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A 7% pear cider as a base for then fermenting mead,

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blastedkane

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This is my first post and my first attempt at cider and so I was hoping for some advice.

I love mead and want to make some of my own. however first a little background. For my birthday I was given a cider making course which was loads of fun and I got to make a 1gal demijohn of Pear Cider. This has now fermented out to just under 1 and therefore is very dry and, according to my calculations should be at about 7%

Whilst waiting for that to finish a friend of mine gave me access to their orchard which used to be a cider orchard and i managed to get about 60 kilos of apples, so I pressed them and got about 25 Litres of juice. 20litres is currently fermenting and I pasteurized 5 litres to keep as just juice.

The pear cider seemed to halt fermentation for about 2 weeks and So i have racked it off into a clean demijohn and topped with water. but as mentioned it is very dry and acidic. I was worried about overfermenting (as mentioned this is my first time and i think I should have read more before starting) and so I dropped a campden tablet in to halt the process so I have a flat acidic drink at 7%.


NOw onto the questions.

These are 4 fold.

1. I have been experimenting with back sweetening the Pear with the pasteurized apple and it makes for a really nice drink. If I blend 50% apple and 50% pear with the alcohol content drop to 3.5 ?

2. What is the ideal alcohol content for long term storage?

3. If I do the above then I will have a demijohn of blended cider which I hope to bulk age and then bottle in about 3 months. any thoughts on potential spoilage?

4. Finally (and this is why I posted here) I am thinking about taking half of the pear cider, adding about 2 Litres of water and 3 Lbs of honey. Pitching some yeast and then re fermenting to make a pear melomel. will the end product take on the pear characteristics or will the fact that the pear is already fermented cause any problems?
 
This is my first post and my first attempt at cider and so I was hoping for some advice.

I love mead and want to make some of my own. however first a little background. For my birthday I was given a cider making course which was loads of fun and I got to make a 1gal demijohn of Pear Cider. This has now fermented out to just under 1 and therefore is very dry and, according to my calculations should be at about 7%

Whilst waiting for that to finish a friend of mine gave me access to their orchard which used to be a cider orchard and i managed to get about 60 kilos of apples, so I pressed them and got about 25 Litres of juice. 20litres is currently fermenting and I pasteurized 5 litres to keep as just juice.

The pear cider seemed to halt fermentation for about 2 weeks and So i have racked it off into a clean demijohn and topped with water. but as mentioned it is very dry and acidic. I was worried about overfermenting (as mentioned this is my first time and i think I should have read more before starting) and so I dropped a campden tablet in to halt the process so I have a flat acidic drink at 7%.


NOw onto the questions.

These are 4 fold.

1. I have been experimenting with back sweetening the Pear with the pasteurized apple and it makes for a really nice drink. If I blend 50% apple and 50% pear with the alcohol content drop to 3.5 ?

2. What is the ideal alcohol content for long term storage?

3. If I do the above then I will have a demijohn of blended cider which I hope to bulk age and then bottle in about 3 months. any thoughts on potential spoilage?

4. Finally (and this is why I posted here) I am thinking about taking half of the pear cider, adding about 2 Litres of water and 3 Lbs of honey. Pitching some yeast and then re fermenting to make a pear melomel. will the end product take on the pear characteristics or will the fact that the pear is already fermented cause any problems?

I will try and help with very limited experience, others maybe able to help more :)

1. I believe you would likely restart the ferment. Campden tablets are not designed to stop fermentation (http://blog.eckraus.com/blog/wine-making-tricks-and-tips/campden-tablets-what-they-can-and-cant-do)
2. Wines / Meads for long term storage are typically 12% ABV +. Cider wouldn't typically be stored 'long term' i.e. it would traditionally be drunk within the year of making.
3. I think you would likely restart the ferment - I'm not also not sure you would gain anything from bulk ageing. Your process is kind of wonky but I think you realise that :)
4. I'm not really sure if this would be successful. Again a slightly back to front process :)

If you don't like what you have, you have nothing to lose by trying it I suppose :).
 
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