any idea what temp range would be good for cold crashing?
I've got next to no fridge space but it can get pretty cold here in the north, also after cold crashing for a week or so would it be fine to rack it off to a demijohn to see if I got all the yeast then repeat crashing if not?
It is just juice and EC-1113. It will stay in the carboy until it is fermented dry.
Did you mean EC-1118? If you are fermenting to dry, then you dont really need to cold crash unless you want to accelerate the clearing, which will happen on its own if you give it enough time. For purposes of cider, the main reason to cold crash is to shut down the fermentation, but you need to use an ale yeast for that. EC-1118 will not shut down if you crash it, but it will usually clear the cider up quite a bit.
Why are you "cold crashing"? What are you hoping to gain from that action? If you really feel you must "cold crash". You live in Buffalo. The temperature outside must be close to freezing. Can you leave your cider outside for a few hours and let it get close to freezing then bring it back in again..
I was cold crashing because I thought I had to, but maybe I am doing it at the wrong point. Once it ferments clear, I will not crash it then...but instead go straight to bottle. I do plan on (per the recipe used) adding a can of Frozen AJ Concentrate as a primer. Is this where I should cold crash...or am I completely confused?
Also to answer your question, I guess I could leave it outside for sure. I just worry about it actually freezing but if all I have to do is drop the temp for a bit I can definitely do that. Thanks for the info guys.
Cider makers who come from a wine making background as opposed to being brewers don't cold crash anything (except perhaps to remove trataric acid crystals)...
Thanks man... I think that is what was worrying me. Reading about crashing and pasteurizing. Its my first cider so I'm used to just bottling my beer and throwing it in the fridge until its ready.
If your trying to follow phug's recipe then there is no need to cold crash. Just let it ferment all the way down to 1.000. He said it took 4 weeks. You can let it go longer to clear if you want. The can of FAJC is just to carb the bottles. Pout the thawed can in the bottle bucket and then sophin the cider into the bucket then bottle and cap and store in room temp for a few days.
He said it shouldnt blow up since you are using just enough sugar to carb. But I would use 1 or 2 soda bottles as test to see if they over carb. If they do you can pasteurize if they dont you can just enjoy chill and enjoy them.
If you are going for a sweet cider I would recommend racking as soon as it is at point that you like, regardless of whether you cold crash. I've found that with the yeast I mainly use (Nottingham), bumping the juice with sugar to at least 1.064 allows fermentation to be stopped just by racking.
Has anyone tried to backsweeten to reduce dryness, bottle and let ferment a few days for carbonation and then cold crash the bottles? I am thinking of trying to do this with a one gallon experimental batch and want to make sure I understand the risks.