Hi,
I make bottle conditioned cider and it always has a nice fizz, if I detail my method you might be able to see if any of it would help you.
Press apples, ( sulphite at 50% with ref to ph)
Come back between 6 to 9 months later, test for sg, if above 0.998 come back in another couple of months.
When it is finished fermenting (sg 0.998 or not dropping over a couple of months of warm weather) Rack into a clean container. It is always clear at this point no filtering or agents are needed.
Add 8g/L of sugar (making sure it is dissolved) I then add some re-hydrated EC1118 yeast, mix well and bottle.
This is normally in the summer and after 3 to 4 weeks it has a nice fizz. If done in cold weather it will take a lot longer to get a fizz if at all.
Others will have different methods and their own reasons for doing it that way, this works for me, I also use apples from peoples gardens so the juice should be very similar.
Just for reference I press around 7,000L a year, around 500 to 1000L I make fizzy.
Hope this helps
Vince
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So the questions are:1. could the clarifying agents be completely settling out the yeast, so there is none available for the bottle conditioning?
2. If that is the case should i add a small amount of dry yeast at bottling? Nutrient needed too? I assume yeast would need to be added to each individual bottle in order to have a chance to work, or i would need to add it to the carboy after the clarifying had been done, and then wait some time for it to start growing.
3. Assuming there is still yeast in the cider that gets racked off to the bottling bucket, what is the worst case? Say all of that sugar (from 1.008 down to 1.000) was converted, what would the pressure be in the bottles, and would it be enough to blow them? I am using the standard 22 oz brown beer bottles, which are not too heavy.4. i assume that with 1.008 sugar there is no need to add sugar at the bottling step?
I don’t add nutrient, I don’t do anything other than what I put in my post, I don’t add yeast at pressing either. if you want it clear give it time.
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6 gallon carboy:Siphon cider from carboy to bottling bucketAdd the whole packet of Lallemand yeast to the bucket (after preparing in a sugar solution at 35C as recommended by Lallemand)add the 1/4 teaspoon of yeast energizer and mix (or use some of the Wyeast Nutrient instead. how much?)cover and wait 2 hoursstir and bottle
7.5 gallon carboy - same as above but split the yeast energizer and priming yeast between the two batches or:extract a few millilters of "sludge" from the bottom of the carboy in a syringe (assuming this will contain enough yeast to inoculate the cider in the bottle), and mix this in the bottling bucket.
If you have additional time, perhaps you could help educate me on yeast and yeast nutrients. see below, and please correct me/interject below where appropriate.What are nutrients? I've read that a major one is nitrogen, what else?It seems most people say there is no way for the average homemaker to measure nutrients; is that true?when nutrient levels become too low, the yeast will die.Nutrients come from the apples themselves. Apples from an orchard that is not fertilized, or where the trees are old, have low levels of nutrients.
Your last comment below that starts with "I aim for a drop..." says you do rackings until the nutrients are exhausted; this implies that ALL THE NUTRIENTS are located on the bottom.
Is this true only for a cider that has clarified in the carboy? If the cider is still cloudy, then the nutrients are still "floating", and in this case racking would NOT remove the nutrients? Also, if the first is true and all the nutrients are on the bottom, does that mean all the yeast are on the bottom too, and there is some kind of buoyancy driven convection current that keeps the cider mixed so you don't end up with low SG on the bottom near the yeast and high SG at the top where there is no yeast?