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Fruit Cap Carboy Removal

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Grancru

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Feb 1, 2010
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Location
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I have been seeing recipes for melomels where the fruit such as orange wedges pushed through the small opening of a carboy during initial fermentation. My question is how do you get the wedges back out after racking to the secondary?

I want to try an Orange/Cinnamon melomel once I find a tried and true recipe.
 
You can use just about any tool that you find handy. You turn the carboy over to get the orange pieces near the opening, and you can use a bottle brush, a coat hanger, crochet needles, needle-nose pliers, a hemostat, or just about anything else to grab them or pull them though.

This process is exactly why I now ferment most all fruit batches in a bucket. ;)

Medsen
 
What Medsen said. As an added bonus, if you use a bucket, you can put the fruit in a grain bag or some cheese cloth for easier removal. I just pulled the pineapple and ginger out of my latest batch last night so that things can settle back down before I rack it to secondary this weekend. I'm also expecting to lose less of my mead by doing so.
 
Most of the time: if it goes in easy, it comes out easy. Sometimes you have to stick your fingers in there and pull it out.
 
I had made a hard lemonade once and cut the lemons into 8's. After racking into a bottling bucket the remaining lemons in the carboy had become so hydrated and squishy I could shake them out over the kitchen sink. They just shoot right out.
 
I cut the fruit small/thin enough so that it goes right in without being forced. When it's time to clean up, I fill the carboy with water, invert, and start swirling to create a cyclone inside, and 95% of the fruit matter swirls right out.
 
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