adults laughed at me and said there was a lot more to getting sugar from it than cutting it open.

  • @dbseamz
    @dbseamz Жыл бұрын

    Awesome, I've been hoping for a video about sugar refining for a while! I think this is a good way to intersperse some modern tools into the series--the part where you compared the "from scratch with modern equipment" to the commercial product AND the one you made with more primitive tools was super interesting. I agree with what Ch3zter said in a different comment, that trying the project with modern tools first may be helpful in knowing what to do with the primitive equipment.

  • @Nightstick24
    @Nightstick24 Жыл бұрын

    Just wanted to add my voice to the great number of people here saying: this was great, and I'd love to see more like it! Definitely don't need to worry about it not being full primitive tech, it was very interesting and I thoroughly enjoyed it, I'd love to see more videos like this where you tackle DIY'ing modern industrial processes. Really enjoyed this one, thanks!

  • @GeckoHiker
    @GeckoHiker Жыл бұрын

    When I was a kid in Florida we used to chew on sugar cane stalks. We got them growing wild in wet areas and even propagated them to our backyard wet areas. Publix would also sell cane in the produce section. They may still do it in season. Sugar from cane or beets is the same thing after full refinement. But I believe in less refinement so we use a little bit of turbinado in regular cooking or to sweeten iced tea. I'm past having any kind of craving for sweets, so black coffee, plain teas, and bitter beers are my favorite drinks after ice water.

  • @TheRestedOne

    @TheRestedOne

    Жыл бұрын

    +1 for plain teas and bitter beers.

  • @Girvo747
    @Girvo747 Жыл бұрын

    Where I am in Australia, it’s all sugar cane! Super cool to see sugarbeets

  • @thisisnotacryforhelp5800
    @thisisnotacryforhelp5800 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Andy, long time fan here. I really like this series and enjoy your journey through the ages. I was just wondering when you were going to show us how to make a horse? They were very important to the advancement of many societies and I've always wondered how we did it. Thanks! And keep up the good work :)

  • @SAethicsgradient
    @SAethicsgradient Жыл бұрын

    Great video as always! You may find a pair of silicone oven mitts handy for future experiments that call for squeezing a hot bag - mine made doing BIAB (brew in a bag) beer brewing a lot nicer. They do double duty as regular oven mitts in my kitchen, way nicer to clean than cloth ones.

  • @theJellyjoker
    @theJellyjoker Жыл бұрын

    Where does my sugar come from? Beets me

  • @cosmicbrambleclawv2
    @cosmicbrambleclawv2 Жыл бұрын

    All things considered it's pretty impressive that you made raw sugar and that it was THAT close to processed levels of white Just the sugar in the raw itself is cool by my standards

  • @mbavery1975
    @mbavery1975 Жыл бұрын

    Separation. I always had trouble with this one too. It helps to think of paring. Great video!

  • @matthewhuszarik4173
    @matthewhuszarik4173 Жыл бұрын

    Sugar beets have been around and used to make sugar for many decades. As a teen fifty years ago we used to buy sugar beets to feed deer in the winter.

  • @DovidStern
    @DovidStern Жыл бұрын

    I really enjoyed this, I didn't mind at all that you weren't doing primitive stuff. I want to see more!

  • @jannepeltonen2036
    @jannepeltonen2036 Жыл бұрын

    This was super interesting! Also I didn't know sugar beets were the same plant as the red beetroots. But is corn syrup really famous over there in the US? I don't think I've ever heard of it before, except maybe in this channel.

  • @nathandobbin1661

    @nathandobbin1661

    Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately yes. I say it's unfortunate only because I have an allergy to corn and thus corn syrup.

  • @jacksontracy9684

    @jacksontracy9684

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah corn syrup is in pretty much everything here in the US

  • @brianstevens3858

    @brianstevens3858

    Жыл бұрын

    Corn syrup is ubiquitous in American foods.

  • @TheMojenkins

    @TheMojenkins

    Жыл бұрын

    The US grows a ton of corn, it’s partially subsidized by the government. It’s hard to find anything without some form of corn on the ingredients list.

  • @isiahrodriguez64

    @isiahrodriguez64

    Жыл бұрын

    We grow so much corn we use it for everything we can think of, and some things you wouldn't think of.

  • @kyleterpstra1994
    @kyleterpstra1994 Жыл бұрын

    This was a very cool combination of in the garage DIY, horticulture, and chemistry. Very fun to watch, and gave me quite the appreciation for the table sugar I put in my coffee every day. Two thumbs up and i think Dwight Schrute would be proud.

  • @markiangooley
    @markiangooley Жыл бұрын

    I lived for a few years in Billings, Montana. One big use of irrigation water from the Yellowstone River near Billings has been watering the sugar beet fields. The problem: the river water is very hard, very rich in minerals. After a few decades of irrigation, so many minerals have been added to the soil of the irrigated land that no crops will grow in it. Only a few salt-tolerant plants, usually considered weeds, can survive. No more growing beets or anything else useful. Producing sugar from beets or cane would not be economically practical in the United States if there weren’t heavy taxes on imported sugar. High-fructose corn syrup would also be less attractive in food and drink manufacturing if imported sugar weren’t artificially expensive. Sugar beets are fascinating, especially the history of how they came to be, but… I don’t know if they’re a really practical crop anywhere except due to political pressures rather than economic ones.

  • @chrisdale5443
    @chrisdale5443 Жыл бұрын

    many years ago I visited a sugar beet factory in England, they said that at one point they could only make brown sugar until someone realised that adding a cup full of white sugar to the centrifuge once it had got up to full speed turned the whole batch white, and it was an incredible thing to see about one or two hundred Kilos of brown sugar suddenly turning white in the blink of an eye.

  • @nerdy1701

    @nerdy1701

    Жыл бұрын

    Well that's highly interesting. Do you know why it did that?

  • @chrisdale5443

    @chrisdale5443

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nerdy1701 It was to turn the brown sugar white

  • @nerdy1701

    @nerdy1701

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chrisdale5443 right. I understand what it did not how it did it.

  • @chrisdale5443

    @chrisdale5443

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nerdy1701 To be honest I don't understand how it worked either but it was impressive to watch

  • @nerdy1701

    @nerdy1701

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chrisdale5443 Fair enough. Pretty cool nonetheless.

  • @moniquem783
    @moniquem783 Жыл бұрын

    Really fascinating! I wonder what an in between process would be like. Didn’t they make sugar cones because that somehow separated out the molasses? I’d love to try that one day. I’m all for chopping things in the food processor though! Btw, don’t they do a bleaching step in commercial processing? Surely that accounts for the colour difference. The colour of yours looks about the same as unbleached cane sugar (we only have cane sugar here so I’ve never seen unbleached beet sugar to compare). I have some sugar beet seeds and plan to try processing my own soon. Not sure I want to do your washing setup. That looked nightmareish. Maybe I’ll end up growing canes instead so I don’t have to deal with the beetiness.

  • @kongkunin
    @kongkunin Жыл бұрын

    This was great! Glad to see continued recovery from the fire!

  • @Deveyus
    @Deveyus Жыл бұрын

    So, a good centrifuge is worth the effort to build for a lot of reasons. The diameter of the spinning apparatus is actually critical for determining the amount of force you can place in the contents at a given speed. Centrifuges and ball mills are simple enough devices that you can build them yourself for most scales, but are actually super useful and awesome things to have.

  • @michaelpalmer4387
    @michaelpalmer4387 Жыл бұрын

    East Anglia in the UK is a big sugar beet growing area. I've regularly driven past Wissington, Europe's largest sugar beet processing plant. Lit up at night it looks like something out of Blade Runner. I've also worked in Bury St Edmunds where British Sugar has facilities with big chimneys for the steam. It occasionally smelled like baked potatoes. In the UK sugar beet factories tend to work 24 hours a day between September & March(?). That includes Christmas Day. Hard to believe sugar beet & beetroot are virtually the same plant (much like the brassicas).

  • @mavor101
    @mavor101 Жыл бұрын

    Sugarcane based sweets taste great. The extra minor flavoring especially when you are using a more raw unpurified source of sugarcane sugar is wonderful in a ton of recipes. It's such a shame that big business focuses directly on cheap processed sugar instead, though.

  • @brianjones9780

    @brianjones9780

    Жыл бұрын

    I personally don't mind since it drives my resident state's economy here in Idaho. my great grandpa worked in the sugarbeet factory and retired well from it. it's good in my opinion that arable land here in a colder temperate zone can still be used for making sugar. sugarcane is typically only viable in subtropics or tropics, so it's a big thing for us here in Idaho. consider also that if a homesteader in the temperate US wants to make sugar themselves they need to grow sugarbeet and not cane and use a process like in the video, it's the option we have here up north and it works pretty well

  • @a2e5

    @a2e5

    Жыл бұрын

    @@brianjones9780 and you can always add cane molasses to beet sugar. (heard that beet molasses taste awful) the sucrose is the same anyways.

  • @ArmchairDeity
    @ArmchairDeity Жыл бұрын

    Dude that was really awesome… I very much enjoyed this departure from the channel norm! Very well done!!

  • @DeathlordSlavik
    @DeathlordSlavik Жыл бұрын

    I used to live close to one of the processing plants back when I lived in Idaho so sugar beets are the first thing I think of when it comes to sugar.

  • @irissupercoolsy

    @irissupercoolsy

    Жыл бұрын

    same!! there was one in Belgium in the town of 6000 people I lived in growing up

  • @DeathlordSlavik

    @DeathlordSlavik

    Жыл бұрын

    @@irissupercoolsy They have a unique smell don't they always seems stronger in the mornings especially if the weather conditions are right to cause fog.

  • @irissupercoolsy

    @irissupercoolsy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DeathlordSlavik yes!!! haha. One month a year the entire town would stink

  • @currentliveoccupant

    @currentliveoccupant

    Жыл бұрын

    Where at? I worked at the one in Nyssa 30 years ago and my dad worked at it and the one that’s around Nampa or Caldwell right off the freeway.

  • @DeathlordSlavik

    @DeathlordSlavik

    Жыл бұрын

    @@currentliveoccupant The main one I think of is when I lived in Payette the smell from the one in Ontario would drift over in the mornings. Of course I also lived in Fruitland and Caldwell at different times afterwords so I still would regularly smell the sugar beets.

  • @BenjaminKlahn
    @BenjaminKlahn Жыл бұрын

    It doesn't come from beets?

  • @ShadowHauk
    @ShadowHauk Жыл бұрын

    Been around sugar beets most of my life. The beet flavor and other impurities are removed with milk of lime & CO2 reaction. They make the lime milk at the refinery, add it to the liquid, then pump CO2 through it. The impurities precipitate out with the lime. That leaves a liquid that's clean enough to start cooking down, etc. Michigan sugar is featured in a pretty decent video on here that details the process. This is the Bay City plant. Picking up a friend who works there is the closest I've been to that plant but I've been inside both the Sebewaing and Caro plants. I grew up in Caro and have delivered several hundred, if not thousands of loads of beets between the two plants, most of them at Sebewaing though. Michigan Sugar is pretty good about educating anyone who's interested about how the whole process works.

  • @masterricon
    @masterricon Жыл бұрын

    This style of video is what I originally thought the channel was when going to be when I subscribed ~2 years ago. I've really enjoyed the channel thus far, but this seems like a very natural progression for the channel and should help with expanding topics! Great video!

  • @jmonsted
    @jmonsted Жыл бұрын

    HFCS being "most famous" is a very american phenomenon. I don't know of any other country that uses it in significant volumes, other than maybe in products imported from the US. Canada maybe?

  • @tookitogo

    @tookitogo

    Жыл бұрын

    The only reason US food manufacturers use it is because it’s dirt cheap there. And the only reason HFCS is so cheap there is because the corn used to make it is highly subsidized. :(

  • @cideway
    @cideway Жыл бұрын

    Lived in Europe for a couple years in my 20s and found sugar tasted weird there. Having grown up on cane sugar only, discovering beet sugar was a shock.

  • @Milites98
    @Milites98 Жыл бұрын

    Great video Andy!! Love to see you back at it. Also super cool to know that the primitive method was still decent!

  • @irissupercoolsy
    @irissupercoolsy Жыл бұрын

    the process is actually so cool to see and it's a bit different from what I thought!

  • @evilbaron
    @evilbaron Жыл бұрын

    This title is a bit more clickbaity than i like. Because nearly All of our sugar here in Europe (Germany for me) comes from Sugarbeets. And many many people know that, for sure. Oh, and also "we" celebrate the Sugar Festival in the Town Zeitz, called "Zeitzer Zuckerfest".

  • @AK_Ray
    @AK_Ray Жыл бұрын

    FACT: bears eat beets.

  • @JimmyTownmouse
    @JimmyTownmouse Жыл бұрын

    I like how the he introduces the topic by telling us how we probably have misconceptions about where our sugar comes from and then shows us some red beets and says that’s where it comes from.

  • @dawnelder9046
    @dawnelder9046 Жыл бұрын

    Sugar beets really made headway during the Second World War. My friends grandfather worked at a sugar beet factory in Canada during this time. They also stated growing them in England because of the blockades. The rationing worked out to 8 oz per person per week. That is the recommended limit for sugar consumption now. Health improved very much during the war. Especially in England. Before the war, thanks to the depression, many people were living on a high sugar, plant based diet. Diabetes was quite high. With rationing, if you could not afford the meats, eggs and dairy rations you got them for free. They knew they needed every worker and they needed a healthy work force. This was a short lived substity as everyone was soon employed. Sugar was used in preserving, so not much was left over for sweets. Most people still preserved back then. Especially in Canada. I grew up cooking from the Victory Cookbook from New Brunswick Canada. Also, the Canadian Cook book. Both use way less sugar than you would use in modern recipes from Canada. Also more blackstrap as a replacement. I have noticed modern America Cook books use even more sugar than Canadian recipies. I don't have any old American cook books, but assume that once they entered the war, the recipies reflected the rationing.

  • @subliminalvibes
    @subliminalvibes Жыл бұрын

    Here in Australia we still use sugar cane.

  • @wave1090

    @wave1090

    Жыл бұрын

    In Latin America too

  • @rdizzy1

    @rdizzy1

    Жыл бұрын

    I''m betting eventually they will switch to sugar beets as well, they require roughly 25% less water per measurement of sugar, compared to sugar cane.

  • @robertbackhaus8911

    @robertbackhaus8911

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rdizzy1 Sugar cane is generally grown in places where, if anything, you get too much rain for other crops. Try to grow sugar beets around here and most years they would just rot in the ground. To the south of where I am there are areas where they irrigate sugar cane crops, but in those places there is a limitless amount of ground water or river flows to tap.

  • @rdizzy1

    @rdizzy1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robertbackhaus8911 Well, eventually most places will have major issues with fresh water shortages, thus they will want to save it where they can.

  • @RealAndySkibba
    @RealAndySkibba Жыл бұрын

    Yum. New content smell. Dwight Schrute approves this video.

  • @dhawthorne1634
    @dhawthorne1634 Жыл бұрын

    You can clean it up with a re-crystallization. Dissolve 3 parts sugar to 1 part water over low heat. Allow it to cool then drop in a few grains of already processed sugar to act as seed crystals. Once you get some larger crystals, break them up coarse and rinse with ethanol that is as cold as you can get it (think 190 proof Everclear that has been in a chest freezer on it's lowest setting). Ice water is another option, but it dissolves sugar much more readily than ethanol, resulting in higher losses. Cold is the key, either way, as it slows the dissolution.

  • @ionwhy2561

    @ionwhy2561

    Жыл бұрын

    Someone has taken an organic chemistry 🧪 class

  • @dannyx1991
    @dannyx1991 Жыл бұрын

    That was actually a lot more entertaining than I thought. Good stuff man.

  • @billynomates920
    @billynomates920 Жыл бұрын

    not sugar cane or sugar beet? oh, i've been clickbaited. oh well, i'm here now. good job!

  • @PyrusFlameborn
    @PyrusFlameborn Жыл бұрын

    In Europe we use sugarbeats for our sugar because during the Napoleonic Wars the British blockaded mainland Europe preventing access to the American colonies where sugarcane was grown. So we switched to sugar beets. When the war was over and the blockade lifted we kept using sugar beets because we already had those production chains setup and never switched back to sugar cane. We also don't use corn syrup here, that's a very American thing.

  • @lemmonsinmyeyes
    @lemmonsinmyeyes Жыл бұрын

    very cool, I've been curious about sugar beets for a long time, thanks for the info!

  • @vukasinjovancevic3856
    @vukasinjovancevic3856 Жыл бұрын

    Why isn't this on the history channel

  • @albanianvalor

    @albanianvalor

    Жыл бұрын

    Because they care more about aliens that they don’t even know if they’re real

  • @shrekfanboy1734

    @shrekfanboy1734

    Жыл бұрын

    Cause it isnt history

  • @razorsaber2287

    @razorsaber2287

    Жыл бұрын

    Cause the history channel sux

  • @metalface8515

    @metalface8515

    Жыл бұрын

    Because Andy is a legend and History Channel isn't as cool as him. Actually.

  • @jacobkoster3808

    @jacobkoster3808

    Жыл бұрын

    They actually tried to make a tv show based on this on the food network and it didn’t pan out

  • @trogdor8764
    @trogdor8764 Жыл бұрын

    Please be very careful with that drill press. Especially when you're using it for something it wasn't designed for, take some time to really think about what might happen when it starts spinning. You can hurt yourself really easily with it. Also, avoid wearing loose clothing that might get caught and pull you in. That includes long sleeves, hood strings, etc.

  • @williamwoolcock
    @williamwoolcock Жыл бұрын

    My father ran a highway construction business. He paved I75 thru Flint, Michigan. One night, after a large section of concrete was poured a bunch of local kids gathered up the sugar beets that had fallen off trucks. They threw the beets into the wet concrete. The next morning we had to take jack hammers to remove the sugar beets, them patch in the holes. They make great baseballs, but tend to explode when the bat hits them. Don't follow too close behind a sugar beet truck.

  • @justinle1085
    @justinle1085 Жыл бұрын

    A really well made video. Loved learning about the history

  • @araylaurence6220
    @araylaurence6220 Жыл бұрын

    it doesn't come from sugar mines in easter island? shame

  • @tetepeb
    @tetepeb Жыл бұрын

    Really bugs me that you showed Beetroots and a pack of white sugar giving the impression that the white sugar comes from Beetroots, you can probably make sugar from Beetroots but you make it from Sugar Beets like you do later in the video. Makes the whole idea of the video seem like a clickbait.

  • @tookitogo

    @tookitogo

    Жыл бұрын

    Totally agree.

  • @erikzorger3311
    @erikzorger3311 Жыл бұрын

    before dehydration you should try mixing in a little Irish moss. it is used in brewing to make sediments settle. also you can pour the acid solution that you use to prevent oxidation into the food processor so it doesn't oxidize in the container while you are cutting it up.

  • @DobleWhiteAndStabley
    @DobleWhiteAndStabley Жыл бұрын

    Bro, having the primitive vids, alongside modern diy is pretty refreshing. Love it!

  • @DeGuerre
    @DeGuerre Жыл бұрын

    This is probably more my problem, but I bristled every time I saw the word "separation" misspelled on screen.

  • @tookitogo

    @tookitogo

    Жыл бұрын

    You weren’t alone. Plus “oxidization” instead of “oxidation”. (Yes, I know the first is also accepted at this point, but…)

  • @LanceMcCarthy
    @LanceMcCarthy Жыл бұрын

    I really enjoyed this new format/approach

  • @ElizabethGreene
    @ElizabethGreene Жыл бұрын

    When you're at the grey cloudy solution stage you might try using diatomaceous earth filtration. That's very handy for chemistry work where you can't get a solution clear, and food grade diatomaceous earth isn't expensive. Use a buchner funnel, and vacuum adapter. Put in filter paper, wet the filter paper with water, add a thin layer of diatomaceous earth, wet that and make sure it fully covers the bottom of the filter, add another layer of filter paper on top, wet that, and it's ready to use. It is FANTASTIC for catching the solids in solutions and leaving behind the material (in your case sugar) that's in solution. Orders of magnitude better than your brita filter.

  • @MissScarletTanager
    @MissScarletTanager Жыл бұрын

    If I recall, the whiteness from commercial sugar comes from processing through chemicals or bone char to further remove impurities.

  • @supertinnietank
    @supertinnietank Жыл бұрын

    Like the mix of "modern" and "primitive replication of modern". Some more attention to and description of the primitive process would have been good, cause it's been quite a while since I saw the previous sugary episodes so a recap would've been nice. Using primitive techniques to achieve modern (ish) results is one of my favorite thins to think about and I would love to see more of that.

  • @davesatxify
    @davesatxify Жыл бұрын

    I enjoy your productions. your presentation is very.. real and quite amusing, usually deliberately... sardonic humor rocks

  • @pjubo
    @pjubo Жыл бұрын

    please do more of this, loved this video!

  • @marcusfridh8489
    @marcusfridh8489 Жыл бұрын

    I live in the part of Sweden where the most sugar beets are cultivated. Southern Sweden, Scania, the city of Landskrona

  • @cvspvr
    @cvspvr Жыл бұрын

    the process of cycling water over the beets is used often in chemistry. it's called soxhlet extraction. you can pretty easily buy the glassware that does this