TimT
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Cider brews for this year - it's been a long list:
1) Cyser, made from early ripening apples collected around January. When milled and crushed they produced a very low gravity must (about 1.020), but we added honey to this to get the gravity up to around 1.080. Fermented on wine yeast, this brew is coming in to its own - a mead with both wine qualities and appley fragrance.
2) Cyser, made from leftover must from brew 1). I fermented this on some wild yeast I had collected through happy accident earlier this year. The yeast chewed through all the sugar, with the FG being one point lower than the FG of 1). The two brews tasted similar, though this wild yeast cyser had more esters and fusels and whatnot, and will clearly benefit from a longer ageing.
3) Trentham cider - a month or so ago we collected a bunch of wild apples from around the Trentham/Mt Macedon area. All of them were quite sweet, so I suspect this cider might be quite low in tannins. I fermented this one on White Labs cider yeast. I'm tempted to throw some hops on this one for a week before racking to experiment with the hopped cider concept, and make up for the possible lack of tannins. Or possibly some other spice? A few cloves? (Collecting these apples, I lost my wedding ring under the first tree we stopped at, but at least I got a crappy joke out of it - 'With this ring, I tree wed').
4) Bright cider 1 - we collected a whole bunch of apples from around Bright, as we do every year, and got about 9 litres of cider must, which we introduced to some White Labs cider yeast. The unfermented must tasted quite rich, sweet and tart and tanniny, so I think this will mature into a very nice drink. I fermented this one in a flimsy 10 L plastic container that used to be used for water, whacking a condom on top as an airlock! Fermenting is slacking now, so I'm thinking I should rack it in a small 10 L oak barrel I got for my birthday. (The barrel still has to be screwed together). Just uncertain of the right time to do this.... I don't want substantial fermentation to warp the barrel or anything like that.
5) Bright cider 2 - still had apples left over, and with some added wild pear juice - we got these pears from a park in Preston, and they had a very dry tanniny flesh (though very sweet juice) - I got almost 9 more litres. 4.5 of these went on some more White Labs yeast, and other 4 litres went on....
6) Wild Bright Cider - I had my doubts the wild yeasts would catch in time but I needn't have worried. After blobbing around the bottom for a day or so, the sediment suddenly and dramatically rose to the surface of the brew just before I was due to go out to the shops. When I came back it was fermenting slowly.... the day after fermentation picked up pace quite a bit, and for a while it was beating the White Labs yeast in terms of carbonation. This is the cider I'm most excited about - one and a half years ago I caught an extremely strong and useful yeast from the peel of just one of my apples. This cider is just *full* of yeasts. And they're all competing with one another to get to the available resources first. Once they're done I'm sure there'll be a lacto-bacilli fermentation moving in as well. The cider smells delicious at the moment, and doesn't seem to have gone through the disgusting 'smells like farts' stage that my other ciders have done - I'm not sure whether this is a good or a bad thing, but certainly at the moment it's smelling very powerful and and fruity and alcoholic. Not sure whether this cider can be sugar-primed to get a sparkling drink at the end - might the lacto-bacilli interfere with a secondary fermentation?
Interested especially in advice on 4) and 6).
1) Cyser, made from early ripening apples collected around January. When milled and crushed they produced a very low gravity must (about 1.020), but we added honey to this to get the gravity up to around 1.080. Fermented on wine yeast, this brew is coming in to its own - a mead with both wine qualities and appley fragrance.
2) Cyser, made from leftover must from brew 1). I fermented this on some wild yeast I had collected through happy accident earlier this year. The yeast chewed through all the sugar, with the FG being one point lower than the FG of 1). The two brews tasted similar, though this wild yeast cyser had more esters and fusels and whatnot, and will clearly benefit from a longer ageing.
3) Trentham cider - a month or so ago we collected a bunch of wild apples from around the Trentham/Mt Macedon area. All of them were quite sweet, so I suspect this cider might be quite low in tannins. I fermented this one on White Labs cider yeast. I'm tempted to throw some hops on this one for a week before racking to experiment with the hopped cider concept, and make up for the possible lack of tannins. Or possibly some other spice? A few cloves? (Collecting these apples, I lost my wedding ring under the first tree we stopped at, but at least I got a crappy joke out of it - 'With this ring, I tree wed').
4) Bright cider 1 - we collected a whole bunch of apples from around Bright, as we do every year, and got about 9 litres of cider must, which we introduced to some White Labs cider yeast. The unfermented must tasted quite rich, sweet and tart and tanniny, so I think this will mature into a very nice drink. I fermented this one in a flimsy 10 L plastic container that used to be used for water, whacking a condom on top as an airlock! Fermenting is slacking now, so I'm thinking I should rack it in a small 10 L oak barrel I got for my birthday. (The barrel still has to be screwed together). Just uncertain of the right time to do this.... I don't want substantial fermentation to warp the barrel or anything like that.
5) Bright cider 2 - still had apples left over, and with some added wild pear juice - we got these pears from a park in Preston, and they had a very dry tanniny flesh (though very sweet juice) - I got almost 9 more litres. 4.5 of these went on some more White Labs yeast, and other 4 litres went on....
6) Wild Bright Cider - I had my doubts the wild yeasts would catch in time but I needn't have worried. After blobbing around the bottom for a day or so, the sediment suddenly and dramatically rose to the surface of the brew just before I was due to go out to the shops. When I came back it was fermenting slowly.... the day after fermentation picked up pace quite a bit, and for a while it was beating the White Labs yeast in terms of carbonation. This is the cider I'm most excited about - one and a half years ago I caught an extremely strong and useful yeast from the peel of just one of my apples. This cider is just *full* of yeasts. And they're all competing with one another to get to the available resources first. Once they're done I'm sure there'll be a lacto-bacilli fermentation moving in as well. The cider smells delicious at the moment, and doesn't seem to have gone through the disgusting 'smells like farts' stage that my other ciders have done - I'm not sure whether this is a good or a bad thing, but certainly at the moment it's smelling very powerful and and fruity and alcoholic. Not sure whether this cider can be sugar-primed to get a sparkling drink at the end - might the lacto-bacilli interfere with a secondary fermentation?
Interested especially in advice on 4) and 6).