Recently the neighbors fruit tree went unpicked and dropped mostly to the ground. I made pie and whatnot but all the bruised fruit was going fast. Vino it is, I decided.
Cooked it all up. The recipes say don't heat it or the pectin will cloud your product, but i don't care, and the ground-scores needed to be sanitized.
Poured the whole mess into a cloth-lined colander... About half the juice went through, and the rest was coming out one drop at a time. Grabbed the cloth, and started twisting and pressing: great success! Except for the burning fingers and leaking pulp.
So, the idea is a low-cost, ho-made juice press. It is a cloth bag open at one end and with stout ears sewn on. There is a simple frame with a pan or funnel under, a fixed hook, and a crank handle with a rotating hook.
The bag would be hung from the hooks, by the ears. The goods are poured in, and after a brief gravity session the top of the bag is folded over and wringing commences.-- afinehowdoyoudo, Oct 17 2011 I think it's somewhat baked... http://www.gracieac...oreitem.asp?r=74903 [xandram, Oct 17 2011] I have done this myself before, but don't know if the actual product is baked!-- xandram, Oct 17 2011 I applaud giving sex workers who want to get out of the business new marketable skills in mechanical engineering, but isn't this a bit specific?-- jutta, Oct 17 2011 It is, and even more worrying, the source of the // stout ears sewn on // is not stated. Will they have to use their own ears ?
// hung from the hooks, by the ears //
Is this in some way related to pole dancing ?-- 8th of 7, Oct 17 2011 Let go of my ears dammit, I know what I'm doing...-- 2 fries shy of a happy meal, Oct 17 2011 random, halfbakery