Icarus9414
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- Joined
- Feb 11, 2015
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So my previous batch of cherry apple cider was a little on the tart side. I thought I'd fix it by back sweetening in the keg while racking a 5 gallon batch with 1 cup of turbinado sugar. The cider is now almost undrinkable due to sweetness. The sugar fell out of solution and is now at the bottom of the keg. It initially somewhat clogged the dip tube so I agitated the keg and got the cider flowing through the tap. Now when I pour I have small amounts of sugar in the bottom or the glass. The way I see it, I have two options. I can either try using an auto siphon to transfer the cider to a different keg with the intent of leaving some of the sugar behind in the previous keg or rack back into the carboy, reintroduce more yeast into the cider, and hopefully overpower the potassium sorbate that's already in the cider to restart fermentation. The abv is 6.8% so far, so Nottingham should be able to handle the excess sugar. Any suggestions from more experienced cider makers would be greatly appreciated. I don't feel like wasting 5 gallons of cider and won't have anything ready to drink for another 3 weeks.