3milerider
New Member
Hey all,
So I decided after lurking around for a week or so and having browsed all over the web for some tips and tricks I decided to give some rudimentary brewing a shot.
Some background, currently I live on a small island in the Caribbean. And by small, I mean VERY small. So access to supplies is limited at best. I became interested in some of the minimalist brewing techniques. Not wanting to invest too much money for a first time project I decided to give cider a whirl as getting a gallon of apple juice wasn't too expensive here, and I already had some bread yeast sitting around.
Now I realize that my ingredient list there isn't too impressive. But again, let me stress, I'm on a small island in the Caribbean. Getting things shipped here is dicey, especially in terms of speed of shipping. So I chose to work with what I had on hand rather than what would be the best quality. Also, no easy access to testing equpiment (e.g. hydrometers), so I'm basing things off pure math and estimations.
The juice I bought was 28g per 8oz per the label, so by rough estimation I would guess that to be a SG of 1.02ish. Seems low from what I read about juices, but I'll run with that for now. I added a cup of sugar which should have raised SG to 1.048 per my calculations. Pitched with about 2tsp of rapid-rise bread yeast (since later generations of the yeast would just be yeast I see no issue here). Gave it a good shake and screwed the cap back on the juice lightly to act as a makeshift airlock. Wrapped the whole thing in a trash bag with a few holes poked in it (to prevent excess mess in the case of cap malfunction and juice explosion). After 3 days my bubbling had slowed to near minimal so I capped it tight and popped it in the fridge, releasing gas a couple of times as it cooled to keep my bottle from exploding.
So now I have a somewhat decent, self-carbed, very dry cider it appears. It tastes somewhat like an apple-flavored champagne with a slight hint of yeasty flavor (my understanding is this should disappear, or at least be reduced if I let the whole setup age for a few weeks). It doesn't taste too alcoholic, but it's not sweet at all, which leads me to believe I must have processed most of the available sugar. I'm unsure if I just burned up all the available nutrients or if I simply had bad yeast and killed it off with the alcohol concentration at this point.
Now, I'd much rather have a slightly sweeter cider, the mouthfeel and taste aren't too bad though so I'm thinking about repeating this experiment in a few weeks. But can anybody give me a decent estimate of an SG to aim for to get a sweetish cider without being cloyingly so? I figure another cup would give me 1.073, but that seems like it might end up really sweet. Or should I just let my yeast burn itself out with my original setup and then try and backsweeten (maybe with a simple syrup after the cider is cooled)?
So I decided after lurking around for a week or so and having browsed all over the web for some tips and tricks I decided to give some rudimentary brewing a shot.
Some background, currently I live on a small island in the Caribbean. And by small, I mean VERY small. So access to supplies is limited at best. I became interested in some of the minimalist brewing techniques. Not wanting to invest too much money for a first time project I decided to give cider a whirl as getting a gallon of apple juice wasn't too expensive here, and I already had some bread yeast sitting around.
Now I realize that my ingredient list there isn't too impressive. But again, let me stress, I'm on a small island in the Caribbean. Getting things shipped here is dicey, especially in terms of speed of shipping. So I chose to work with what I had on hand rather than what would be the best quality. Also, no easy access to testing equpiment (e.g. hydrometers), so I'm basing things off pure math and estimations.
The juice I bought was 28g per 8oz per the label, so by rough estimation I would guess that to be a SG of 1.02ish. Seems low from what I read about juices, but I'll run with that for now. I added a cup of sugar which should have raised SG to 1.048 per my calculations. Pitched with about 2tsp of rapid-rise bread yeast (since later generations of the yeast would just be yeast I see no issue here). Gave it a good shake and screwed the cap back on the juice lightly to act as a makeshift airlock. Wrapped the whole thing in a trash bag with a few holes poked in it (to prevent excess mess in the case of cap malfunction and juice explosion). After 3 days my bubbling had slowed to near minimal so I capped it tight and popped it in the fridge, releasing gas a couple of times as it cooled to keep my bottle from exploding.
So now I have a somewhat decent, self-carbed, very dry cider it appears. It tastes somewhat like an apple-flavored champagne with a slight hint of yeasty flavor (my understanding is this should disappear, or at least be reduced if I let the whole setup age for a few weeks). It doesn't taste too alcoholic, but it's not sweet at all, which leads me to believe I must have processed most of the available sugar. I'm unsure if I just burned up all the available nutrients or if I simply had bad yeast and killed it off with the alcohol concentration at this point.
Now, I'd much rather have a slightly sweeter cider, the mouthfeel and taste aren't too bad though so I'm thinking about repeating this experiment in a few weeks. But can anybody give me a decent estimate of an SG to aim for to get a sweetish cider without being cloyingly so? I figure another cup would give me 1.073, but that seems like it might end up really sweet. Or should I just let my yeast burn itself out with my original setup and then try and backsweeten (maybe with a simple syrup after the cider is cooled)?