• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

First Batch in Progress- Am I Ruining It?

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

phillybrew

Member
Joined
Jan 11, 2011
Messages
8
Reaction score
0
Location
Philadelphia
So my first batch of cider is in progress, and I'm wondering if I'm going down the wrong path. Here's what I'vd done so far:

1. Placed 5 gallons of cider (purchased from my local brew shop) into my 6.5 gallon primary fermenter (plastic), added one rounded cup of table sugar, 1/4 teaspoon of potassium metabisulfite and pitched with dry packet of wine yeast.

2. Didn't see a lot of action through the airlock, but I think the lid wasn't on supertight. Smelled like rotten eggs for a couple days and had some action on the top of the cider, so I know it has fermented.
3. Dropped 2 plastic grommets through the hole in the lid while trying to check it (!). Ugh.

4. After about 6 days, added 5 teaspoons of yeast nutrient per directions. Forgot to dissolve it in water. Just dropped it on top and stirred with a sanitized spoon.

5. Waited about 6 more days and transferred to 5 gallon glass carboy. Left about a gallon behind in fermenter.

Here's where it gets a little messed up. I know it is supposed to fill the carboy pretty much to an inch below the top, but obviously I lost a lot in the transfer/sludge. Local brew shop had recommended filling the space with marbles, but I didn't have any and had read about topping with apple juice. In the meantime, I had a family emergency and had to leave town for four days. So here's what I did.

1. Left it as is (with too much head space) for four days.

2. Bought a gallon of pasturized, unsweetened (Apple & Eve) apple juice and poured it into the secondary with one teaspoon of yeast nutrient. I was worried the fermentation was done and I'd be creating bottle bombs if the natural sugars didn't ferment. Now I'm worried that there's not enough head space for any fermentation that might be taking place.

This is where I am now. It's in the secondary, filled to the top. There are some bubbles around the top and the airlock is ocassionally bubbling. Did I ruin it? What should I do now?
Before you ask, I have never taken a reading...
 
Well, I figured that. But I guess I was looking for a general thumbs up or down, based on people's past experiences...
I will try to take a reading (never done it before) tonight, but I didn't really want to mess with it too much.
 
Most likely if you didn't do anything to stop fermentation besides racking once, you'll be fine. The remaining yeast will probably east the rest of the sugars. To be on the safe side I would check some gravity readings before I bottle. If the first one you check shows that it's pretty much dry then don't worry about it. If you check and it still has some residual sugar then check back in a week. If fermentation has stopped, add campden and sorbate. No bottle bombs.
 
Ok. I was planning on having it sit in the secondary for a month or so and then putting it in another carboy for a couple months before bottling. Does that sound right?
So, I'll take a reading tonight. How do I get the cider out of the carboy? What reading would let me know it's dry?
 
1. Did you wait 24 hours after adding your k-metabisulfite? That is likely why the fermentation was weak. You need to wait 24 hours and then pitch your yeast.
2. Yeast nutrient should have been added at the addition of yeast packet
3. I would be VERY surprised if your cider fermented dry in 6 days. I have ciders still fermenting from their initial start in mid Oct. Granted some are higher sugar value, but still. Cider isn't like beer, fermenting to capacity in 1-2 weeks.
4. Adding the cider probably added fermentable sugars, but see #3 - I don't think it is done fermenting.
5. I don't think the cider is ruined, but you could have some taste issues since you let O2 have a chance to oxidize the must and diffuse in. If you had some free SO2 left over from your kmeta it likely helped remove *some* of the O2 that difussed intot eh must from the head space.
6. for your future runs of cider, keep a sealed jug aside for top off. I find that if you let your cider ferment a good month, or at least until it kicks off most of the lees, you can rack, top off with fresh cider and let it sit until month 3-4 (or more) to ferment out dry and start bulk aging. Since you rack off you take it off most of the lees (which prevents off flavors from autolysing), so you kill two birds with one stone.

With cider, air is your enemy, but I think you should be ok. Remember, cider, especially if you went with store bought cider, will taste very green in most cases for at least 3-4 months. I hope you plan on aging your hooch for 6 months+?
 
To get a reading you can use a wine thief or a syphon to pull some off into a container. I woul recc not putting your sample back into the cider due to contamination possibilities. Just top off, with water at the worst, cider in the best case.

Ghetto fabulous siphon being a straw, plus your thumb and a lot of patience. dip the straw in, thumb over top of straw and withdraw... thumb off and liquid into container. Obvioulsy, you may want to just use a syphon unless you are patient.


A reading of 1.000 or .098 indicates you are fermented dry
 
I followed the directions of my LHBS exactly, which was waiting until the cider hit room temp before pitching the yeast (about 8 hours). They told me to wait 3 days until any wild yeast died off before adding the nutrient, but I wasn't able to get it in til day 6. They suggested putting it in the secondary to finish fermentation for another month and then a third carboy for several months before bottling. I didn't buy store bought cider. I bought it from my LHBS, and they got it from an apple farm. Fresh cider.
So, when I put it in the third carboy, how do I fill it to the top without adding anything (and starting more fermentation)? Marbles?
 
I hate to tell you this but I question your LHBS's knowledge of cider making. I am gonna go with my years of experience and gut on this one. In my humble opinion your local brew store knows little about cider. A lot of home brew stores don't (they focus on beer).

I press about 200 gallons of fresh cider each year and have over 100 gallons in fermenters this year alone. I make good cider.

For instance, while putting marbles in sounds cool, is a great way to introduce bacteria (I assume you would sanitize them), or more likely crack your fermenter as you plop them down.

I go about 1 month in glass primary, then when it slows I rack to another glass secondary and top off with fresh cider. From there I let it sit until it ferments dry and degasses (3-4 months). Bottle at ~4-6 months+

I would recc you resulphite at 30PPM when you bottle.
 
I was planning on adding more sulphite when I moved it again. Should I just leave it in the secondary, then, and forget moving it? There's some sludge on the bottom. I assumed that's why I'm moving it again. Yeah, the marbles sounded complicated, so I opted not to. Hey, it's all a learning process!
 
No sweat man - I am not busting on you. there is very little good info on cider making out there. Luckily I had some good resources, including a 70 year old man to teach me :)

I would let your cider sit and ferment for another couple weeks - it will slough off lees for up to a year but most of the lees are off at 3-4 months.

I suggest that you:
1. rack and add sulphite in 30ppm for your next racking (maybe wait 2-3 weeks at least if you have a lot of lees in there) - the sulphiting will help to pull O2 out of solution.
2. wait at least to month 3 from your start of ferment to bottle. When you bottle, smell the cider - if it smells like eggs (sulfury) do not add sulphites at 30PPM, instead mix 1 cabden tablet in 1 gallon of water. Before you bottle, sanitize your bottles and then dunk them in the weak kmeta mix. drain, then bottle. This will give you a super weak installment of kmeta.

disclaimer - if you have fermentation activity at month 3, you likely have a malolactic fermentation taking place. All bets are off and you have to wait for it to resolve before you move on. This could take months. That is ok though, cider isn't really great until it has about a year on it
 
Between - if you want to know a few good books to check out, let me know and I can give you a few. When I started working with cider, at one point I remember going into a home brew place, I asked them some questions about cider, they acted confident but gave bad advice. Between some reading and my old timer cider maker friend, I learned a lot. I am not a cidah mastah (yet :)), but I thought it was a funny name. Now the old man Stanley, he is a cidah mastah.

Cider is a live animal too. So there is certainly more than one way to handle it. I have had pretty good success, so it isn't rocket science. Producing routinely phenomonal cider on the other hand, is not for the very fickle cider maker.
 
Ok, so as I understand it, my new plan should be:
1. Take a measurement tonight
2. Leave it as is for 2 to 3 weeks
3. Rack it to another carboy and add more metabisulphite (what is 30ppm? I was initially told 1/4 teaspoon per 5 gallons)
4. Let it sit in there for a couple more months (when I rack it to the third container, do I add more cider to the top?)
5. Tranfer to my bottling bucket to bottle (I'm assuming, as this is what you do with beer). Do I prime for carbonation at this point, same as beer?
6. I have never used cabden tablets or tannin(?) so not sure about all that...

Does this sound right? Thanks so much for your help!
 
PPM = Parts per million. 1 cambden tablet has about 30PPM (Free SO2) per gallon. The tablets are just premeasured tablets of kmeta. Does your powder kmeta list a free so2 strenth (1/8 tsp = 200PPM free S02 per 1 gallon)? I can't remember it off hand.

In short - kmeta binds to O2 in solution at a rate of about 50 percent (all of this is PH dependant - a whole 'nother animal). Usually the package reports free sulphite per gallon. As long as your PH on your cider is <3.8 So2 will be effective in the right dose. Personally, I wouldn't worry about any of that right now.

In my opinion I would do as you laid out above. If you want to carbonate it, you may have to do things differently. You may have to reintroduce yeast if you wait until 4months transpire - the yeast may be very weak, and with each racking you take more yeast out of the picture. The tough part with cider is, if you get a malolactic fermentation (say you bottle in 6 weeks from start of fermentation), you might have bottle bombs. I have a kegging system so I force carbonate.

Always top off with each racking - with water if you don't have cider. I would try to keep racking to no more than 4-5 racks. I personally shoot for 2-3 rackings tops, unless it really needs it, or I over sulphited - happened once. Every rack be gentle and attempt not to introduce air back in.

You can add tanin, but add it now, or with your next top off. It will taste like an addative if you don't let it bulk age in.
 
Maybe someone can chime in and give a quick slurry recipe for yeast reintroduction? I can't seem to find my old one...

Basically, you make a weak yeast+ water solution and add it to your bottling bucket, gently stir it in with the priming sugar addition and wait 30 minutes, restir and bottle immediately and cap. You can also substitute cider, but you have to be careful of the sugar values (bottle bombs).

You probably will still have yeast capable of carbonating at 3-4 months, but that is pushing it. You can always bottle and take a chance, if you fall short, you will have still cider.
 
Ok. So I took a reading tonight and it is at 1.0, so I'm assuming it is basically done fermenting. It's been in the secondary since January 1st. Should I still leave it in there a couple more weeks or move to the third carboy and let it sit for a month or two before bottling?
Oh, and it tastes great! At least to my novice taste...
 
If it is 1.000 you are good. I would:
Is there a large amount of lees in your bottle? if yes I would:
1. rack if into a third carboy and sulphite 30PPM - if the cider smells sulphury, you may want to skip or lighten the sulphiting for this racking. Top off with juice or water. It will restart fermenting the new sugar, and that is ok. Let it finish and clear

2. Do sulphite when you bottle.
IMHO

Glad it is some good hooch!
 
Thanks. There is a large amount of lees, so I will rack within the next couple days. And I did smell a slight sulphury smell, so I'll reduce that.

Thanks!
 
Back
Top