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My 1st try

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jdawdy

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As someone who's first stop upon arrival in UK is for a pint of Old Scrumpy at the pub, I occasionally get desperate for some cider here in the US. Its at least 1-2 hours of driving to find a store that sells commercial cider, and the stuff is...well..."not good" to say the least.

So I went to the cider mill in Willcox Arizona (in my Cessna...the owner is a pilot and provides free transport from the airport!), and picked up 5 gallons of freshly pressed (as in, within minutes of pressing) unpastuerized cider. He even gave me a $2/gallon discount because I had my own container (an army 5 gallon plastic water can).

The fresh pressed cider was absolutely delicious. Sweet and smooth.


I got home and proceeded to make sure the container was airtight by using some melted wax around the screw-on cap. I added boiling water to a cup of fresh cider to bring it up to about 100deg, then added red star champagne yeast. I let that sit for about 15 minutes, then tossed the whole lot into the plastic 5 gal water bucket, added some yeast nutrient, and stuck an airlock on. It started bubbling a few hours later.

I left it there for about 18 days while I went on a trip. I got back the other day and there was no more bubbling.

I tried a taste test: The cider had a distinct beerish flavor and a very pleasant aroma of apples, was pretty...rough, as you would expect after 2 and a half weeks. There was no vinegarness, no rottenness, and no sulfur taste/smell.

Is this pretty much what I should expect taste-wise at this point?

I bought 5 gallon plastic food-grade bucket from a homebrew store and racked 4.5 gallons. I thought the fermentation process might not have finished, so I tossed in a teaspoon of yeast nutrient, some karo syrup, and took about half a cup of the lees, added some sugar, and let it sit on a hot radiator for a few hours until I saw a few bubbles. This I tossed back into the racked cider. I put the water lock back on.

My plan is to let this sit for about another month, then to rack it again if necessary, or else to bottle it.

I have not put anything in except the yeast nutrient. And the yeast of course!

Jim
 
jdawdy - Welcome to brewing and this forum.
That does sound pretty good, the blend of the apples usually has a big impact but if you liked the flavor before fermentation the end result will be good. You may want to back sweeten with splenda or something if it's too dry, but the harshness you tasted will mellow out after a month or so of ageing.
Best of luck,
 
I have a question that has arrived a few times for me lately. Did you kill of the natural yeast from the cider before adding yeast and nutrients? i have access to unpasteurized cider fresh off the press and i've always used whatever yeast was in the apples, never added but would like too.
 
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