Fifthly, Essential Oils differ from one another in point of fluidity. Some are as thin and as fluid as Spirit of Wine: of this number is the Essential Oil of Turpentine. Others, again, are thick, and even congeal as they cool: such, for instance, is the Oil of Roses. In distilling Oils of this latter sort, care must be taken that the spout of the alembic head do not grow too cold, but be kept always in such a degree of warmth as may prevent the Oil from fixing in it, and stopping it up; which would interrupt the distillation, and might also occasion some other more considerable inconveniencies, of which we shall take notice presently.
From what hath been said it appears, that the distillation of Essential Oils cannot be regulated by any one general rule; but that the manner of operating must be a little varied, according to the nature of the Oil to be distilled, and to that of the vegetable from which it is to be drawn.
The time of day fittest to gather plants for this distillation is the morning before sun-rise; because the coolness of the night hath shut all their pores, and concentrated their odour: whereas in the evening, after the plants have been exposed all day to the heat of the sun, their odorous principle is in a great measure dissipated, and they are left almost quite exhausted of it. Now, the more of the odorous principle the plants contain, the more Essential Oil will they yield, and the more virtue will that Oil have.
Plants fresh gathered, and as yet full of moisture, do not yield so much Oil in distillation as they do when dried; because the oily particles in a very moist plant are more diffused, and even separated from each other, by the interposition of the aqueous parts: whence it comes to pass that, in distillation, they ascend in a state of separation from each other; so that being dispersed through the water they give it a milky colour, like that of an emulsion; and cannot unite together but in small quantities, which hinders their being easily separated from the water.
This inconvenience doth not happen, or at least is considerably less, when the greatest part of the humidity of the plant is evaporated by desiccation: for the oily particles, being thus delivered from the intervening aqueous parts, which kept them separated from each other, are brought nearer together, unite, and form little visible globules of Oil, which easily emerge from the water employed in the distillation. But, in drying plants from which the Essential Oil is to be extracted, great care must be taken that they be neither exposed to the sun, nor laid in a warm place; because the heat would carry off part of their odour, and even, from some plants, a pretty considerable quantity of their Essential Oil.
Plants of a loose texture, that easily give out their Essential Oils, need not be comminuted, or macerated in water with Salt. But this method must unavoidably be taken with such as are hard, and do not readily part with their Oil. Woods, barks, roots, for instance, must be first rasped, then set to macerate in water impregnated with Salt, as before directed; and this sometimes for several weeks before they be distilled.
On this occasion Salt procures three different advantages. In the first place, it prevents the matters, that must stand in maceration for some time, from running into fermentation: an inconvenience that would considerably diminish the quantity of Essential Oil, or perhaps rob us of the whole, by converting it into an Ardent Spirit, if the fermentation were spirituous; or into a Volatile Alkali, if it went on to the last stage, and as far as putrefaction. In the next place, it acuates the water, and renders it more capable of penetrating and properly dividing, during the maceration, the texture of the plant which requires to be thus prepared. Lastly, it adds a little to the heat of the boiling water, and so promotes the ascent of the heaviest Oils.
Nevertheless, when you find it necessary, for the reasons assigned above, to mix Salt with the water to be employed in distilling your Essential Oil, you must be cautious of putting in too much. You will indeed obtain, by means thereof, much more Oil than if you distilled it without Salt: but, as a great quantity of Salt will make the water acquire a much greater degree of heat than that of pure boiling water, a good deal of the heavy Oil of the vegetable will be raised by such a heat, mix with the Essential Oil, deprave it, and make it like those that are adulterated with a mixture of some heterogeneous Oil, as will be afterwards shewn.
When every thing is prepared for distillation, it is proper, as directed in the process, to apply at once a flaming fire, brisk enough to make the liquor boil immediately: for, if the water be kept long heating before it be made to boil, the Essential Oil, which cannot rise without the heat of boiling water, will, by a less degree of heat, be only agitated, dashed about every way, and churned as it were; by which means it will be divided into very minute particles, and dispersed in the water, which will thence acquire a milky colour: and consequently we shall fall into the inconvenience that was pointed out above, as happening when we distil plants without having dried them, and while they are loaded with all the moisture and sap that was in them when fresh gathered.
When the water in the cucurbit boils, it will be known by the noise that boiling water usually makes, which is produced by the numerous bubbles that rise and burst on its surface. The spout of the alembic is then so hot, that a man cannot lay his finger on it, without such a sensation of burning heat as is not to be endured. With this degree of heat the water distils in drops, which succeed each other so fast, that they seem to form a continued small stream; and this water is replete with much Essential Oil.