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i wish i'd heard sooner matieChuck probably figured this out, but I'm pretty sure Dawg meant pectase (AKA pectic enzyme).
Dawg
i wish i'd heard sooner matieChuck probably figured this out, but I'm pretty sure Dawg meant pectase (AKA pectic enzyme).
i wish i'd heard sooner matie
Dawg
I wonder if NYS apples are less flavor rich than the apples in your neck o' the woods. We expect a starting gravity above 1.050 and a pH of close to 3.2 but then, this is for cider and not so much for wine. and there are many orchards around here that press their apples specifically for cider makers so they label their containers with all the useful and necessary vitals.Perhaps that’s why my apple wines haven’t turned out insipid despite adding water to them. Or maybe they are and I like them that way.
Actually the first wine I made (it was apple) called for 20 lbs of apples for 5-gallons of wine, not to squeeze out the must, and to top up with cold water. My experience with cooking told me just pack in all the apples I could and always top up with apple juice. I also did squeeze the juice from the must…It turned out great.
I’ve tasted apple wines that go from light Riesling, where you have a hint of apple flavor, to hard apple cider. I enjoy both. I would say you don’t have to guess which fruit mine is made from.I wonder if NYS apples are less flavor rich than the apples in your neck o' the woods. We expect a starting gravity above 1.050 and a pH of close to 3.2 but then, this is for cider and not so much for wine. and there are many orchards around here that press their apples specifically for cider makers so they label their containers with all the useful and necessary vitals.
Great idea!What do you want as a finished wine? Can you try a glass with a drop of oak extract?
Since apple is such a light wine I’ll probably add a half a spiral per carboy. I will definitely try apple concentrate for back sweetening. And I have some glycerin that I may try as well.What do you want as a finished wine? Can you try a glass with a drop of oak extract?
Oak is good at giving more body to a weak wine. If you have low apple notes and want apple notes I would look at back sweetening with frozen apple concentrate. ,,, If the long flavor notes are low I would add a smooth/ astringent flavor tannin. Another choice is More Wine has English concentrate from tannic variety apples ,,, Last night Cider Farm held a tasting of imported ciders. One of the selections was a Spanish product done in chestnut barrels. It had lactic acid front notes (likely went through MLF) and I would describe it as thin/ low body/ low tannin/ bitter (possibly the chestnut).
you are in Oregon, you have tannic apples available if you hunt it outThe apple juice available to me is low in tannins, so it benefits from oak. If I had access to some higher tannin cider apples I would probably not need the oak.
I'm sure that I could find some, but I don't have an apple press. I might try freezing and crushing, but what would be even better would be if I could find someone locally with an apple press who would be willing to let me use it.you are in Oregon, you have tannic apples available if you hunt it out
No problem there. The last carboy was sweetened more… darn near to desert wine levels. Not for me but we have family members who will only drink sweet wines.I would keep the bottles separate and turn it into an experiment.
Did you reserve either, unmixed? If you saved 2 bottles of each, it would be interesting to see how they differ 6 and 12 months from now.You could tell the difference in yeast. The 71B was smooth and more fruity. The EC1118 was sharper… more acidic tasting.
Should be good for 2 years. I would not worry about it.Should I be OK if it’s consumed within a year or two? It had a full dose in April when it went in the cellar.
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