Short answer: That takes a long time, and may never finish.
Longer answer: Water and ethanol form an azeotrope. They combine and leave the vapor phase together. You lose ethanol form a water solution only (about) as fast as you lose water. That is slow, because water binds strongly to itself. It may well take days, and you will attract much dust, in that time, if you leave the vessel open.
Geek answer: If you have access to a lab, you may try freeze-drying, or vacuum evaporation to speed the process up, with minimal heat damage to the active. We do not have DIY procedures for the removal of ethanol from solutions. This is, in fact, a very hard problem to fix. If you could save the evaporated ethanol, this would be concentrating it, and that is bootlegging. Yes, you don't want to save it, for this particular application, but the techniques are the same. It is hard to achieve, and various government agencies like it to be difficult. So it works out well -- for them, not you.