Hey guys, I'm not sure where I ran across this but I've found it invaluable when starting with new flavors (note that you can change the flavor source at the top). What's more, it lists several vendors that I've never even heard of. The flavor lists also look fairly comprehensive, so it could be useful for those making apps etc.
Enjoy, and if anyone knows the originators do tell so they can get the props they deserve.
Happy mixing!
Wow, that is amazing.
A quick glance and I found a couple of flavors missing (FW Watermelon, Pecan, and Wild Cherry)... but overall, an invaluable resource.
Thank you for finding that and sharing it with us.
I'm brainfarting. Is there any way to save that to one's own google drive?
I'm not really sure you can to be honest. It is a published sheet (hence the /pub which makes it simple html), not a public sheet. You could always rip it of course (plenty of apps). Don't think of it as a Google doc, think of it as a web site.
[Edit] - Ok, so I'm not familiar with Google Drive but &output works. Here is an xls file of the sheet. Obviously Excel can open it and Google drive should be able to import that somehow. If the conversation makes it ugly, again, I'd go back to saying you should just rip it and place it in a handy zip.
Are these recommended %'s to use when mixing?
Yes, I use them as starting points as everyone's taste is different. So if you have a new flavor and this chart says 6%, mix up a 5ml batch at 6% and try it out. It should turn out quite agreeable. If you want it stronger, bump it to 8% next batch. If weaker, drop to 4%. Repeat to find your personal perfection. :)
Tables like these GREATLY reduce waste when starting out with new flavors. In the past, you'd mix up like 10 tiny batches from 3%-20% and try each one (which is how they arrived at these numbers).
Note: the yellow column is that average of all the various tester's opinions. You can also view the sheets for other flavor vendors with the links at the top.