Pressing Bag, 1/2 Gallon (Pack of Two)

$36.00

(Pressing Cloth) High Tensile pressing bag for use with the 1/2 Gallon Tincture Press.  Also may be used for hand pressing tinctures or juice, although the best yields will be obtained by using the 1/2 gallon press.  These bags are made of specially designed filter fabric, non-reactive food grade polypropylene cloth, super duper sturdy, will last for scores of pressings.  Pressing bag measures 12 inches by 12 inches laid flat, and opens up to fill a 6 inch diameter vessel with room to spare.

Technical Data:

50 CFM (Cubic feet airflow per minute) rated

Approximately 20 micron gap between fibres

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  1. Question

    Michael Fuhrmann

    How best to clean bag after pressing? How many pressings can a bag do before it needs replacing?

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  2. Question

    kris10.ann.smith

    Hi Richo,

    While pressing a fresh echinacea root & flower/leaf glycerite tonight in the press with this bag, it still felt quite heavy and my yield was smaller than I expected (3 cups finished). There was around 1/2 gallon in the bag and I pressed slowly. Is that just the nature of pressing a glycerite? I wondered if I should have used cheesecloth instead. Thank you very much!

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    • One person found this helpful
      Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      hi kris10.ann, thank you for writing. glycerine is thick and i do think you’re right, the cheesecloth should work better, and warm the whole thing up before pressing–cold glycerin is extra thick. i generally use the pressing bags for dry herb tinctures and opt for the cheesecloth with oils and fresh herb glycerites. I suppose you pulled everything apart and kneaded the marc, right? I do that anyway with every pressing to help prohibit the whole thing from getting stuck and to optimize yields. Another thing to consider is to use the pressing block and just press less with each pressing–do a quart instead of a half gallon–that will increase surface area to mass ratio which helps. richo

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    • kris10.ann.smith

      Very helpful as always. Thank you! I didn’t think to warm it up before straining, and I’m up in Ohio, so that definitely would have helped. I’ll remember for next time! I didn’t knead the marc. Can you explain that? Do you do that after a first pressing?

      Thank you again. I really love supporting your business, not just because of the quality, but because of how generous you are with your help before and after purchases.

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      hi kris10ann, no prob, my pleasure. The kneading thing is demo’d in the oldest youtube tincture pressing, the one where i look. . . youngest. anyhow in short you press until the point of diminishing returns, then let the press down and take the pan out and pull out the bag with the semi-dry marc in it and work everything around in there, then repack into the press and you’ll get another yield of tincture. This works because when pressing, the outer layer of the marc becomes quite dry and the inner portion stays quite wet. So you mix it up and repress. This also helps keep the press from getting stuck, because the reason it gets stuck is the bag rides up around the plunger. Once that starts to happen, it is a good idea to bring it down and repack. richo

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  3. Question

    Colleen Hamson

    Do you have bags that are any smaller than 1/2 gallon?

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  4. Question

    Lydia

    How do you clean the pressing bag? Especially thinking of cleaning the bag after an herbal oil pressing. Does it make sense to have one bag for pressing oils and a different one for tincture & succus? Thanks

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    • One person found this helpful
      Diana

      Diana

      Hello Lydia,
      Once you use a bag for oils, it is an oil bag forever! For standard tinctures, empty out the marc and shake the bag, then wash by machine or by hand. Don’t use soap. Remember that you can just use 4 layers of cheesecloth to press out your oils. Cheesecloth really works better for oils than the pressing bag, and can be discarded after use.
      Richo

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