Litchfield
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Hi All, a friend and I have started a mission to brew cider in a sub-tropical region of China and would be grateful for some advice and/or thoughts on the best way forward. We are fairly new to this, so apologies for any questions that seem dumb. This is our process as stands -
Day One (Juice Day)
Wash and juice Xinjiang Apples into sanitized food grade bucket. Remove as much pulp as possible. 1kg = >/<500ml.
Raise OG to 1055 with white sugar, if necessary. Begin with 100g increments, dissolve into juice then introduce back into the batch.
Add pectic enzyme to juice, according to instruction.
Raise the acidity to a pH level of 3.4. Increments of 1g Malic Acid per litre of juice if original acidity is around 4, try less if not.
Introduce SO2.
Day Two (Begin Fermentation)
24hrs after SO2 addition, transfer to sterilised carboy, add in Lalvin EC-118 yeast. > 2.5g/5gal is sufficient.
Keep at room temp <20 degrees C.
Racking
After 9-14 days, when air lock has stopped bubbling, rack into new, sterile carboy. Leave behind sediment. FG should = 1000.
Leave in this state to condition and clear. At least one month. If large amounts of sediment appear, rack again to condition.
Avoid breaking air seal.
Blending and Bottling
Dilute by 25%. Add sweetener/sugar/acid to taste. Looking for a balanced sweet sharp taste.
This has produced a nice cider during winter time where temperatures would naturally stay between 15-20 degrees C. However, we are now moving towards the summer and constant temps of above 30 degrees C. So, two questions -
1) Is it OK to leave cider in secondary at higher temps? We use a temperature controlled room, but for safety reasons it is difficult to keep it cool for long periods of time. What would happen if we let our cider condition at higher temperatures for a period of a month or two?
2) We have been experiencing problems with bottling. That is, we are consistently getting off flavours developing after a few days of being in the bottle. As far as I can work out this is either due to poor sanitation, oxygenation of the juice or perhaps due to the sweetener we are using (I cannot reliably tell you what this is as the packet is in Chinese, it is some kind of apple flavouring). The next thing we will try is sticky's stove top method of pasteurisation which will hopefully solve the problem without adding further sulphites. I've read about pasteurisation causing a haze, will this still be the case post fermentation? We are taking our next batch to a festival to needs to look and taste as good as poss!
Thanks
Tom
Day One (Juice Day)
Wash and juice Xinjiang Apples into sanitized food grade bucket. Remove as much pulp as possible. 1kg = >/<500ml.
Raise OG to 1055 with white sugar, if necessary. Begin with 100g increments, dissolve into juice then introduce back into the batch.
Add pectic enzyme to juice, according to instruction.
Raise the acidity to a pH level of 3.4. Increments of 1g Malic Acid per litre of juice if original acidity is around 4, try less if not.
Introduce SO2.
Day Two (Begin Fermentation)
24hrs after SO2 addition, transfer to sterilised carboy, add in Lalvin EC-118 yeast. > 2.5g/5gal is sufficient.
Keep at room temp <20 degrees C.
Racking
After 9-14 days, when air lock has stopped bubbling, rack into new, sterile carboy. Leave behind sediment. FG should = 1000.
Leave in this state to condition and clear. At least one month. If large amounts of sediment appear, rack again to condition.
Avoid breaking air seal.
Blending and Bottling
Dilute by 25%. Add sweetener/sugar/acid to taste. Looking for a balanced sweet sharp taste.
This has produced a nice cider during winter time where temperatures would naturally stay between 15-20 degrees C. However, we are now moving towards the summer and constant temps of above 30 degrees C. So, two questions -
1) Is it OK to leave cider in secondary at higher temps? We use a temperature controlled room, but for safety reasons it is difficult to keep it cool for long periods of time. What would happen if we let our cider condition at higher temperatures for a period of a month or two?
2) We have been experiencing problems with bottling. That is, we are consistently getting off flavours developing after a few days of being in the bottle. As far as I can work out this is either due to poor sanitation, oxygenation of the juice or perhaps due to the sweetener we are using (I cannot reliably tell you what this is as the packet is in Chinese, it is some kind of apple flavouring). The next thing we will try is sticky's stove top method of pasteurisation which will hopefully solve the problem without adding further sulphites. I've read about pasteurisation causing a haze, will this still be the case post fermentation? We are taking our next batch to a festival to needs to look and taste as good as poss!
Thanks
Tom