TasunkaWitko
Well-Known Member
Any guidance would be appreciated:
http://www.eckraus.com/search?q=yeast+for+hard+cider
Thanks -
Ron
http://www.eckraus.com/search?q=yeast+for+hard+cider
Thanks -
Ron
I have made several ciders in the last year, most with crab apples or crab apples blended with other apples and a few with straight, store bought cider. Safale US-05 has been my "go-to" yeast. One I did with Edinburgh Ale yeast was very good. Champagne will take it VERY dry.
There aren't any complex sugars involved, so attenuation means almost nothing. Any of those yeasts will take an OG of 1.06-1.07 down to 1.000 or less.
When you use US-05 or Edinburgh (WLP028?), what is your FG usually? Nottingham, Coopers, and champagne yeast always end up dry for me. Looking for less attenuation.
There aren't any complex sugars involved, so attenuation means almost nothing. Any of those yeasts will take an OG of 1.06-1.07 down to 1.000 or less. Most yeasts, even bread yeast, will handle up to 10% ABV, or an OG 1.076, with ease. A better tactic would be to taste until it gets to a FG you like, rack off the sediment, add priming sugar, and bottle. When it's carbed enough(use of a PET soda bottle is recommended), pasteurize and enjoy!
Question: would anyone consider this yeast for achieving the goals I am persuing?
http://www.eckraus.com/lalvin-wine-yeast-type-71b-1122.html
Sometimes. But ale yeast will often stop a bit short of dry. My last cider used S04, and the FG was 1.004. It's still dry, but not as dry as when I use wine yeast (which will go to .990!). Of course, I like dry cider so I don't sweeten it either way, and 1.004 still is crisp and tart.
Yooper, Why would ale yeast not bring home a totally brut (dry) cider? If the starting gravity was around 1.050 why would an ale yeast have any greater difficulty in converting all the sugar to alcohol than any wine yeast? I wouldn't ask ale yeasts to work on fruit wines or meads but I start those around 1.090 (about 12% ABV) but for 6 or 7% ABV why would SO-4 or SO-5 or Nottingham conk out early?
I don't know for sure, but suspect that ale yeast is not as good at simple sugars like fructose as wine yeast- but certainly my last batch with S04 (with nutrients, but not added sugar) started at 1.048 or so (can't remember exactly) and finished at 1.004, perfectly clear and beautiful.
Champagne yeast takes it all the way dry, and usually pretty fast (not sure why it would take 8 days - that sounds like something was wrong).
I have a cider working with S-33, about 11 days in. Was 4 gallons juice, 1 gal local UV pasturized cider. Still really cloudy.
Not worried, going to let it sit until mid nov, kill the yeast, add some AJ concentrate and keg.