I've some ed's apfelwine (montrechet) from commercial pasteurized glass bottle cider crashed at 1.05 and some local unpasteurized plastic jug cider allowed to ferment to 1.15 with natural yeast.
Both ciders were fermented in 80 degree ambient temp. The apfelwine was aged for 3 weeks in bottles, but was not handled properly during racking and bottling and probably suffered oxidation. I believe the local cider was handled to reduce oxidation, but has been racked twice (still sitting in secondary).
Both have an initial pleasing "tip of the tongue" flavor, which turns a bit yeasty and then hits with a thick aftertaste that has a yeasty feel, but doesn't actually taste much like yeast. Such that the initial reaction of my testers was, "[sip]Hey, this is actually pretty goo - oh. yea, that's not good"
Obviously I know now to try fermenting closer to 60 deg. and be more careful handling, but thought I'd see if anyone has had experience and could state definitively that this sort of off flavor is a temperature issue rather than something else I need to address. Even though the natural yeast might do some funny things at 80, I would have thought Montrechet would have done better, but it actually has a stronger flavor. I've read that oxidation imparts a "sherry" flavor, but I've never had sherry to know the flavor, so could that be the issue?
Both ciders were fermented in 80 degree ambient temp. The apfelwine was aged for 3 weeks in bottles, but was not handled properly during racking and bottling and probably suffered oxidation. I believe the local cider was handled to reduce oxidation, but has been racked twice (still sitting in secondary).
Both have an initial pleasing "tip of the tongue" flavor, which turns a bit yeasty and then hits with a thick aftertaste that has a yeasty feel, but doesn't actually taste much like yeast. Such that the initial reaction of my testers was, "[sip]Hey, this is actually pretty goo - oh. yea, that's not good"
Obviously I know now to try fermenting closer to 60 deg. and be more careful handling, but thought I'd see if anyone has had experience and could state definitively that this sort of off flavor is a temperature issue rather than something else I need to address. Even though the natural yeast might do some funny things at 80, I would have thought Montrechet would have done better, but it actually has a stronger flavor. I've read that oxidation imparts a "sherry" flavor, but I've never had sherry to know the flavor, so could that be the issue?