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Maceration of herbs in the cider process

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Ronnb

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Oct 23, 2019
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I am familiar with adding herbal ingredients in beer brewing but, if I wish to macerate an herb that has mild anti-fungal qualities, in the cider, should I do this after primary fermentation, after racking or towards the end of primary?
I worry a bit about introducing oxygen, after racking, to the cider.
 
O2 isn’t nearly as big of a concern with cider.

You can add the herb just about anytime.

If it were my cider, I’d add a tiny bit before and after fermentation. Then make a tincture to add at packaging.

Remember that cider is more “delicate” than beer. A little flavoring goes a long long way.
 
Ginger, cinnamon, cloves, basil, lemongrass all have antifungal properties. All of which I’ve used many times in mead, cider and beer without running into issues.
Cultured yeast would chew through with no issue.
I can’t speak to natural ferments though.
 
You're probably right. The OP didn't mention which "herb" so I didn't want to make any assumptions.

I still suggest a hot tea post-fermentation; it's the easiest way to control the flavor/balance.
And:
Remember that cider is more “delicate” than beer. A little flavoring goes a long long way.
:mug:
 
O2 isn’t nearly as big of a concern with cider.

You can add the herb just about anytime.

If it were my cider, I’d add a tiny bit before and after fermentation. Then make a tincture to add at packaging.

Remember that cider is more “delicate” than beer. A little flavoring goes a long long way.
Thank you very much for the information. I will consider this further.
I'm playing with Artemisia Vulgaris (mugwort) just now, since I use this in our vermouth, thus I have this in a newly dried and in tincture form.
 
Thank you very much for the information. I will consider this further.
I'm playing with Artemisia Vulgaris (mugwort) just now, since I use this in our vermouth, thus I have this in a newly dried and in tincture form.
How did your mugwort experiments go?
 
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