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easy way to improve cheap cider

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GeneDaniels1963

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I am not a connoisseur, I make cider from store bought juice with added concentrate for higher ABV and a stronger apple taste. I drink it as soon as it finishes, with a little more concentrate added to sweeten (it stays in the fridge until its gone)

I think I have found the perfect way to punch-up the taste profile of this kine of cider; dehydrated crab apples!

Last fall I found a crab tree and harvested several pounds from it. I tried fermenting some, but that really didn't work out too well. So I quartered the rest and dehydrated them, and placed the finished product in the freezer.

Now when I make my cider (1 gal batches), I place about 1/2 cup of dehydrated crabs in the juice. Like I said, I am not a connoiseur, but the difference is very noticeable.

I have a lot of crabs in the freezer, the only problem is the tree I picked them from is going to be cut down for a road widening job soon. :mad:
It will not make a crop next year for sure. I will have to find a new source of crabs next year b/c I want to keep making my cider this way.

Cheers!
 
I bought a juice blend from a local orchard specifically for hard cider. Guess what? Crabs were in the blend, as well as quince. So I guess you're onto something.
 
They aren't crab apples, but you can get a 2 lb bag of Kauffman's Fruit Farm dried granny smith apples, with no sulphur or preservatives on Amazon and elsewhere. These might provide the tartness you want.
 
What specifically was the difference the crabs added? More tannic? Tart? Acidic? Apple-y? I too use store bought juice, mostly because I go through hard cider so fast that I need to keep production up, but I'm looking to bump up my game to more than just Motts, 71b, and time.

I typically make 6 gallon batches of store bought straight cider, 3 gallon batches of fruited cider (cherry, pomegranate, etc) and 1 gallon batches of testers, with different kinds of juice (mango peach apple). I'm not looking for a tart cider, but I am interested in how the dried apples changed the profile of your base recipe
 
I would say more tanin, and slightly more tart. But some extra tartness is needed when I sweeten with concentrate, so it is not really noticeable.
 
They aren't crab apples, but you can get a 2 lb bag of Kauffman's Fruit Farm dried granny smith apples, with no sulphur or preservatives on Amazon and elsewhere. These might provide the tartness you want.

Great minds think alike. I have already been thinking I might dehydrate some granny smith apples, skin and all, to use when the dried crabs are gone.
 
Adding dried crab or wild apples is an interesting idea. I think it might be a crap shoot to know how much to add though. I ferment wild apples as a separate batch and blend it in with my main batch to taste but also measure the total acid to avoid getting a sour result.
 
I think I have found the perfect way to punch-up the taste profile of this kine of cider; dehydrated crab apples!

Last fall I found a crab tree and harvested several pounds from it. I tried fermenting some, but that really didn't work out too well. So I quartered the rest and dehydrated them, and placed the finished product in the freezer.


How did you dehydrate the crab apples?
 

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