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Carbonating Pear Cider with Maple Sugar

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divedeep

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I have five gallons of pear juice that I fermented with champagne yeast. It now has aged for a few months in a carboy. I also added light toast american oak. I have champagne bottles and want to carbonate it in the bottle. I will filter the cider before bottling and I want it to be similar to champagne when done. I would like to use maple sugar (not syrup) as I am thinking it may give some interesting flavors mixing with the oak and pear. My question is how much maple sugar to use? Anyone have some experience with using maple sugar? I am thinking a cup.
 
I really have no idea. Are you familiar with bottle conditioning beer, where the rule of thumb is 4 ounces of table sugar (approximately 2/3 cup) per 5 gallons for middle-of-the-road carbonation? I have no idea how maple sugar relates to table sugar, though. Actually I'm not even sure what maple sugar is and would love to hear about it.
 
I just ordered a Maple Cider at the bar last night. Got me searching for some diy ideas on this site. I'm not the most experienced cider maker. Ive bottled a few gallons of cider myself. I typically use one can of apple juice concentrate to bottle a gallon of cider. Maybe you can use that as a reference as to how much maple sugar you would add your Maple Cider. I think you've got a good plan. Personally I might start with 3/4 cup of sugar per gallon. Tasted as you go. You can always add more sugar to taste.
 
I have made hard apple cider many times, and have had much success making a champagne like product. This is my first attempt at using pears. I have previously used white sugar. Maple sugar is made from cooked down maple syrup and is not as refined as white sugar, so I am thinking it will take more to produce the same amount of carbonation. I will try about 8ozs, instead of the 4-5 ozs that would be used with white sugar.
 
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