A couple of years ago I tried making my first cider, no apples last years but this year there is plenty. I used apples from only one tree and made 2 batches, both with champagne yeast. I only added pectine and yeast, to one of the batches I added some amarillo hops, straight after primary fermentation I bottled with about 6g/l for carbonation.
Alcohol content came out to about 7.3% completely dry, it tasted pretty much like a low abv white wine, the batch with hops was miles better than the one without. Unfortunatly it wasn't very good - aging helped but not as much as I would like. It was just to sour.
I suspect my apples just wont make a good cider on their own, they are to sour and the suger content is to high for my tastes, they range from golfball- almost not quite tennisballs in size and ripen very late in the year and remain in the tree well into december. I suspect tannin content is rather low, but I am in no way confident.
Heres my plan for this year:
Add so2 to kill wild yeast, I didn't do this the first time.
Add yeast nutrients and pectine.
Adjust ph to 3.4 or so with calcium carbonate. I believe the must is much lower, like 3 or so.
Use a yeast that doesn't go completely dry, any suggestions?
Add oakchips during primary fermentation.
Add dried bitter orange peel during primary fermentation.
Boil hops in water and add that to the juice, hoping to lower the abv and add bitterness, would love some thoughts or recommendations on what to use.
Possibly dryhopping aswell, I have not decided.
I am planning to ferment in a bucket, should take 2-4 weeks, then cold crash and move to a second bucket with so2, potassium sorbate and a little water, then coldstabalize and maybe use a clearing agent if its needed but I don't think it will be, after that I plan to move it to a keg with sugar and water. I will be adding water 3 times (1, with the boiled hops, 2 with so2, 3 with the sweetening), Ideally bringing down the abv without losing to much flavour. When it has aged at least 6 months I will just carbonate it with co2 in the keg and maybe bottle it from there or just keep it in the keg, depending on how much hassle it is and how much I want the keg for other projects.
I am mainly looking for thoughts on boiling hops for cider, what kind how much how long etc, a good yeast that doesn't make the cider very dry, I want lower abv so I want the opposite. And what do you guys do with apples that gives a must with a gravity of about 1055 and is very sour but not much else. Also I have read somewhere that you want a final abv of higher than 6% to store, is 5% super risky? I kind of want a to end up closer to 5%.
Alcohol content came out to about 7.3% completely dry, it tasted pretty much like a low abv white wine, the batch with hops was miles better than the one without. Unfortunatly it wasn't very good - aging helped but not as much as I would like. It was just to sour.
I suspect my apples just wont make a good cider on their own, they are to sour and the suger content is to high for my tastes, they range from golfball- almost not quite tennisballs in size and ripen very late in the year and remain in the tree well into december. I suspect tannin content is rather low, but I am in no way confident.
Heres my plan for this year:
Add so2 to kill wild yeast, I didn't do this the first time.
Add yeast nutrients and pectine.
Adjust ph to 3.4 or so with calcium carbonate. I believe the must is much lower, like 3 or so.
Use a yeast that doesn't go completely dry, any suggestions?
Add oakchips during primary fermentation.
Add dried bitter orange peel during primary fermentation.
Boil hops in water and add that to the juice, hoping to lower the abv and add bitterness, would love some thoughts or recommendations on what to use.
Possibly dryhopping aswell, I have not decided.
I am planning to ferment in a bucket, should take 2-4 weeks, then cold crash and move to a second bucket with so2, potassium sorbate and a little water, then coldstabalize and maybe use a clearing agent if its needed but I don't think it will be, after that I plan to move it to a keg with sugar and water. I will be adding water 3 times (1, with the boiled hops, 2 with so2, 3 with the sweetening), Ideally bringing down the abv without losing to much flavour. When it has aged at least 6 months I will just carbonate it with co2 in the keg and maybe bottle it from there or just keep it in the keg, depending on how much hassle it is and how much I want the keg for other projects.
I am mainly looking for thoughts on boiling hops for cider, what kind how much how long etc, a good yeast that doesn't make the cider very dry, I want lower abv so I want the opposite. And what do you guys do with apples that gives a must with a gravity of about 1055 and is very sour but not much else. Also I have read somewhere that you want a final abv of higher than 6% to store, is 5% super risky? I kind of want a to end up closer to 5%.