2) if I decide to carb it: do I need to worry that my yeasties are dead? (I bottle carb my beers - I don't keg)
I would suggest using a priming sugar calculator. I prefer fairly light carbonation, between 1.5 and 2 volumes. I find much over 3 volumes to be irritating. That's really a matter of personal preference though.I'm ready to bottle my first batch and want to bottle it 4 ways so I will know what I like best when batch #2 is ready. I followed the original recipe.
Plain (uncarbed/no backsweetening)
Plain carbed
Plain backsweetened
Plain carbed and backsweetened
I think I will just use Splenda to sweeten and think I want to go "lightly carbed" Any suggestions on the amount of corn sugar to achieve a light carbonation? ...and how much splenda would yall suggest for sweetening?
Interestingly enough, the apple flavor actually increases when it's been aged. Or, more precisely, the apple flavor is always subtle but the alcohol flavor covers it when it's young. As it ages the apparent alcohol flavor and aroma drop to practically nothing, allowing you to taste the apple more. It will be a little more apparent if you sweeten it slightly. A fair amount of what most people define as "apple" in their head is actually sugar.
BamaProud said:Wow that bottling day was a little different. 4 types of Apfelwein
1.25 gal Plain (uncarbed/no backsweetening) in wine bottles
1.25 gal Plain carbed in 22oz beer bottles
1.25 gal Plain backsweetened in wine bottles
1.25 gal Plain carbed and backsweetened in 22oz beer bottles
I backseweetened with Splenda and just did a wild guess using 1.5 tbsp per bottle. My target was 2 volumes for carbonation
All packed up to age a few months except for 1 bottle of each which I will sample once a month of so after a couple of months. Batch#2 will be all one type.
captgreg said:Hey guys, I have a 5 gallon batch of apfelwein in primary now about 4 weeks. Would like to bottle it soon to carb and pasteurize some and let the rest age in the bottle after natural carbing in the bottle. My question is, will it still age properly sealed in the bottle? I plan on carbing with one can of concentrate in the whole five gallon batch then once half is bottled I will add another can if concentrate to the remainder and bottle then pasteurize at appropriate carb level, any suggestions?
My most recent batch (2nd one) was a disaster at bottling time. It was completely turned.
I let it sit in the primary for about 5 1/2 months before noticing that the airlock was drying up. Not completely dried up yet though. Filling it up again took a backburner to other things I was doing that day and a couple days later, noticed the airlock did not have enough liquid in it to prevent o2 from getting inside. O2 could've been exposed for a little less than half a day when I filled it up again.
Since I was bottling it in the coming weekend I didn't campden it or anything. In the bottling bucket I normally dissolve my campden with a little water. Did that and my normal bottling routine and tasted a sample. Very watery apple taste with a bitter aftertaste. Yuck! I could tell it was turning. I ended up with 23 bottles of it. Tried 1 a week later and it was even worse...
So, there ya have it. I ruined a 5 gallon batch in less than half a day after 5 1/2 months. Keep an eye on your airlocks folks, don't make my mistake...
Going for my 3rd batch of it tonight. Won't make the same mistake twice.
Hmm. Reminds me of what happens to wine sometimes when it's been left on the lees to long. It starts tasting like soy sauce. I've never found any way to correct the problem.I have made a number of batches the past 18 months. But the most recent batch I made in January 13 and planned to let it age the full 3 months in carboy before bottling or kegging. Then I couldn't decide which, didn't brew for a few months, had water damage at the house, etc. and here I am end of May and finally deciding to keg it roughly 4 1/2 months. My understanding was the longer in the carboy the better it gets.
Kegged it Sunday and gave it a quick taste Tuesday just to check, and it tasted not good. It should really have a full week in the keg or longer, and I don't have the pressure cranked up or anything (I think its at 7 or 8) because I have my orangepassionfruitapfelwine on tap plus two beers, but I don't know why it would taste crappy after 3 days on pressure. It should taste excellent but flat, not crappy.
Has anyone found that leaving it the carboy too long ruins it? Should I have taken the airlock off and just capped it after the first month? Do you think time on pressure and/or more aging will cure it? I couldn't place the off flavor but my fellow brewer thought it was getting a vinegar type flavor.
Also looking for creative solutions if it is ruined. Choices include mixing with other cider/apfelwine, dumping it, aging it, etc.
And if you have opinions about that, I also have a blonde ale that got ruined by tannins and although mixing it kind of works on a bottle by bottle basis, you still catch that tannin (cardboard) flavor and I hesitate to mix the whole batch at one time and potentially ruin the other beer or end up with an even bigger batch of crappy beer. Which has me hesitating to do it with that beer or my apfelwine if it really is ruined.
You didn't use Splenda as your priming sugar did ya?
Has anyone found that leaving it the carboy too long ruins it? Should I have taken the airlock off and just capped it after the first month? Do you think time on pressure and/or more aging will cure it? I couldn't place the off flavor but my fellow brewer thought it was getting a vinegar type flavor.
Also looking for creative solutions if it is ruined. Choices include mixing with other cider/apfelwine, dumping it, aging it, etc.
Hmm. Reminds me of what happens to wine sometimes when it's been left on the lees to long. It starts tasting like soy sauce. I've never found any way to correct the problem.
Hey guys, I have a 5 gallon batch of apfelwein in primary now about 4 weeks. Would like to bottle it soon to carb and pasteurize some and let the rest age in the bottle after natural carbing in the bottle. My question is, will it still age properly sealed in the bottle? I plan on carbing with one can of concentrate in the whole five gallon batch then once half is bottled I will add another can if concentrate to the remainder and bottle then pasteurize at appropriate carb level, any suggestions?
BamaProud said:I ran out of clean beer bottles and bottled 2 bottles in Champagne(I think/hope) bottles. Carbonating at 2 volumes(my target), if I am wrong about the bottles being champagne bottles, do yall think wine bottles can handle that much pressure, or will I likely have bombs?
It really depends on the bottle. I've gotten wine both in paper thin bottles and in bulletproof glass bottles. There is huge variance.
How did you cap them?
BamaProud said:Corks. They are pretty heavy duty bottles. I am not too worried, but thought I would ask.
Hmm, no but I've done cranberry wine before. I find it likely that your cranberry flavor will pretty much stomp on your apple flavor. Not actually a bad thing, as it should mellow the cranberry a lot. Cranberry wine tends to be really tart with straight cranberry juice.So I made my second batch of Apfelwein last weekend. It's a Cranberry apple mix. Did 2 gallons of Cranberry Juice and 3 gallons of Apple juice. Also changed up the yeasties and used S-05 this time.
Anyone tried doing this with S-05? What was your experience with it? Did it taste good/bad?
Also, anyone did this using cranberry juice?
Hmm, no but I've done cranberry wine before. I find it likely that your cranberry flavor will pretty much stomp on your apple flavor. Not actually a bad thing, as it should mellow the cranberry a lot. Cranberry wine tends to be really tart with straight cranberry juice.