Cider from Frozen Concentrate | HomeBrewTalk.com - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Community.

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk by donating:

  1. Dismiss Notice
  2. We have a new forum and it needs your help! Homebrewing Deals is a forum to post whatever deals and specials you find that other homebrewers might value! Includes coupon layering, Craigslist finds, eBay finds, Amazon specials, etc.
    Dismiss Notice

Cider from Frozen Concentrate

Discussion in 'Cider Forum' started by jmprdood, Jan 1, 2012.

 

  1. #1
    jmprdood

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Jan 1, 2012
    Made a batch yesterday to ring out the ol' and bring in the new. Made pretty much like the last I made (except using the concentrate 'cause it was cheaper):

    5 gal of apple juice once reconstituted (14 12oz cans, no preservatives)
    2lbs of brown sugar
    Yeast Nutrient
    Nottingham Ale Yeast rehydrated and pitched @ 68F
    OG 1.070
    Expected ABV of ~9.5%

    Fermenting away now 30 hrs in.

    How have your batches w/ frozen concentrate turned out?
     
  2. #2
    funky_brewster

    Active Member

    Posted May 9, 2013
    Hey, your recipe specs are just about spot on for what I was gonna try (though I plan to substitute pasteurized strawberries for the brown sugar), since I saved about $10 buying frozen concentrate rather than the same thing + water.

    Did this turn out like you'd hoped? 9.5% is beefy, I imagine that took a little time to condition out.

    Thanks if you've got a second (and recall from 16 months ago)!

    -funky
     
  3. #3
    jmprdood

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 20, 2013
    Turned out great, but did need several months of conditioning to smooth out. Did you brew this up?
     
  4. #4
    funky_brewster

    Active Member

    Posted May 24, 2013
    I did, 13 cans of concentrate added up to about the same grams of sugar as 5 gallons of store-bought juice. I also diced & pasteurized about 5 lbs of granny, jonagold, and fuji apples that got added to the primary. Gravity was 1.054 when we pitched the Nottingham yeast.

    About 8 days in, it was juuuuust about slowed to a stop and I added another 5 lbs of the same apples, this time juiced, with the flesh collected and all of it pasteurized before cooling and pitching as a secondary fermentation (no transfer). Foolishly, I forgot to take a grav reading before adding the second apple addition, but the reading after was 1.030 and tasted quite nice.

    Plan is to let it roll another 2 weeks on the yeast, then bottle or keg for at least a month, depending on the FG.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page

Group Builder