Just to clear things up:
It was a mistake of me to write in the first tech, that the water has to be at a certain temp to properly coagulate together and form the foam.
I was only halfay correct, IT is true that you cannot add the egg while your brew is too hot. This is because the hot water INSTANTLY cooks your egg, and it is not able to mix in with the tannins well enough. You DO NOT want a cooked egg..
But i was wrong when i said it should be slighly warm at least before adding. In reality, it doesnt matter how cold your brew is when you add the egg, in fact you do want it cool/room temperature, to AVOID the instant coagulation of the egg.
So just add the white of one egg, at any point once your washes are all combined into one pot, as long as the water is cooled down, and you still have a pot or half pot of water (unreduced). Then you stir your eggwhite in, then my personal preferance is to SHOCKK it with very high intense boil. This causes the exact film you want, which rather than being solid chunks of egg, is a foamy pink purple goop, that is easily removed. If you cook the egg it is still effective, just that not as many tannins are trapped.
This is another important step not in the original:
This is in response to people whos brews didnt come out clear:
If you add the egg and remove the goop and once you reduce, and your tea is still murky:
Did you let it settle in the fridge overnight? if you let it settle overnight in a glass container, the tannins and remaining egg will stick to the sides, then you pour off.
Or, if there is still murk, simply run your tea through a coffee filter. I tie a rubber band around a filter and have it concaving down. I pour the tea in and let it sit, it goes slow, but it has never not all gone through, and this has never failed to turn even the nastiest brews in to pure red koolaid looking tea.
Normally if you ran a murky brew through a coffee filter it would clogg it up, but if you did the eggwhite tech and you still have crud, for whatever reason the stuff goes through the filter. I think its because the eggwhite tannin chunks are so big and easy to separate from the water, that the water just goes right through them and into the collection container while all of the solids are retained in the filter. The stuff that is left in the filter resembles shiny red plastic and is very wierd.
The way i do it is settle in the fridge overnight, pour off the good clean stuff, and then whatever crud and tiny amount of liquid is left at the bottom, i run through a filter. It is possible and easy to remove every last single solid, for a brew that is very tastless and packs a mean punch.
Cheers guys best of luck
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