ViperMan
Well-Known Member
So I thought I'd be cute and calculating... I figured I'd start with a real high OG cider, add a LOW attenuation yeast, and finish with a still-sweet cider that I could bottle carb and enjoy without having to worry about pasturization...
I failed. Sorta...
I used 3 gallons of store-bought apple juice, 1 gallon of store-bought white grape juice, and one gallon of store-bought peach-mango juice - all "organic" and using vitamin C for preservatives. I then added 2 pounds of brown sugar and one pound of dark belgian candi sugar (I wanted a more dark, sinister-looking cider.) I ended with an OG of 1.08 :cross:
I used White Labs WLP002 English Ale yeast with a low, 70-75% attenuation. I used a starter.
Fermentation took over 2 weeks, and after the first week, had barely dropped to 1.05. Another week later I had 1.02 and barely any bubbling - I thought, "Mission Accomplished!" Well I just checked the cider last week, and it's 1.000!!! 10.25% alcohol!

So now I'm at a loss... Or at least, have a lot of work ahead of me. I want to add some sugar back into it - preferably using apple-juice concentrate, to get it back to a 1.016 or so. I want to bottle it, let it bottle carb, then either bottle-pasteurize right away, or cold crash it.
The other option is to add Lactose, which I have in-stock. But I've read that it doesn't add much in the way of sweetness... I don't want to add any artificial sweeteners - I tried that on a few test bottles from the last batch and I ended up dumping them out - they were absolutely awful.
I REALLY didn't want to bottle-pasteurize again. That was a stress that I didn't need, and at 20 minutes per 8 bottles or so, it's going to take FOREVER to do an entire 5-gallon batch...
Anyways, if anyone has a process-of-choice to add some sweetness back in, I'd appreciate hearing it. If nothing else I'm going to rack to secondary first, then start adding apple juice concentrate and making multiple hydrometer measurements until it's about where I want it - then bottling.
Thanks for reading.
Jeff
I failed. Sorta...
I used 3 gallons of store-bought apple juice, 1 gallon of store-bought white grape juice, and one gallon of store-bought peach-mango juice - all "organic" and using vitamin C for preservatives. I then added 2 pounds of brown sugar and one pound of dark belgian candi sugar (I wanted a more dark, sinister-looking cider.) I ended with an OG of 1.08 :cross:
I used White Labs WLP002 English Ale yeast with a low, 70-75% attenuation. I used a starter.
Fermentation took over 2 weeks, and after the first week, had barely dropped to 1.05. Another week later I had 1.02 and barely any bubbling - I thought, "Mission Accomplished!" Well I just checked the cider last week, and it's 1.000!!! 10.25% alcohol!

So now I'm at a loss... Or at least, have a lot of work ahead of me. I want to add some sugar back into it - preferably using apple-juice concentrate, to get it back to a 1.016 or so. I want to bottle it, let it bottle carb, then either bottle-pasteurize right away, or cold crash it.
The other option is to add Lactose, which I have in-stock. But I've read that it doesn't add much in the way of sweetness... I don't want to add any artificial sweeteners - I tried that on a few test bottles from the last batch and I ended up dumping them out - they were absolutely awful.
I REALLY didn't want to bottle-pasteurize again. That was a stress that I didn't need, and at 20 minutes per 8 bottles or so, it's going to take FOREVER to do an entire 5-gallon batch...
Anyways, if anyone has a process-of-choice to add some sweetness back in, I'd appreciate hearing it. If nothing else I'm going to rack to secondary first, then start adding apple juice concentrate and making multiple hydrometer measurements until it's about where I want it - then bottling.
Thanks for reading.
Jeff