Thought Iād post my attempt at Whiterastaās tek, as the original is a bit light on detailsā¦
In summary, I performed this just after doing a standard Manske, with the aim of comparing yields. I did this tek in slow-time, leaving days between steps, because I had other stuff to do too ;-)
1. Powdered 100g Syrian rue seeds, and mixed with 200 ml Ethanol (95%) with ~0.5 tsp citric acid. Capped jar and let stand for 4 days. Reddish-brown liquid with turquoise sheen in daylight.
2. Strained using an AeroPress with metal disk, and washed solids with 40% ethanol (vodka) to bring total volume of liquid to 330 ml.
3. Ran this thru paper filter twice, which stained very red. Liquid lighter in colour but would probably need 20 attempts to clean completelyā¦didnāt bother with further attempts.
4. Simmered for a few minutes, watching carefully, until alcohol smell disappeared completely. Volume now ~80ml. Added 150ml distilled water to loosen up.
5. Filtered this 5x through cotton wool (also in AeroPress) but still wasnāt crystal clear.
6. Chilled overnight to see if any sediment fell out, but it didnāt.
7. Based with ~25ml janitorial ammonia, to give pH 11. Instant precipitation. Here I tried an experiment: I poured this into a sep funnel I have, and stood it up in the fridge, and left it for about a week. I wanted to see if I could run off the sediment from beneath the liquid: it sorta worked, but the liquid just formed a kind of bore-hole through the sediment, so I got a first rush of sediment, followed by clear liquid, as the rest stayed caked inside the funnel. So, transferred everything to beaker, and let settle again.
8. Another attempt to catch the sediment: placed beaker in freezer on top of pre-cooled metal block for ~30 mins. This worked better, and the bottom of the beaker was frozen solid, so I could pour off liquid and ice-crystals from the top, before adding fresh water, to wash. Washed/froze 3x.
9. After the final washing, I didnāt add any extra water, just ~0.25 tsp citric acid to the wet harmala mix (~50ml) to redissolve harmalas as bright red citrate. Chilled overnight and a little black sediment fell out, which was discarded.
10. Mixed with 0.5 tsp CaOH. Nothing much happened, until I started to heat in water-bath, when precipitates started to form. Heated to about 60C, and pH showed 6-7.
11. Chilled overnight, and re-checked pH, which was now 8, oops! Added a pinch of citric to get pH back to 6-7, before filtering. Quite a bit of tan-coloured sediment. Filtered solution now a clear, bright red.
12. Dried in low oven (85C) for about an hour, yielding 1.3g rust-coloured harmalas citrate. With the earlier Manske extraction, I got about 3.3g freebase, but that was not perfectly pale, so probably not 100% pure.
Conclusion: I think Iāll persevere with Whiterastaās tek. Itās a lot less messy, and you donāt have big volumes of water and sludge to deal with, which means I should be able to start with a larger amount of seeds. More finesse needed for steps 8 thru 11.
āI sometimes marvel at how far Iāve come - blissful, even, in the knowledge that I am slowly becoming a well-evolved human being - only to have the illusion shattered by an episode of bad behaviour that contradicts the new and reinforces the old. At these junctures of self-reflection, I ask the question: āare all my years of hard work unraveling before my eyes, or am I just having an episode?ā For the sake of personal growth and the pursuit of equanimity, I choose the latter and accept that, on this journey of evolution, I may not encounter just one bad day, but a group of many.ā
ā B.G. Bowers
ą„