Hello,
I am trying to get my (17 gallons) of cider that has fermented with wine/champagne yeast for 2 weeks ready for drinking as quickly as possible while maximizing tastiness. The cider will likely be very dry so I plan to backsweeten. If you can, please fact check my statements and respond.
I am going to rack each of them into jugs to start. There will still be some leftover yeast at this point. I have read the cider will taste awful at this point, and that it needs to sit for a minimum of 2 weeks. I would like to skip this process if possible in any way. I was thinking about adding potassium sorbate to kill the current yeast left (campden tablets were added at the beginning of fermentation). And then backsweeten with brown sugar and some flavoring. What will I be left with? What is exactly the point of waiting to do this other than to obtain carbonation?
When adding the backsweetening a flavors it will probably need to be stirred in, but stirring will introduce oxygen. Will this damage the alcohol?
Thanks!!
I am trying to get my (17 gallons) of cider that has fermented with wine/champagne yeast for 2 weeks ready for drinking as quickly as possible while maximizing tastiness. The cider will likely be very dry so I plan to backsweeten. If you can, please fact check my statements and respond.
I am going to rack each of them into jugs to start. There will still be some leftover yeast at this point. I have read the cider will taste awful at this point, and that it needs to sit for a minimum of 2 weeks. I would like to skip this process if possible in any way. I was thinking about adding potassium sorbate to kill the current yeast left (campden tablets were added at the beginning of fermentation). And then backsweeten with brown sugar and some flavoring. What will I be left with? What is exactly the point of waiting to do this other than to obtain carbonation?
When adding the backsweetening a flavors it will probably need to be stirred in, but stirring will introduce oxygen. Will this damage the alcohol?
Thanks!!