I know cider making is a game of patience, but how do people manage to
resist the temptation/pace themselves to make their stuff last?
I've been at times accused by the wife of "not liking" some of her
fruit wines, but only because I think there's a few bottles left of
the very good stuff that should be saved.
In terms of this years cider and perry, we've dispatched about 7 or 8
litres of cider and 5 of perry so far this season. On the basis the
rest of it doesn't go bad, less the stuff we give away in the barter
economy, less the good stuff we just have to hold back... I _really_
can't see how it's going to last until 2010 picking, let alone
pressing and/or seeing us through to when the 2010 batch is ready!!
Any amusing tips or hints? M
Vicky
2009/12/30 Cheshire Matt <goo...@camelid.net>:
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I am also in the same fortunate position with enough production to more
than cover the needs of myself, family, friends, the postman etc...
[Indeed I have a (bottled) backlog going back to the Millennium now and
although I tend to use the older stuff for cooking or (as New Year's Eve
approaches) mulling, I probably have enough to make it worth bulking and
re-working / re-fermenting whenever I get the time and a bit of fresh
juice].
One odd thing I notice is that, despite unlimited access, my own
consumption pattern is very inconsistent. There will be weeks when I
drink no cider at all and even spend good money on wine as an
alternative instead! Then suddenly I get a yen for my own production
again and several bottles will disappear in fairly short order. I guess
we all need some 'diversity' in our lives!
Andrew
but trial and error, and personal preference
Stephen
Heather wrote >>>> I'm gathering that blackberries are hard to work with. Well, good thing they are a weed in this part of the world.<<<
not at all, I have made a lot of fruit wines in the past but blackberry is the only one I bother with now. Its good, just needs to be drunk young. A little elderberry can 'stiffen' it, pure elderberry is too 'dark' for me, but adds something to blackberry. I made a gallon of blacbberry and apple this year, adding blackberries t apple juice and chaptalising to SG 1110 plus a wine yeast. nice.Stephen
I'd like some tips on how to make cider and perry that's ready to drink in
such a short time! No matter what style I make I've never managed to produce
anything ready to drink before March at the earliest, and it's usually
better by July/August time. What am I doing wrong?
Mark
http://rockinghamforestcider.moonfruit.com/
http://rockinghamforestcider.blogspot.com/
Stephen has the best recipe for mulling, which is the one I follow. So
maybe he should speak to this. In essence you are heating cider with
extra sugar or juice and a dose of spices (eg cinnamon, allspice) to
provide a warming winter drink. Hence if the cider is not top quality it
hardly matters.
'Rework' is common in all production industries, no less in food and
drink than elsewhere since it saves on waste. In the context of cider,
old product (so long as not tainted) can be refermented with yeast after
addition of sugar or fresh juice. The yeast metabolises and 'reduces'
the stale and oxidised volatile components such as ethyl acetate and
acetaldehyde so a newly freshened cider is the result. But you can only
do this if the cider is fundamentally sound, not if it's affected by
'mouse' or anything alien that cannot be broken down and restored by yeast.
Andrew
I'm very interested by this, what proportion juice to old cider would
you use to re-ferment?
We're otherwise the same although our cider is always available the
quantity consumed varies and beer/wine/whisky is usually also on hand!
Vicky
Nick
Edwards
Ciderniks – Cider from Kintbury
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