boswell
Well-Known Member
If you're going to try this, I'd suggest a 1 gallon batch to start. After reading this whole thread, I had a vastly different idea what this would taste like.
BigFloyd said:I had kegged a batch of this a few weeks ago (fermented on Notty). Since I already had some in bottles from a prior batch, I decided to play around with back-sweetening and spicing it a bit for the Christmas season.
First, I broke apart and soaked one large cinnamon stick and about 20 allspice berries in a few ounces of cheap vodka a couple of days. After removing the solid bits, I combined it with 1.5tsp K-sorbate (to inhibit yeast activity because I like to bottle off the kegs to share) and a can of frozen concentrated apple juice. It was very milky-looking. After depressurizing the keg, I poured the whole thing into about 4.5 gallons of Graff and sealed it back up.
A few hours later, I tried the first sample. Nice. It gave the Graff a better hint of apple flavor. The spices were present but subtle and in no way dominating. It also stayed decently clear in spite of the milky addition. I may play around with different spice combos and amounts in the future, but I'll certainly do this again.
Followed the original recipe exactly. Had the exact same OG and FG. It's been bottled for about 12 days now. I decided to crack one open and see what it was like. Super, super, sour. Tasted clean enough, but my goodness it is hella sour. I think back sweetening would take care of this, but I am bottling and not kegging and did not want to fool with bottle pasteurizing. Any chance this one will mellow out some with more time bottle conditioning?
Followed the original recipe exactly. Had the exact same OG and FG. It's been bottled for about 12 days now. I decided to crack one open and see what it was like. Super, super, sour. Tasted clean enough, but my goodness it is hella sour. I think back sweetening would take care of this, but I am bottling and not kegging and did not want to fool with bottle pasteurizing. Any chance this one will mellow out some with more time bottle conditioning?
Followed the original recipe exactly. Had the exact same OG and FG. It's been bottled for about 12 days now. I decided to crack one open and see what it was like. Super, super, sour. Tasted clean enough, but my goodness it is hella sour. I think back sweetening would take care of this, but I am bottling and not kegging and did not want to fool with bottle pasteurizing. Any chance this one will mellow out some with more time bottle conditioning?
Was thinking of brewing up a batch but leaving out the hops and dme. Anyone have any experience with this or guesses how it might turn out
It will probably turn out alot like Apfelwein, only a little lower abv.
Mine too was a bit sour, not sure if this is typical of this Graff or not, really i do not detect any maltyness at all. I don't care for the ciders currently on the market, I find them to be way too sweet, so even with the sourness I like it as do all my friends. Oh and I used white Labs English Cider Yeast, next batch will be fermented with what the OP suggested.