I forgot to post the yeast pasteurization temperature links earlier.
Advances in Applied Microbiology on google books
The Biological Impact of Flash Pasteurization Over a Wide Temperature Interval
The Handbook of Food Preservation
They all recommend that 60-65C or 140-150F for 30-40 mins should be adequate to kill yeast to log 5.
Lower temps can be used, but the time length becomes a problem.
I've tested my 3 gallon pot by adding 8 12oz capped beer bottles filled with water. I heated the water to 170, removed it from the stove and added the bottles. After 5 mins the water bath temp had dropped to 145F and a test of one bottle showed that the internal water temp was 145F.
I left the bottles in the pot for 10 more mins then removed them and tested 1 bottle every 5 mins. The heat loss from the bottles was very slow, 1-2 degrees every 5 mins.
Including their 10 mins at temp in the waterbath, they remain over 140F for 1/2 and over 130 for 1 hr. I'm confident that is enough time and heat to reduce the yeast to negligible levels.
No! These results do not reflect each other.
Pimento's cider was dry, with just enough priming sugar added to achieve carbonation. It makes sense that it would take a week to two weeks to carbonate. With less sugar in solution, the yeast have a harder time finding it and consuming it. It's the same principle that causes wine and mead to ferment 90% relatively quick, but often that last 10% takes time, usually in an actual secondary vessel. It's the same reason a beer can ferment out in as little as 3 days, but will take a week or two weeks to carbonate because the yeast has settled, there are fewer cells in the bottles, and less sugar added back in.
RukusDM's cider was sweet.... what, like 1.012... and wasn't cold crashed to drop cells, and then even more sugar added to prime. Just because you both had similar results in the time it took to carbonate does not mean you've replicated each other's experiments. I am still having a hard time wrapping my mind around those results. I urge you to repeat this experiment before you draw any conclusions. I once bottled beer with a filthy tube that I didn't sanitize, I also used my mouth to create the siphon, and didn't use mouthwash first. I got no infection. That does not mean it's acceptable practice.
I don't want to crap on your work, I enjoy and appreciate it, especially the water bath temp/time curves.
I think you need to do more research before you draw any conclusions. And as a pessimist, I believe you'll find too many variables that you can't control that will swing the results every time.
What was the starting time in each of your latest tables? 8:47 and 9:25?
No! These results do not reflect each other.
Pimento's cider was dry, with just enough priming sugar added to achieve carbonation. It makes sense that it would take a week to two weeks to carbonate. With less sugar in solution, the yeast have a harder time finding it and consuming it. It's the same principle that causes wine and mead to ferment 90% relatively quick, but often that last 10% takes time, usually in an actual secondary vessel. It's the same reason a beer can ferment out in as little as 3 days, but will take a week or two weeks to carbonate because the yeast has settled, there are fewer cells in the bottles, and less sugar added back in.
RukusDM's cider was sweet.... what, like 1.012... and wasn't cold crashed to drop cells, and then even more sugar added to prime. Just because you both had similar results in the time it took to carbonate does not mean you've replicated each other's experiments. I am still having a hard time wrapping my mind around those results. I urge you to repeat this experiment before you draw any conclusions. I once bottled beer with a filthy tube that I didn't sanitize, I also used my mouth to create the siphon, and didn't use mouthwash first. I got no infection. That does not mean it's acceptable practice.
I don't want to crap on your work, I enjoy and appreciate it, especially the water bath temp/time curves.
I think you need to do more research before you draw any conclusions. And as a pessimist, I believe you'll find too many variables that you can't control that will swing the results every time.
Well its true the testing isn't complete, however I didn't make these numbers up. Perhaps you could do some testing to verify?
I didn't say you made up the numbers. Relax.
I have tested, but didn't plot the data. They were mental notes. I outlined my last gallon of cider results on page one. They are very distant from your results. You chose to ignore those, but accept pimentos. Are you doing what scientists often do, unintentionally; accepting results similar to yours while ignoring results that contradict your own?
No! These results do not reflect each other.
Pimento's cider was dry, with just enough priming sugar added to achieve carbonation. It makes sense that it would take a week to two weeks to carbonate. With less sugar in solution, the yeast have a harder time finding it and consuming it. It's the same principle that causes wine and mead to ferment 90% relatively quick, but often that last 10% takes time, usually in an actual secondary vessel. It's the same reason a beer can ferment out in as little as 3 days, but will take a week or two weeks to carbonate because the yeast has settled, there are fewer cells in the bottles, and less sugar added back in.
RukusDM's cider was sweet.... what, like 1.012... and wasn't cold crashed to drop cells, and then even more sugar added to prime. Just because you both had similar results in the time it took to carbonate does not mean you've replicated each other's experiments. I am still having a hard time wrapping my mind around those results. I urge you to repeat this experiment before you draw any conclusions. I once bottled beer with a filthy tube that I didn't sanitize, I also used my mouth to create the siphon, and didn't use mouthwash first. I got no infection. That does not mean it's acceptable practice.
I don't want to crap on your work, I enjoy and appreciate it, especially the water bath temp/time curves.
I think you need to do more research before you draw any conclusions. And as a pessimist, I believe you'll find too many variables that you can't control that will swing the results every time.
I must say I'm a bit confused as your bottles having more carbonation than mine with the same pressures. I did not use the higher temperature though, I used 160, and they have a nice initial head but not allot of carb, but something I would not mind having every day.
Any chance they weren't cooled down to normal fridge temps before you opened?
Thinking....hmmmf.
Your theory that wine and mead slows down in the last 10% because of less sugar is entirely unfounded and honestly, I don't think you know what you are talking about.
Wines and meads slow down in the later stages because the nutrients get used up. It has nothing to do with there being less sugar. Re-read Cvillekevins posts and pay attention to when he talks about keeving and using low-nitrogen apples. Yeast in the absence of nutrients, particularly nitrogen will slow down and eventually go dormant.
Unfounded? This is from the Mead Sticky by hightest.. his Staggered Nutrient Addition link. It contradicts you. Should he re-read Cville's sticky too?
http://home.comcast.net/~mzapx1/FAQ/SNAddition.pdf
The nutrient quantities were changed based on conversations with Dr. Clayton Cone wherein I learned that he recommended the bulk of the nutrients be added before 30% sugar depletion - the yeast are usually well into their stationary phase at 50% sugar depletion and cannot utilize the nutrients as well as they can before 30% depletion. As such, the NAS (second revision) now adds 85% of the nutrient nitrogen before 30% sugar depletion.
Wines and meads slow down in the later stages because the nutrients get used up. It has nothing to do with there being less sugar. Re-read Cvillekevins posts and pay attention to when he talks about keeving and using low-nitrogen apples. Yeast in the absence of nutrients, particularly nitrogen will slow down and eventually go dormant.
I just recalled something. I took a sixer of this stuff over to my neigbors last week to have a couple with him.
We drank a couple...They were chilled. The last one he opened had a mild gusher and lost a oz or so of cider. We had just opened 4 with nothing like this. We drank these prior to Pasteurization, as they were still in the bottle conditioning stage.
I took a look at his bottle and it had more yeast on the bottom than I had seen with any of the bottles. Its possible when I bottled the last few from the bucket, I got some lees from the bottom in them.
I just cracked open my gauged pop bottle and it had less carbonation than the rest.
It may be that when I split the batches the priming sugar wasn't mixed well and that bottle got a bit less.
I won't be splitting this coming batch, so we'll see how it compares.
To be clear, are you adding priming sugar to a dry, cold crashed, racked cider?
Because I recently cold crashed a fermenting cider at 1.020 ... bottled... and tested 12 hours later and had adequate carbonation. If noobs read this, and think it will take two weeks for their sweet cider to carbonate in the bottle before pasteurizing, someone is going to die. Can you give more info, preferably edited into your OP, about the cider going into your experiment?
Rukus, your PM box must be full.
Ferm temp low 60's, no exact number. Campden was only added 24 hours prior because it was raw and for all I know this lady accidentally ground up one of the stray cats in the cider press. Bottle conditioned is 72, almost exactly, kitchen counter temp.
Thought #1:
I didn't use a pressure gauge. I went by bubbles and foam in the glass when poured. 12 hours, "carbonated". It occurred to me just now, there is already alot of CO2 dissolved in the cider from fermentation... I just degassed another batch by gently swirling the carboy and this occurred to me. Because there was so much CO2 already in the liquid, a long wait for the bottle to carb wasn't necessary.
Thought #2:
It went from 1.056 to 1.020 in about 6 days. That equals about 6 gravity points a day, or 3 gravity points every 12 hours. My understanding, I've read somewhere, it's less than 1 gravity point that is necessary to carbonate a beer. Doing a quick calculation, a standard 5 oz of priming sugar in a 5 gallon batch of beer only bumps the gravity by 0.001.
Rukus, your PM box must be full.
Ferm temp low 60's, no exact number. Campden was only added 24 hours prior because it was raw and for all I know this lady accidentally ground up one of the stray cats in the cider press. Bottle conditioned is 72, almost exactly, kitchen counter temp.
Thought #1:
I didn't use a pressure gauge. I went by bubbles and foam in the glass when poured. 12 hours, "carbonated". It occurred to me just now, there is already alot of CO2 dissolved in the cider from fermentation... I just degassed another batch by gently swirling the carboy and this occurred to me. Because there was so much CO2 already in the liquid, a long wait for the bottle to carb wasn't necessary.
Thought #2:
It went from 1.056 to 1.020 in about 6 days. That equals about 6 gravity points a day, or 3 gravity points every 12 hours. My understanding, I've read somewhere, it's less than 1 gravity point that is necessary to carbonate a beer. Doing a quick calculation, a standard 5 oz of priming sugar in a 5 gallon batch of beer only bumps the gravity by 0.001.