Brewing Colloidal Silver
Brewing Colloidal Silver
Brewing Colloidal Silver
Please read this whole manual (all two pages!) before using or even plugging in the
brewer.
An important word of caution here: When this unit is set up and turned on, if you were to
touch both metal tips on the alligator clips, you could receive a nasty shock. Do not allow
children or anyone unfamiliar with this unit to touch it when it is on. This is high enough
voltage to hurt (55 VDC). In spite of the on/off indicator light on the unit, until you are familiar
with this unit and have brewed several batches, don’t even plug it in until everything is set up
and ready for brewing. This unit is not “idiot proof” nor “user friendly”. If you don’t follow
these basic precautions, you CAN receive a nasty zap.
I also need to say this: If you brew the CS too long, you will still have good, effective CS, but
it will likely not be crystal clear (probably yellow, gold or cloudy), and it will have a stronger
taste. The longer you brew it, the darker the color and the stronger the taste. You will use up
your silver wire much quicker, though. It’s also OK to brew it for a shorter-than-suggested
time and still end up with good CS, though you may need to ingest more of it (though not
necessarily). If you are drinking it freely and using it in cooking, juice, coffee, etc., you can
brew it for 1/2 to 3/4 of the suggested brewing times and still receive the benefit CS
provides.
If you blow the fuse, the indicator light won’t go on. If you do blow the fuse (by touching the
silver wires to each other while the device is on, or shorting the red alligator clip to
something else), you will need a 125 to 250 volt, 500 milliamp fuse as a replacement. (extra
fuses are included with this brewer.) Radio Shack (The Source) or computer/electronics
repair shop may have them, or contact us. Even many hardware stores have them. Take
your old one in to show them its size (it’s 20 mm long). I can show you places on the internet
to order them. If you are careful you should never need to replace the fuse.
I want to say something about steam-distilled water. If you find water in a store that says
“steam distilled” water, it is actually steam-distilled water. If it merely says “distilled” water, it
is not necessarily steam-distilled water. The word, “distilled” can legally be used to describe
any type of water treatment whatsoever, from reverse osmosis to filtering it through a paper
napkin. For pure, clear, good CS-brewing water, it needs to be steam-distilled water. If you
brew CS from any other type of water, it will not be clear, but cloudy/murky, and the brewing
instructions in this manual will not apply. If you cannot find steam-distilled water, I have
added brewing recommendations for non-steam distilled water to the end of this manual.
To set up, fill your 1-gallon jar (wide-mouth, glass or clear plastic ‘pickle’ jar) with CS starter
and distilled water (one quart/liter CS, 3 quarts/liters distilled water). If you have no CS to
The alligator clips don’t hook on to the sides of the wires, but onto the ends, like alligators
trying to bite off the ends of the wires with their front teeth. If you discover the wires resisting
hanging straight down, twist the alligator clips in one direction or the other (like you were
screwing or unscrewing the alligator clip) until they make the wires start to angle the other
way and hang straight down. Or just bend the wires until they hang straight. I say “straight”,
but actually, you can curve them a bit so that they lean towards the inside of the glass jar
wall away from each other, hugging the inside of the jar walls. The idea here is to make the
wires be as far apart from each other as the jar walls will allow. It’s ok if the wires actually
touch the jar walls. By straight down, I don’t mean that the wires need to be pencil-straight, I
only mean that they should point down towards the jar bottom instead of angling sideways.
Make sure everything is all hooked up and ready before you plug in and turn on the
power.
If you have no CS to use as starter, allow to brew for 2-1/2 to 3 hours, checking on it every
15 minutes. If the water at anytime becomes cloudy or yellow tinged, stop and notice how
long it took to reach that point. That will be your optimum brewing time without starter, using
the water that is available to you. If it is still crystal clear after 3 hours, you can brew it more,
checking it every 30 minutes, or taste it. If it has any bitter or metallic taste, it is done. If it
becomes yellow or cloudy, stop and remember how long it took to get yellow/cloudy, then
deduct 10 minutes from the time it took to get yellow cloudy. That will be your optimal
brewing time. If you brew it 5 hours with no change, it means you have very pure water
(that’s good!). If you stop brewing at 5 hours, even though it is still crystal clear, don’t worry,
you have good CS. It is certainly at least 10 ppm (which is all you need).
Use some of that CS (yellow or not) as starter for the next batch (drink the rest), and brew it
1 hour. If that batch turns yellow, reduce the brewing time each following batch by 10
minutes until you find the right time for brewing CS with the particular quality of water that
you have. Then you will know that the previous brewing time (before it became yellow) is
the longest you can brew and still get clear CS. Whatever color CS you get, it is not
dangerous or ineffective. You may want to dilute it for taste, but don’t throw it away!
OK, after you have set it up and turned it on, here is what to expect:
After a few minutes you may observe tiny bubbles rise from one or both of the wires, while a
very fine silver mist may begin to float off the other. This will take longer, up to half an hour
At the end of the brewing time, turn off the device (and unplug it) and unhook the alligator
clips from the wires. Make sure you have turned off/unplugged the device before you
unhook the alligator clips. Put a coffee filter into a funnel or coffee filter holder from a
coffee brewer (if you decide to bother to strain it), pour your CS through it into a clean jar,
and you’ve done it! If you very gently stir the batch during the brewing, every 30 minutes or
so, the fuzz will be much less, and there will be less “sludge” in the water. (I don’t personally
bother.) If you do stir it, turn it off before stirring to prevent the wires from accidentally
touching each other and blowing the fuse. You can stir it with a plastic, wood or even metal
utensil (make sure it is clean). Generally, stirring is only needed if your water is not very
pure.
When you are making clear CS, your silver wires will also last the longest. If you forget while
brewing and don’t turn it off, you can completely dissolve the silver wire (a very expensive
batch of CS) and your CS will look like coffee. (I’ve done it several times. I just super diluted
it and my family and I drank it anyway.) Having some kind of alarm to remind you to shut it
Now, after having suggested the above brewing times, the reality is that your experience
may be different because of the quality of your water. If your water has minerals or other
stuff in it (such as is the case with well, spring, filtered, reverse osmosis or tap water), you
will need to brew a much shorter period than I suggested. If you end up with cloudy, yellow
or gold or darker CS, you will need to experiment with brewing times until you accomplish
clear CS. If you are using any other water but Steam Distilled water, you don’t need any CS
starter, the minerals in the water will be starter enough.
Using any other type of water, the process is simple: No starter and brew for 10-15 minutes.
Remember that over-brewing with non-steam distilled water uses up your silver wire much,
much faster (up to 5X or more faster). Avoid using chlorinated water. Contact me with any
questions.