UPDATE:
tonight i just started to re acidify half of my soup stock. i used HCL acid and boiled on a "stainless pan" from a thrift store.
At first I thought it was gonna be just like the first time i was doing it with acetic acid.
then when i went past 50% reduction i noticed sandy sticky kind of blobs on the boiling solution. At first I thought there was some powdered bark in there because thats what it initially looked like to me.
color is dark, texture like powdered bark. I pressed it between my fingers and rubbed it, it felt like fine charcoal.
I have 2 guesses why this happened (litmus paper indicated 2-4 ph level):
1.The very small pot handle welding (size of a small pencil eraser at the end of a pencil) which i suspect was aluminum; reacted to the acid on the solution and made this black charcoal like semi sticky residue.
OR
2. due to the acidity of the solution, tannins and other impurities fell out of the solution.
I tested the black charcoal like semi sticky residue by putting it on another container with some water in the microwave.
I did it 3 times and i put fresh slightly acidic water every time i put it on the microwave.
Each time the goo melted a bit; but not enough to completely melt.
About 20% of the solid mass melts into the acid water every time i did this. I did this 3 times.
I would assume that this goo has already saturated the water because when i put allot of water on the container, it completely melted back into the liquid.
Any educated guesses about what black charcoal like semi sticky residue is?
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