Hi folks
I've been reading a few old cider references. In Charley (1935) "The biochemist in the cider factory" available here:
there is an interesting idea I have not seen elsewhere. On p.66 we can read:
"A method has been developed in France in which the fresh juice is collected in a shallow vessel which exposes a large surface of the juice to the air. Under these aerobic conditions the yeasts propagate at a fast rate, but their fermentive capacity is repressed. The yeasts assimilate nitrogen and when a heavy crop of yeasts is formed the juice is racked to a vat for fermentation; the juice now contains only depleted resources of nitrogen and the yeast action is correspondingly retarded."
I do wonder how the "fermentive capacity" can be retarded if the yeast propagates quickly. Has anyone tried anything like this? If is works, it could be an alternative to keeving in musts that otherwise are not suited to keeving.
If the idea is just to keep the must oxygenated, you should be able to set up a bubbler in an existing fermentation vessel rather than find shallow vessels.
Just thought I would share. Seems interesting. Old literature has some cool stuff in it sometimes.
/Jeff