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Bochet Cyser

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Burnt the honey and put it all together today. I have to say, it was a little crazy burning it. I guess the burner i used was a bit hot, it took all of 15 minutes before i started seeing black steam and got to be a real blackish red. The weird thing was that he minute i put the honey on, there were honey bees everwhere. I am in FL so they are still pretty active, but there had to be 30 or 40. I either got paranoid or they started acting agressive when the black steam started up! That is when i pulled it off and brought it in.

I went with 2 oz of tannin( that is what my local brew store gave me free), nutrient and a small bottle of vanilla extract. The OG was huge for me, at 1.074. It tasted really good. Lots of depth of flavor, then the honey came in at the end. I sprang for a white labs english cider yeast, WLP775. and the bucket is currently sitting in my tub until it starts givin off gas. I am planning on putting in my cooler at 66-68. Any reason to go colder?

All and all, a fun brew. The smells are really pretty wild when cooking the honey. I had local gallberry honey and it gave off the blossom smell while cooking. I will post some pics when i pull it out of the bucket in 6-8 weeks... If i can wait that long!
 
The bees are part of why I'm working out a crock pot-based method of caramelizing the honey. :) I think that those first whisps of smoke are a good place to stop anyway, because I don't think burnt marshmallow is particularly tasty, but that's just me.

I wouldn't go cooler. I ferment all of my ciders between 65-70F and haven't gotten any of the flavors from hot fermentation.
 
Ok, i tasted and checked gravity on this over the weekend. It is at 1.008 or so and seems to be tasting dry. In fact, it doesnt have much taste at all? I want to bottle some for a party in november but fear it will taste... not great. Should I back sweeten? or just wait? I seem to remember someone saying the taste kinda comes back. It has only been ferm. For about 3 weeks. All that wonderful burnt honey taste is gone. I will say it has some kick to it. The color is very similar to bourbon and taste and smell is like diluted cider. Suggestions?
 
Sounds like it just needs some time. Backsweetening will help, but aging really brings a lot of the flavor back.
 
The bees are part of why I'm working out a crock pot-based method of caramelizing the honey. :) I think that those first whisps of smoke are a good place to stop anyway, because I don't think burnt marshmallow is particularly tasty, but that's just me.

I wouldn't go cooler. I ferment all of my ciders between 65-70F and haven't gotten any of the flavors from hot fermentation.

Did you ever work this out? Would love to try bochet without melting my skin off.
 
Blanchy said:
Sounds like it just needs some time. Backsweetening will help, but aging really brings a lot of the flavor back.

So should i just sit on it for another few week, then back sweeten or go ahead and add some sugar now and let go. I want to see what it turns to by itself i think. I can always ad sugar at the end
 
I would simply keep it in your carboy for as long as you possibly can, and not worry about back-sweetening it until you are ready to bottle. It really is just a waiting game. The flavors should come back a bit over the next month or so, so you can calculate your sugar amounts then. After you've bottled, try sampling it every month or so- you'll really be able taste a difference from month to month.
 
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