Thank you for all your help.. I am using starsan to sanitize, and Five Star PBW Cleaner. I have noticed that the cleaner leaves a residue so I am diligent in rising it thoroughly. As for the Campden, in all the cider recipe instructions I have read say to add the tablets after adding the cider to the fermenter to halt the wild yeast then let it sit for 24 hours then add your yeast. This way you dont have two different yeast fighting it out. Im thinking that because I am using store bought cider I can eliminate this step. I dont add pectic enzymes because a clear cider isn't all that important to me. I do also add yeast nutrients.
Do you have any suggested recipes
Again thank you for your help
I dont know. I added them to stop any fermentation so I could add the additional cider and brown sugar. Do you think it may improve with time in the keg, or just dump and try again? I am going to do the caramel cider from the forum next.
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?t=292770
You don't need to use campden in pasteurized cider. It is very useful in winemaking with fruit, so that it can kill other microbes. Wine yeast is tolerant of sulfites, so many winemakers use campden (sulfites) routinely.
I also use campden at every other racking. Campden tablets are a convenient form of potassium metabisulfite. It's used primarily as an antioxidant by winemakers- it binds to the wine so oxygen can't. It does dissipate so it is added at intervals to protect the wine (or mead, or cider).
Many people seem to be under the mistaken impression that campden will halt brewer's yeast or wine yeast. It does not.
In order to stabilize a cider to inhibit further fermentation, such as in sweetening a finished cider, steps need to be taken. From this thread:
https://www.homebrewtalk.com/showthread.php?t=508303 I have written:
Sweetening the Cider:
If the cider is finished, and clear, then campden and sorbate will allow you to sweeten the cider. If it's not finished and there are a lot of lees (sediment), it won't do anything.
The way it works is that sorbate does not kill yeast, but it prevents yeast reproduction. So, in an active fermentation when there are hundreds and hundreds of billions of active yeast, it won't do a thing. But once fermentation stops, and the cider clears, and the cider is racked off of the fallen yeast, it can be added to prevent yeast reproducing, thereby not allowing fermentation to begin again (usually). Sorbate works better in the presence of sulfite (campden), so they are generally added together.
However, it will NOT stop an active fermentation and will not work in a cider that is not clear and done fermenting.
If you use this method, and it is successful, you can sweeten to taste without any risk of bottle bombs.
Because the yeast has been inhibited, however, you will not be able to bottle carbonate the cider. Carbonation is a function of the yeast.
It's fairly easy to make a sweet still cider, or a dry carbonated cider. To make a sweet sparkling cider, extra steps and techniques like bottle pasteurization or kegging would be needed.
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