oznewbie said:
There are some nice receipes/ideas here guys
Next im going to go for ....
1.7 kg Coopers pale ale
1.5kg coopers malt extract
20g cascade hop tea
20g cascade dry hop on day 4
us-05 yeast
lower temp 18-20*c via swamp cooler method
carbonation drops 2x each tallie.
2 week ferment.
3 week bottle
fridge.
wish me luck.
thanks, all ideas/suggestions taken onboard.
(This is taken from the most recommended suggestions and im comfortable with the process)
again .... thanks
(Next is cider, strawb/lime apple cider. Lol)
Good luck with the strawberry lime cider, unless you're kegging there isn't really a good way to sweeten it up to rekorderlig style.
You can back sweeten with bickfords cordials at the end of the ferment, but the sugars will ferment out in the bottle likely causing bottle bombs. You can try to sweeten with lactose, but then the flavours of the strawberry and lime don't come through and you wind up with a sweet apple cider.
The closest I have got so far, was as follows.
Black rock apple cider kit
1kg frozen berries from aldi
300g brown sugar
Bickfords lime cordial
Bickfords raspberry cordial
I boiled 3 l of water in a pot. Added 1/3 of the apple kit syrup, and the frozen berries. Boiled gently for 10 min to get any nasties out of there.
Added 300g of sugar to the clean fermenter, followed by the rest of the tin and the boiled goods. I didn't strain anything. Topped it up to 23l, added two bottles of cordial, which I worked out to be equivalent to 700g of sugar.
The flavours and sweetness all fermented out after 14 days in the primary. I then racked it to secondary for 7 days, trying to find a way to sweeten and flavour it in the meantime.
I then killed the yeast(a big no no if you're bottling) by raising the temp to 75°c in a big pot. I then no chilled it in a cube. I figured if the yeast is done and the sugars are done there's little risk of any infection.
Now that the yeast couldn't eat any more sugar I cold crashed the cube, and added another two bottles of the bickfords cordials to sweeten and flavour. These bottles are roughly 50% sugars.
I then kegged it, force carbed and a week later was drinking it.
It isn't exactly recoderlig. I'm pretty sure that recoderlig is a really sweet wine that's mixed with a cider.
What I did make is a nice cider that isn't too sweet, if I were to try again I'd try with lactose and artificial flavourings, just to see the difference, and I'd filter it to get a bit of the cloudyness out.
As for bottling, I've no idea how to sweeten and carbonate at the same time other than using artificial sweeteners and flavours, which aren't in the product I was trying to replicate.
They probably force carb after pastuerising and sweetening, and force the already carbed liquid in to the bottles.
Also I wound up with a cider at about 6.2% abv. Its good and fun but I'd probably drop the brown sugar next time to get it closer to the 4.0% that the girls are used to.