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Man, I love Apfelwein

Discussion in 'Winemaking Forum' started by EdWort, Oct 12, 2006.

 

  1. DoctorWho

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 21, 2011
    Bp - no offence at all. You are right, I forget sometimes that I have been doing this for a while and am very precise in what I do, and then offer advice like it's the easiest thing in the world.

    Nice to learn some more history about Apfelwein and its derivatives. I was introduced to the good stuff from a german friend of mine a couple of years ago and am delighted to be able to make it myself now! Now I just have to train the pallet for dry whilst watching out for the hangovers;).
     
  2. cthulu1975

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 21, 2011
    Have a batch in the carboy for two weeks. Moved fridge, dropped carboy, thank god for plastic bin, towel. No breakage but geyser from bung. Mental note no drinnking during project time. :drunk:
     
  3. CHefJohnboyardee

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 22, 2011
    I had my stuff sitting for 4 months now. I siphoned some out for a party at St Patricks day and put the airlock back on. Bottled it tonight without carbing it. I love it with a splash of ginger ale. The same goes for my in-laws and everyone at the party. I know what everyone is getting for a summer gift- a champagne bottle and a can or two of diet ginger ale! :D
     
  4. junkmaster

    Member

    Posted Apr 22, 2011

    Thanks Doc. Good stuff. Cheers!
     
  5. jaycount

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 23, 2011
    I made some original apfelwein. Took half of the batch and bottle carb'd it like a beer. Took the other half and sweetened it with wine conditioner. To my surprise after about 3 weeks I popped a bottle of the sweetened stuff and it is WAY carbonated. Super bubbly.

    Why didn't the conditioner beat the yeast into submission? I used the conditioner kind of liberally. I can't remember the exact amounts. :cross:
     
  6. Native302

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 25, 2011
    I have a 5 gallon batch in the primary for 6 weeks now and it's still super cloudy. I followed the recipe exactly and sanitation was spot on. Is this normal and I should just wait longer?
     
  7. DoctorWho

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 25, 2011
    @jaycount

    What what the chemical conditioner you used? Also how long did you let the apfelwein ferment? If it was still in active fermentation it might now have been enough to kill all the yeast.

    @Native302
    Sorry, but 6 weeks is still young for apfelwein, it will clear up but it may take a while depending on the conditions, like temperature and type of juice. Just give it time.
     
  8. jaycount

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 25, 2011
    Used wine conditioner from MWS. Sorry I don't have the brand name or ingredients right in front of me right now. Was in the primary for 8 weeks. Fg was 1.000
     
  9. DoctorWho

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 25, 2011
    I checked it out and it looks like a cool idea. My only concern it that I have never heard of anyone using it for a cider before and there is more fermentable sugar in a cider AFAIK, so it might not have been enough of the potassium sorbate (that's the actual preservative) to kill all the yeast. You may want to pick of some campden tablets (Potassium Metabisulfite) and use in conjunction with the conditioner if you plan on trying again.

    Otherwise, I am not sure what to tell you.
     
  10. Gnarboots123

    Member

    Posted Apr 27, 2011
    Mine has been fermenting for about a month now. My only question is that my airlock never really bubbled much at all. For the past month i have been able to see the bubbles forming in the actual carboy but my airlock never seems to "burp"
     
  11. Rick500

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 27, 2011
    Don't worry about it. Airlock activity is not a reliable indicator of fermentation activity.

    The yeast know what to do. It'll be fine. :)

    (And howdy, neighbor, from another Louisvillian.)
     
  12. Recluse

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 27, 2011
    I bet you have a leaky carboy cap or stopper. IF you are really concerned, pull a gravity sample. I bet it is pretty much fermented to dryness. My airlock stops showing activity after about 1-2 weeks, but the carboy is still totally cloudy. Gradually the yeast clean up after themselves and sink. By 1 month it is starting to clear.
     
  13. Jota21

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 28, 2011
    This recipe keeps popping up in other threads as setting the bar for this type of drink, so I would like to make this for our family vacation in July. Call me lazy, but I dont feel like reading 7,700 posts! Over the course of those posts, have there been any generally agreed upon modifications to the recipe/technique?

    I think the family would prefer a sweeter apfelwein, so if somebody wouldn't mind re-hashing this thread and break it down for me like you're explaining it to a 6 year old, I would really appreciate it! I'm still confused about back-sweetening, and the basics. This will be my first non-extract-kit of anything that i've produced, so i really am a rookie...

    Thank you!!
     
  14. Slurm

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 28, 2011
    Don't modify the recipe -the original is the best. It is also very easy.

    If you want it sweet, add Splenda at bottling time -it is non-fermentable so it will stay sweet. If you want it carbonated, you will still have to force-carb in a keg or add actual sugar for bottle-carbing.

    This is one of those things that gets MUCH better with aging -it starts off pretty harsh. By July may it may be drinkable, or it may not.
     
  15. Jota21

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 28, 2011
    so what if i want to serve it in bottles? Do I add sugar for carbonation + splenda for sweetness? How much of each?

    Again, thanks for the help.
     
  16. Wakadaka

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 28, 2011
    My first batch has been in the fermenter for about 4 weeks now, and I agree that you might be pressed for time for July. Seems you are doing better than alot of new brewers, and brewing what you want to drink in a couple months now, but unfortunately most people say that apfelwein isn't very good til about 4-6 months, and isn't really as good as people say it is until about 8 months.

    I know there are some yeasts that apparently will clean up faster, but I don't remember what the suggestions for that were.
     
  17. 1Mainebrew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 29, 2011
    Has anyone just poured more juice onto the montrachet yeast cake?
     
  18. Recluse

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 29, 2011
    My standard lately has been 8 weeks (minimum 10 -12 is better) in the fermenter, then prime and bottle and drink by 7-10 days later depending on how well the carbonation process has gone. Seems to be very good at that point, and, quite honestly, I haven't noticed it getting appreciably better after additional bottle aging. Of course, I end up drinking fairly little, because a friend of mine thinks it is absolutely the best stuff in the world and I generally give him the majority of the stuff. I ran out of the newer batch and scrounged for some old bottles that had been 'aging' for a year or so to get him his 'fix'. He didn't report that he like them any better than the young stuff. I guess I need to crack one of them and see for myself.

    I definitely like it better with the EC-1118 yeast vs. Montrachet. The ending gravities are about the same with both yeasts (my batches usually go from 1.064--->0.998) but the EC-1118 seems to leave more apple flavor and less tartness.
     
  19. 1Mainebrew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 30, 2011
    So Recluse, 10-12 weeks doesn't give you any hint of autolysis? If not thats great! What temp is it kept at during the 2-3 months in primary?
     
  20. nsw8148

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 30, 2011
    Yep, its worked fine
     
  21. brpruett

    Active Member

    Posted Apr 30, 2011
    Jota, use search feature if you are looking for info.

    Recluse, I agree with your findings about the impact of aging.
    I have some Aepfelwein (about 20G) fermenting on the 6th generation of lees.

    I do add a percentage of cranberry juice to some of my carboys because I like the somewhat fruity finish.
     
  22. MikePGS

    Member

    Posted Apr 30, 2011
    I just bottled my Ed Wort's tonight and have a question. When I took a final gravity reading it was 1.004. This is after six weeks or so in the better bottle, which was kept in my basement. I followed every instruction to the letter, and it was even back to original apple juice clarity. Just to be safe I put some potassium metabisulfate into the mix. Does anyone know if this will potential explodify? Also why would it not have fermented out in six weeks? Temperature?
     
  23. Recluse

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 30, 2011
    I have not noticed any off flavors, so I don't think autolysis is a factor. Since I make the stuff year round, the temperatures change even in the basement.

    My last batch was between 51-64 degrees F during the entire time but previous batches were at 63-69 deg F and though I didn't seem to have recorded it, I know some summer batches probably fermented mostly in the 68-75 deg F range.

    I have to say that my last batch that was at the lowest temp which was in the carboy from 18-Dec-2010 to 17-Mar-2011 was the best tasting...but also didn't carbonate as well. I primed with Apple Juice concentrate instead of Dextrose, so maybe my sugar calcs were off, or something. There was some carbonation, so, even though it was crystal clear, there WERE still yeast in suspension.
     
  24. Vongo

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Apr 30, 2011
    Ok just stole a little sample after 2 months... I can't imagine it getting any better... more age and a little Co2!. I'll be starting another batch this week based on the sample :)
     
  25. samurai388

    Member

    Posted May 1, 2011
    Just bottled one of the 2 gallon batches I've been fermenting for 6 weeks. Tasted a small sample of it that wasn't half bad. I'm going to bottle carb and let it condition for the next few weeks.
     
  26. jbwebst

    Active Member

    Posted May 2, 2011
    I just made a 5 gallon batch this evening, pretty much to recipe - except I used Sam's Club brand apple juice (@ $4.94 for 1.5 gallons). With this much hype, it's going to be hard to be patient!

    DSCN1954 (Large).jpg
     
  27. Chuginator

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 2, 2011
    Sorry if this has been asked- I've spent an hour and a half searching this thread and can't find the exact answer (amazing it's still going after all these years).

    I'm bottling my first batch this weekend. Been in fermenter 2 months. I'm planning on carbing a gallon of it with 1oz corn sugar to beer bottles, and leaving the rest "still." For the still portion - can I use liquor bottles/wine bottles with screw tops? I've seen references to degassing... will pressure be a problem in those types of bottles if I do not degas? I wouldn't mind the slightly sparkling aspect, but I don't want to screw around with gin bottles if there is any chance of overpressurization. If there is a danger, I will order some 32oz fliptops.
     
  28. Recluse

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 2, 2011
    I've bottled my 'still' Apfelwein in normal wine bottles with corks. No problems. As far as I could tell, it remained pretty much STILL, not even much effervescence when opened. You should be OK.
     
  29. Chuginator

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 2, 2011
    Thank you.
     
  30. rossi46

    Senior Member

    Posted May 3, 2011
    Got good news, we will be able to move into our new house sooner that expected. Is it ok to transport a carboy of this stuff?
     
  31. Stockspeed3

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 3, 2011
    It shouldn't be a problem. Just make sure you keep the temps down. And make sure you aren't tempted on the drive to drink it. Lol
     
  32. rossi46

    Senior Member

    Posted May 3, 2011
    Thanks, it's still cool out and less than ten miles, so I couldn't get to tanked.
     
  33. dusty1025

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 4, 2011
    keep it under airlock so you don't get nabbed for driving with an open container
     
  34. jbrookeiv

    Crafted Magazine

    Posted May 4, 2011
    4.5 gallons of Apfelwein is now in bottles. Fermented down to 0.997 with Saflager S-23.

    image-1317856260.jpg
     
  35. Cacaman

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 4, 2011
    I made my first batch of apfelwein today, and I have a few questions (my apologies if they have already been answered).

    1. I sanitized the 5 gallon carboy with starsan, and I got quite a bit of leftover foam stuck in the carboy. Is it ok if the foam stayed in the carboy while pouring the apple juice?

    2. I plan to bottle this batch, and found these fancy welches sparkling grape juice cocktail "twisty-top" 750mL bottles. Do you think they will work for bottling?

    [​IMG]

    3. Edwort says he doesn't use priming sugar while bottling, have any of you all had better results priming/not priming?

    Thanks!!
     
  36. HItransplant

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 4, 2011
    I can only speak to the first question, since my apfelwein is still in the carboy.

    Dont fear the foam... its disinfecting as it squeezes out the top of the carboy.

    youll have to look to the others for question 2 and 3.
     
  37. Malstorme

    Yeast-herder  

    Posted May 4, 2011
    Greets:

    Spent the last few days reading the thread and have so far made it to Page 254 (~2500 posts). Got a batch whipped up last night, following Ed's recipe. I have a few questions...




    Oh wait... No I don't, they've all been answered 30+ times. :ban:

    5 gallons 100% AJ
    Red Star Montrachet
    2# corn sugar*

    [​IMG]

    A ring of bubbles formed in about an hour, and this morning it's percolating nicely now just time to show a little patience.

    *I purchase corn sugar in bulk and apparently "A pint's a pound the world around" doesn't apply to corn sugar. I added 4 cups and measured the OG at 1.054. After pitching and setting settling back in with this monster thread, I saw that my OG's a little low. Did a little Googlin' and found an estimate of 5 oz per cup on fine sugar so..... Grabbed a funnel and added 2 more cups. I figure it may still be a little shy of 2# but close enough for government work. Cheers!


    Mals
     
  38. Recluse

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 4, 2011
    "A pint's a pound" only applies to Water or other liquids/substances with density close to 1.

    Corn sugar is really powdery.. as you found out. 5 oz per cup sounds about right. Most brewing guides call for 3/4 cup per 5 gallons, (ca. 4 oz) though I generally like to prime at the 1 oz per gallon level. I bought a kitchen scale and weigh any solid (e.g. sugar, malt extract, hops etc..) to be sure.

    Certainly will be close enough!
     
    Malstorme likes this.
  39. Recluse

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 4, 2011
    It is a matter of personal preference. I like it sparkling as do my Apfelwein addicted friends, but others like it more like a still wine.
     
  40. _JP_

    Well-Known Member

    Posted May 4, 2011


    Yep, I use those all the time (for beer). Should work great for sparkling wines. Get the label off first though.
     
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