I have no personal experience, but for what it's worth Wolfgang Vogel's
excellent little German book "Wein aus Eigenem Keller" suggests just 10%
quince in cider, and no more than 20%. Pure quince wine is best made as
a dessert wine he suggests (5L of quince juice, 3L of water and 2.5 kg
of sugar). Perhaps the flavour is more acceptable that way? [For
tecchies, the characteristic quince aroma appears to be terpenoid in
origin (marmelo-lactones) and derived from carotenoid breakdown,
together with the usual esters and a touch of dimethyl sulphide]
Andrew
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Wittenham Hill Cider Page
http://www.cider.org.uk
----- Original Message -----From: Nat West
Dear All
Just a word for the record about making cider or perry FOR SALE IN THE UK from any other fruit than apples or pears – offered for general info and E&OE.
The Alcoholic Liquor Duties Act 1979, as amended, Section 1(6), defines “Cider” as follows:
“Cider” means cider (or perry) of a strength less than 8.5 per cent. of alcohol by volume (at a temperature of 20’C) obtained from the fermentation of apple or pear juice without the addition at any time of any alcoholic liquor or of any liquor or substance which communicates colour or flavour other than such as the Commissioners (now, of HMRC) may allow as appearing to them to be necessary to make cider (or perry).
Therefore, any rule made for cider also applies to perry.
The Commissioners’ discretion in this is expressed in HMRC Notice 162 where the permitted ingredients and the amounts and proportions in which they may be used are set out in Section 25 of the March 2009 edition.
Anything that does not meet the conditions for cider (or perry) then falls into the category of ‘made wine’ and, IF SOLD, is subject to the relevant level of wine duty. There is no exemption from wine duty for commercial wine makers whatever the scale of operation – cider is unique in this.
Therefore the addition of quinces, or any fruit other than apples or pears and whether or not fermented in, makes the product wine as far as UK excise law is concerned.
In addition, NACM’s Code of Practice (10th edition) contains rules on the use of the names ‘cider’, ‘perry’ and ‘pear cider’ developed jointly with Somerset Trading Standards. These rules are intended to protect the terms and to prevent such anomalies as (EG:) ‘strawberry cider’ - cider cannot be made from strawberries. If you have made a cider that has then been flavoured with a fruit X, or pulp, or juice, or indeed flavouring (natural or artificial), this should be described as ‘cider with X’ or ‘cider and X’.
Remember also that the style of the description X you add to any label is governed by UK Food Law in order to indicate the nature of X.
Of course, if you’re not selling the product but consuming it yourself, with or without the help of friends or guests, then it is not dutiable...
Best wishes
Nick
From: cider-w...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:cider-w...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Stephen Hayes
Sent: 08 August 2009 08:55
To: cider-w...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Cider Workshop] Re: Quince cider?
Hi Nat, this sounds like an interesting opportunity!
<BR
Quince must be ripe in order to get as much juice as possible.
Otherwise it is really difficult to extract the juice.
Anyone have any Meech's Prolific Quince seedlings, cuttings or seeds to sell or share?
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All started in October.
So far the quince wine with 1/3 quince juice to 2/3 water is so floral and so intense that it tastes like the smell of flowery soap. It's nice and clear though! Beautiful rose colouring. I did cook the juice. Scratted, press, pectinase, cook.
The apple quince was about 25% quince is something odd and weird but I will let it age. Has a real earthiness to it and not sure that these two flavours play well with each other. Time will tell.
The quince lemonade. I LIKE it! 3 gallons of lemonade and about a litre of quince juice (also cooked). It's the best of the bunch. Really gives the lemonade some astringency and body without it being so perfumy that it hurts.
Perhaps the efficient use of quince is in micro amounts. I will try some diluted with water and if the wine becomes cider strength....that's ok too (provided it's drinkable!). Or I may try to post blend with something.
FYI I back flavoured Hard cider with quince juice and it was lovely if drank right away. Horribly nasty after a few days. The tannins from the quince really were nice. I don't think that I had cooked that quince juice for his addition. Didn't have much flavour - just astringency.
My experiences this far with quince. Varietal unknown but has a lemony smell - perhaps champion quince.
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