Chachane186
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- Aug 27, 2013
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Hello,
I'm relatively new to brewing cider (and brewing in general for that matter) and completely new to cold crashing so please forgive me if I seem a little ignorant here.
I'm currently brewing a hard apple cider with the following ingredients:
4 gal apple juice
3.3 lbs light brown sugar
3.5 lbs castor sugar
1 pack champagne yeast
O.G: 1.13
Fermenting in a 5 gal plastic fermentor which is kept 65-70F in a small wine fridge. (I know I should be using better ingredients and equipment but this is the only thing I have available to me at the moment)
It has been fermenting now for 1 day I want to cold crash it before it eats up all my sugar so I don't end up with a super dry cider.
Here are my questions:
Thanks for all your help in advance
Best Regards
From Bangalore, India.
I'm relatively new to brewing cider (and brewing in general for that matter) and completely new to cold crashing so please forgive me if I seem a little ignorant here.
I'm currently brewing a hard apple cider with the following ingredients:
4 gal apple juice
3.3 lbs light brown sugar
3.5 lbs castor sugar
1 pack champagne yeast
O.G: 1.13
Fermenting in a 5 gal plastic fermentor which is kept 65-70F in a small wine fridge. (I know I should be using better ingredients and equipment but this is the only thing I have available to me at the moment)
It has been fermenting now for 1 day I want to cold crash it before it eats up all my sugar so I don't end up with a super dry cider.
Here are my questions:
- When is the right time for when I can cold crash it?
- Is there is a recommended time to wait after start of fermentation?
- Can I open the top of it and take a sample or will that risk tainting or oxidizing the cider?
- If I slowly tip the fermenter over so I can use the spigot (which is at the top for some reason) then will it disturb the sediment at the bottom? And what happens if I disturb the sediment? Will it mess up my cider?
Thanks for all your help in advance
Best Regards
From Bangalore, India.