sponge
Dungeon O' Sponge Brewery
- Joined
- 12/1/08
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Hey
So I just tried my apple cider which has been bottled for 11 days now just to see how it was turning out.
Well.... for one, it was not very carbonated. I'm not sure why, but when i feel the bottles (im using PET) they still feel quite soft (not just the one I tested, but all of them), unlike my bottled beers which are all very firm to the touch. I'm not sure why this happened, as I used the same amount of sugar for the cider as I did the two beers. Anyone have any ideas what has happened there? Would the cider kits use a different yeast to the beers, meaning that more sugar would need to be put into the bottles to carb up??
Also.... the cider is VERY very (yes, TWO very's) dry. I'm not surprised by this with an OG of 1072 and FG of 1004 (gives a potent ~9% cider/wine). I used 2x 2.4L of apple and pear juice (pres. free), 2kg of white sugar, and 4 peeled granny smith apple as the fermentables. Instead of using 2kg of white sugar, would it be possible to use say, 1kg LME, 250g of lactose, and 750g of white sugar, just so retain some body and sweetness and keep the alcohol down a little, or is this not advisable for a cider?
All thoughts would be much appreciated.
Sponge
P.s I mainly made this cider for the women drinkers which we have over, but this is no chick-drink. I could get away with calling it a wine, but I'm not too happy aobut the way this cider turned out.
So I just tried my apple cider which has been bottled for 11 days now just to see how it was turning out.
Well.... for one, it was not very carbonated. I'm not sure why, but when i feel the bottles (im using PET) they still feel quite soft (not just the one I tested, but all of them), unlike my bottled beers which are all very firm to the touch. I'm not sure why this happened, as I used the same amount of sugar for the cider as I did the two beers. Anyone have any ideas what has happened there? Would the cider kits use a different yeast to the beers, meaning that more sugar would need to be put into the bottles to carb up??
Also.... the cider is VERY very (yes, TWO very's) dry. I'm not surprised by this with an OG of 1072 and FG of 1004 (gives a potent ~9% cider/wine). I used 2x 2.4L of apple and pear juice (pres. free), 2kg of white sugar, and 4 peeled granny smith apple as the fermentables. Instead of using 2kg of white sugar, would it be possible to use say, 1kg LME, 250g of lactose, and 750g of white sugar, just so retain some body and sweetness and keep the alcohol down a little, or is this not advisable for a cider?
All thoughts would be much appreciated.
Sponge
P.s I mainly made this cider for the women drinkers which we have over, but this is no chick-drink. I could get away with calling it a wine, but I'm not too happy aobut the way this cider turned out.