Just take the bottles of templaq you have and throw them in the trash. The best way to anneal, without using digital pyrometers capable of measuring 500+ data points per second, is to go by color only. Make the room pitch black and anneal a piece until you see a faint, even, dark red glow. Make sure the color is even around the brass, if not adjust your brass turning method or reposition your coil in an induction setup. This will give you nice evenly annealed brass and will assure that you are miles away from over annealing them. When in doubt, underannealing is always better than over annealing. Honestly, people make a big deal about over annealing brass but it’s way harder to do than you would think. I’ve done this on purpose to test it and severely over annealed brass (I mean BRIGHT CHERRY RED on the entire neck, shoulder and 1/8” under the should/neck junction) only made a very tiny difference in group size at 600 yards, and resulted in no difference in overall score.
Dave