Me.. Give me a little bit.. I'll post the scaled down recipe I used.
awesome!

Me.. Give me a little bit.. I'll post the scaled down recipe I used.
This was an experiment for me, hence the somewhat rambling notes. I repitched yeast previously harvested. Next time I do a 1G of this I'll pitch 1/2 pkg of hydrated notty.
I did not add extra sugar or prime, I assumed I had enough sugar but if you read my previous posts.. I didn't. I'm blaming it on my inexperience with a bench capper; it was probably a combination of both.
Anyway, I hope this helps!
Edit: disregard the note about priming sugar & water.. I didn't add water or sugar whatsoever.
Looks good, were you going for a still cider?
There is more than enough sugar between the 2 cups of brown sugar and the 2 cans of FAJC to make bottle bombs.. not for sure if you just used the brown sugar though
Getting ready to bottle this for my first real cider. I gave it a taste minus the caramel sauce and so far so good, 5.75% according to sg readings. I added 5 campden tabs but also added sorbate per bottle instructions. For still, it didn't specify any sorbate on this recipe. Is there a reason I shouldn't have done that?
I've never used sorbate in my cider and never had bombs when I was bottling. Here's why. The amount if sugar I add to my cider prior to fermenting is sufficient to halt the yeast action when the ABV reached about 10%. As a precaution, when I was bottling I would use the dish washer method to kill the yeast. Now I just ferment, add the caramel syrup, pour it into the keg and force carb.
That makes sense. I am bottling at quite a bit lower abv and keeping it still. I am starting to see I really need to get the capability to force carb, just haven't gone down that path yet. Sorbate seems to be a back and forth topic everywhere I read! I did not sorbate when I did the apfelwein, although that turned out almost too hot for my household (except for me).
Does sorbate contribute anything to the product taste?
Made a 5 gallon batch of this and kegged it recently for a party. Had some trouble getting the syrup to dissolve but once I figured that out it was sooooo good. One of the first things we kicked and I don't typically like really sweet cider.
Caramel sauce:
http://www.taste.com.au/recipes/caramel-sauce/2d4284f9-821a-4013-99e4-689008ceb836
The key is to dissolve the sugar at a low temperate first before cranking the heat, otherwise you'll have crystalized sugar in your brew and you're right, it won't taste very good, and it'll be nearly impossible for the yeast to break it down.
Obviously don't add the cream from that recipe.
You can mix the sugars, or try different sugars, whatever you prefer. The best way to see if it will work is to make a few different caramels, mix it with a cup or so of cider and see what the taste balance is. Try to get your volumes correct so that you know to make more or mix less.
Ok I have a question and I am not too sure if this has already been answered or not but I've tried reading thru it all and I seem to be getting confused.
I have started making a 5 gallon batch of this recipe from page 1. This is my first time making cider. I plan on making a still cider. After about 2 weeks of fermentation I was going to rack onto 5 campden tablets for 24hrs and than rack into my bottling bucket onto the syrup and FCAJ to bottle.
1) Now...will I have to pasteurize the bottles even tho I added the campden tablets or will i be ok without doing it?
2) If I want a still cider should I also add potassium sorbate with the campden tablets? If this is required...again, do I need to pasteurize the bottles or should I be ok?
I've tried to find the answers but I am getting confused with all the back and forth.
Potassium sorbate prevents yeast from reproducing. If you want a still sweet cider you use that after fermentation is done and the cider is clear (bottling time). Adding campden tabs at the same time acts as an antioxidant and helps the sorbate do its job. If you do this, you do not need to pasteurize but you can't bottle condition (carbonate) because the yeast won't be viable any more.
hello all, just wondering about making this in a keg, and then carbing in the keg, then filling bottles from the keg for an advent exchange...and then drinking the rest from the keg myself...to #1 limit the # of bottles I would need to fill ( I don't bottle any more, LOL) & #2 allow me to serve from my keezer/kegerator for home consumption.
would I still follow the same instructions in the updated recipe in post #420, of adding the caramel syrup to the keg...basically just replacing the bottling bucket in the instructions with keg and continue that way, to force carb as normal...and then filling bottles & capping.
thanks for any help.
anyone who has kegged this recipe able to help me out?
thanks![]()