I don't ever use it!
Me neither.
I don't ever use it!
I'm new to fermentation, and I just recently started fermenting a number of different juices in parallel: Martinelli's apple juice, grape juice, cherry juice, pomegranate juice, and peach juice. I started them all at the same brix level, and am using the same Premier Cuvee yeast in all of them. What's noteable is that the bubbler on the Martinelli's has been going probably 2x the speed of the next fastest (grape) for the same volume of liquid. Is there something about apple juice (its Ph or maybe some thing else) that makes it far more favorable to rapid fermentation than the other juices?
I Never get sulphur/rhino farts using S04....and never use nutrients. My OG is always north of 1.06 via juice + FAJC. My ferment temp is always below 68F - typically 64-66F. It cold crashes Great...and the lees end up very solid...leaving a crystal clear cider for me.
Goes to show ya....different folks w/different protocols end up with different results.
Jealous! Frikn chilly Michigan here [emoji43]Living on the edge of the tropics I was in a tee shirt in my motorcycle today. Since I'm about 6-7 miles from the Gulf of Mexico the water table is too high for a cellar or basement. This leaves me with my A/C to control temps, and the wife will kill me if I try to keep it anywhere near that cold.
So for those of us in this position, yeasts that like higher temps are the answer. After using the S-04 I found out that S-05 likes higher temps.
I posted an amazing recipe for a super simple cider that you can't go wrong with.
Living on the edge of the tropics I was in a tee shirt in my motorcycle today. Since I'm about 6-7 miles from the Gulf of Mexico the water table is too high for a cellar or basement. This leaves me with my A/C to control temps, and the wife will kill me if I try to keep it anywhere near that cold.
So for those of us in this position, yeasts that like higher temps are the answer. After using the S-04 I found out that S-05 likes higher temps.
Yep. Thanks for linking it. Hey, how do you all do that. Thats pretty clever. Anyways thats it. The more I think of it, there is no reason to take that juice out of the factory sealed and sanitized container. Want to put a bung in the hole sure. (I could run with this). Anyways, logically I cant find any good reason for removing the juice. The organic black cherry is amazeballs, and this simple recipe saved Christmas. We drank all the wine on Christmas Eve
. But everyone loves it and my wife actually drinks it occasionally. Heck its only apple juice and organic black cherry, thats it. I splashed some fireball in it once. Maybe a splash of vodka? Idk. Hope someone gives it a try!
ps-two packs of juice, they come in a 2 pack of 1 g containers, so 4g juice and 4 quarts of black cherry and that makes one perfectly full happy corny
pps-what does fermented grape juice, pineapple juice, black cherry, cranberry juice, etc...taste like. I have been wondering?
When should I add the pectic enzyme?
I Never get sulphur/rhino farts using S04....and never use nutrients.
I don't do summer ciders any more. When I started making cider I used some Nottingham ale yeast at about 75°F and the fusel alcohols were so awful that I just dumped the whole batch.
I'd go with the datasheet [emoji16]Argh. What has thrown me off regarding the S-04 yeast is that the seller says its ideal fermentation range is Optimum temp: 64°-75° F (https://www.northernbrewer.com/products/safale-s-04-whitbread), but the datasheet claims it is 59-68F (https://fermentis.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/SafAle-S-04.pdf). That may not seem like much difference, but if the datasheet is right, then it is below room temperature, which makes it a non-starter for me.
Nope. I don't want a warm fast ferment. There are aromatics and subtle flavors in cider that you can only get when fermenting cold and slow. You don't seem to get that (yet).
Oh, you're right, I didn't get that. I thought the temp range was just a function of the yeast strain and that doing a kveik at room temperature (which is the low end of its range) would maybe get similar results. But you seem to be saying that not only won't that work, but it couldn't work even in principle, regardless of what the yeast strain is, purely because of the temperature. Is that what you are meaning?
I'm not saying that, because I've never used a yeast that was rated for warmer temps. Maybe someone else has experience with that and can give us an idea of what to expect.
But I do know that a 10 degree difference (65 to 75 for instance) with the same yeast makes a huge difference in the final product, even if that's well within the range of the particular yeast.
There's a fella named Claude Jolicoeur who's book The New Cidermaker's Handbook is the accepted reference on the subject in our time. Jolicoeur's methods are to use EC-1118 which is a "very fast" yeast, but at 50°F - which is below the spec's minimum. He racks off the lees at about 50% gravity to slow the ferment way down. Then racks again somewhere around 1.008 to slow it down some more. From pitch to bottling his cider takes 10 months. Yes, months. That's how you make world class cider.
Fast is the enemy of great.
Great info. useless to me as I can't guarantee 60 2 days in a row much less 50. I'm beginning to think those of us in warmer climates need to start doing our own yeast experiments and noting any differences. sometimes it sucks to live in paradise.
quick search...here's some info on yeasts suitable for higher temp fermentations - by no means all inclusive but a good starting point:
http://beerandwinejournal.com/high-temp-yeast/
and another for "wines" -- that lists many with suitable temps into the 80s:
https://winemakermag.com/resource/yeast-strains-chart
I'd like to find one for summer ciders (in Michigan) that ferments nicely:
- in the 70s
- has great flocculation / solid lees
- an alcohol tolerance 12-14%
- cold crashes well
- low nutrient requirement
...good luck...huh...lol
Cheers!
Cider may ferment dry in just a few days, but I don't feel its drinkable at that point. Time to age, clear and let the flavors can develop. I've pushed ciders out in a few weeks, but was more like drinking the cider equivalent of bud lite.Cider ferments out much slower than beer, if you do it right. I can knock out an English ale in 36 hours with Windsor ale yeast. Ciders, on the other hand, take months.
See above. Dont rush, but yeast plays a big roll.Uh, ok, I'm plainly doing it totally wrong then. What early-stage fermentation temperature do you recommend?
If you do lots of cider, buy a bag and add the day before fermentation. If using whole fruit, dust with the enzyme and you will get a bette yield.When should I add the pectic enzyme?
Sound good, or do you advise against kveik for some reason?
Try the kveik and see, you may be pleasantly surprised. One of my favorite experiments was a simple summer apple cider fermented with trappist ale yeast and 12lb champagne mangoes.Saison yeasts....I've heard....are also good warmer weather suckers...though I haven't used yet. Cheers