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#1 | ||
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Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: maine
Posts: 11
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#2 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Montana
Posts: 2,344
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A whole pound of molasses is a LOT for a 1 gallon batch! Maybe you really like the molasses flavour though. I used 10 oz of molasses in a 6 gallon batch of cyser & it about overpowered the honey & I used 3lbs of honey per gallon. Cloves are pretty strong, you might want to reduce it to just 1 clove, I've never used peppercorns, so I can't say much about that. Regards, GF.
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#3 |
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The Hebrew Hammer
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I would also cut back on the molasses or you are bound to overpower everything else
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#4 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: maine
Posts: 11
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What if I switched to 1 lb of brown sugar and 1 clove?
I'm looking for residual sweetness, and a little bit of molasses flavor. Thank you for the quick input! ---B |
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#5 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: maine
Posts: 11
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Okay. . . so I started with:
1.5 gallons of juice 1.5 lbs demerara sugar 1.5 lbs honey 1.5 tsps fermax Red Star Pasteur Champagne (because it's what I had open) The OG is 1.113 In two weeks I will rack an add: 1 clove 3 black peppercorns (because I use them in my ginger beer) 1/2 a cinnamon stick Lots of ginger a little bit of molasses depending on how everything tastes Please correct me if I should do anything different! Thanks! |
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#6 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pacific NW
Posts: 334
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Quote:
I *think* fermenting dry and adding in a touch of molasses is how Spire Mountain Cider does their dark and dry, but I won't know for sure until I take WSU's cider class this summer. http://www.fishbrewing.com/spire-mountain-cider/dark-dry-apple-cider/ Last edited by CandleWineProject; 02-06-2010 at 12:17 AM. Reason: spelling errors |
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#7 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Mt. Greenwood, Chicago
Posts: 37
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In your original post also mention wanting to have some residual sweetness and priming and bottling? Sparkling meads with residual sweetness are really tricky to do without force carbing, and you'll be risking making grenades.
This looks really similar to a recipe on GotMead. In the latest version of it, a full pound of fresh ginger was used in a 5 gallon batch, but he skips the molasses. At first the combinations of apple, ginger (which I'm not a huge fan of) and the molasses made me kinda wonder, but after reading his comments about tasting it after 3 years, I might give a ginger cyser a try somewhere down the road. Good luck! |
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#8 |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: NJ
Posts: 72
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What about using Lactose or Malto Dextrine to keep some sweetness... I have no idea about amounts for a 1 gal batch
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#9 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Pacific NW
Posts: 334
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I believe you can use lactose, but don't know about malto dextrine. If you aren't afraid of it, Splenda works, too. I like my tea sweet, about a teaspoon per cup (8oz), so for wine I do about 1 tsp per 16oz. Remember, it is easier to sweeten up a dry wine, but if you do it with artificial sugar, impossible to dry out a sweet wine. Wait, we are talking mead here. Well, that's what I get for drinking a beer and answering.
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#10 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: maine
Posts: 11
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Thanks for all the advice!
I probably should have started by explaining my rational first. 1) I like spicy ginger beer, but sometimes it's a little too sweet for me. 2) Ed's apfelwein definitely rocks--not too sweet, not too dry 3) I've only tasted "dry" meads, and they've all tasted a little "sweet" to me. 4) The ginger wine I made tasted like flat, sour, gingerale--yuck! So with all this in mind, I came up with Ginger Cyser. I'll be happy if it is a tiny bit sweeter that Ed's apfelwein. I'm hoping the sweetness I've tasted in dry meads will carry over to the Cyser. I'm also hoping by adding the ginger in the secondary, I will get a more potent and spicy concoction. My goal is a spicy ginger beer type of drink highlighted by the fruitiness of the apple, and the mellowness of the honey. It does not need to be sweet like a true ginger beer. It does need to be spicy like one. I'd rather stay away from artificial sweeteners and lactose. I'll have to read up on maltodextrine. I don't have a fore carb set up. . . yet. Right now I'm a little worried about the potential ABV. I did the math based on honey and molasses. I forgot to change it when I switched to sugar. I'm 3 to 4 % higher than I'd like to be, and nearing the upper limit of the yeast. I hope this won't interfere with bottle carbing. The good news is, I just checked, and the airlock is bubbling like crazy. |
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