b3nsf
Active Member
These apples came right off the trees and I was wondering if I should attempt a Natural ferment without adding yeast... or if I should do what I always do and add yeast.

Mine definitely taste like apple, although I have heard MLF does degrade the fruit aromatics. Booster Blanc from Scott Labs is supposed to help with that. I'll give it a try this year.natural year fermentation doesn't (or rather, it didn't for me).
Mine definitely taste like apple, although I have heard MLF does degrade the fruit aromatics. Booster Blanc from Scott Labs is supposed to help with that. I'll give it a try this year.
Save some of the yeast cake or lees! Instead of dumping it after racking, save some of the slurry in a jar and put it in the fridge, or pitch it right into some more juice to keep em going, you’ll have your own house strain.The main problem with a natural ferment is if the batch turns out really good you may have a hard time replicating it.
We got approx 8 gallons of juice, it's sitting in two buckets now with airlocks.... I have this 10 gallon barrel (was bourbon barrel)... the thought process was like this: top it off with some fancy store bought cider "Apple A Day" brand and fill the barrel and let it sit for like 6 months then bottle it...
Save some of the yeast cake or lees! Instead of dumping it after racking, save some of the slurry in a jar and put it in the fridge, or pitch it right into some more juice to keep em going, you’ll have your own house strain.
8 gallons of juice weighs over 66lbs. Obviously it's not possible to get 66lbs of juice from 50lbs of apples. It probably came from closer to 100lbs of apples (65% extraction).Nice! That barrel is going to make this cider great.
I wish I could get 8 gallons from 50 lbs, I usually get 2-3!