On 6 Oct 2022, at 12:48, love.client <love....@gmail.com> wrote:
Cider apples are usually divided into sweet, sharp, bitter and bittersweet apples. According to standard definitions, most dessert apples would fit into the sharp apple category; they typically have more than 0.45% malic acid and less than 0.2% total phenolic content. Yet, dessert apples don't seem to be called sharp cider apples, but instead... dessert apples. So... is there a clear, measurable difference that distinguishes sharp cider apples from dessert fruit? Or is this nomenclature simply a question of tradition? --
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On Oct 6, 2022, at 8:39 AM, LL <love....@gmail.com> wrote:
Ok, thanks. And the reason dessert apples are typically not favored by cider producers would be that these apples simply are thought to be poor cider apples? Or are there other reasons?
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On 6 Oct 2022, at 22:00, LL <love....@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks Andrew, Wes, Raymond and Dick!
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Andrew

On 6 Oct 2022, at 22:26, Claude Jolicoeur <cjol...@gmail.com> wrote:
I am really surprised by this discussion on market/eating apple varieties not pressing well. This is not my experience... Most of my apples are still standard varieties (although my cider apples produce a larger fraction of the total crop every year). I haven't seen much difference - if any - in the yield from eating apples vs cider apples. And there are many commercial orchards around that grow McIntosh, Spartan, Cortland and other market apples, and press and sell fresh juice. I never heard about any problem pressing these. Plus most cideries in Quebec use these same varieties for making cider and have no issues pressing the apples.
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On Oct 6, 2022, at 3:43 PM, LL <love....@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks Andrew! I assume that the solution with not too ripe fruit can yield a nice, fresh juice but that with cider, ripe fruit is preferred. Is there less pectin in cider apple varieties than in eating apples, or what causes the differences?
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On Oct 6, 2022, at 5:12 PM, LL <love....@gmail.com> wrote:
This is very interesting Stephen!
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On Oct 6, 2022, at 5:41 PM, David Lemieux <djmle...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On Oct 7, 2022, at 5:51 PM, LL <love....@gmail.com> wrote:
I like the look of your ciders, Wes. It's a pitty I can't taste them. The colors are nice. I assume you add sulfites quite early at pressing?
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