.1 is not bad, but if you want to lower it, then GFO will work better than organic carbon.
First, you have to understand that the phosphate that you want to remove is bound up in the sand and rock (aragonite) in your tank. As you lower the concentration in the water column, the aragonite will release more. If you use too much GFO, then your water column level can bounce really low and then bounce back up when the aragonite releases.
The key is to use very little GFO and change it often. You want the decline to be slow, steady and without any downward or upward spikes. Lowering phosphates is not an issue - lowering them too fast certainly is.
I would do something like using a couple of tablespoons in a reactor, put very slow flow through it and then change it ever few days. When the water coming out of the reactor has the same level as the tank (or near), then it is exhausted and you can use this as a guide. What you want is to test like 34 ppb one week, 33 the next, 32 the next, etc. You do not want 34 to start, then 12 (using too much GFO), then 33 (aragonite releases), then 10 (too much GFO), then 32, etc... this is where stuff starts to get mad.