Hi all,
I usually do beer, but I had a batch of apples that were not edible. So I turned them into a cider. This was just a "let's not waste any fruit" project. Anyway I used Notty yeast, and the SG was 1.050, and it is now at 1.000. The sample tasted good to me, but my question(s) is this:
I do not have any bottles (filled with a smoked Bitter...), and I want to secondary for aging. I have read elsewhere that there should be very little room in the secondary for ciders. I am using a 1 gallon jug for this, and I am curious what constitutes too much head space in a 1 gal. jug? I do not have any cider on hand to fill up the jug, and I am not opposed to boiling some water to add if necessary. Suggestions?
Also I am not opposed to letting this sit for a few months because, again, the Bitter is currently conditioning. If I want a light carbonation (I usually do not secondary so I am unsure here), will I need to add additional yeast later, or should a water/sugar mixture work regardless?
Thanks!
I usually do beer, but I had a batch of apples that were not edible. So I turned them into a cider. This was just a "let's not waste any fruit" project. Anyway I used Notty yeast, and the SG was 1.050, and it is now at 1.000. The sample tasted good to me, but my question(s) is this:
I do not have any bottles (filled with a smoked Bitter...), and I want to secondary for aging. I have read elsewhere that there should be very little room in the secondary for ciders. I am using a 1 gallon jug for this, and I am curious what constitutes too much head space in a 1 gal. jug? I do not have any cider on hand to fill up the jug, and I am not opposed to boiling some water to add if necessary. Suggestions?
Also I am not opposed to letting this sit for a few months because, again, the Bitter is currently conditioning. If I want a light carbonation (I usually do not secondary so I am unsure here), will I need to add additional yeast later, or should a water/sugar mixture work regardless?
Thanks!