Evening all!
First experience with pears this past weekend, hoping to gain more insight!
One of our club members has a gorgeous pear tree, 50 feet tall, that had been growing as a water shoot out of large stump when he purchased the land 40 years ago, so the tree is likely over 100 years old, we deduce, as the original stump was huge, he recalls. We think it might have planted as a pollinator. The fruits are small russeted green pears, which get slightly reddish on the areas facing south, and are quite tannic. When they fall naturally they are already brown on the inside, and when picked from the tree the ones that feel even the slighted bit soft are usually half brown from the inside out, the rest are hard but very very juicy.
I just juiced 3 of the smaller ones, strained though a coffee filter, and got the following results
70 ml of juice
pH was 3.18
SG was 1.055
TA - ( for malic using a wine test kit ) was 14 g/l ????
Now you would expect the juice to taste like an acid bomb, but it doesn't, it tastes quite nice actually, certainly not like it has 14g/liter acid, I double checked the TA, and ran the same testing solutions on some apple juice just to make sure it was not expired and giving false results, all looks good
So, I'm wondering.
What are typical acid and sugar levels for perry pears?
Can there be so much sorbitol that juice with a pH of 3.18 and a TA of 14 tastes good?
Cheers and thanks
William

