GreatNorthernLlama
Member
First-time brewer here. Finally harvesting the apples from our tree in the back yard. Let's get the first question out of the way right off the bat: My tree was hit HARD this year by both cedar rust and apple scab. I had an arborist come look at my tree to confirm this. According to him the apple scab apples are completely fine to eat, so I would assume brewing them is the same. I plan on cutting up the apples and any large areas of fungus would be cut out prior to juicing. A healthy dose of k-meta I assume would be enough to offset any concerns here.
Variety of apples, I'm not sure. Best guess is something like a silken. An amature taste test says these are the closest apples from orchards in my area (souther Ontario, Canada) though at the same time not quite the same. Possibly thanks to the above-mentioned ailments to my tree this year but who knows.
Lastly, no masher or juice press here. I'm hoping to extract juice with your standard Breville countertop juicer (finally get a use for the thing) and maybe press the remaining pulp by hand with cheese cloth.
If at this point you don't see any glaring red flags to why I shouldn't brew with these at all, my questions are:
1. Mead vs Cyser for beginners: For my first year, I just wanted something that would turn out and not waste time. If successful, I can experiment more and get fancy in future years. Cyser sounds a little bit more interesting, but reading about adding honey it sounds like organic unpasteurized is a must? Thinking just something like this from Costco?
2. Recipes: Looking at both options, I've been looking at Doin' the most on youtube. He has some solid looking recipes but clearly skips a number of the basics of fermentation as his videos seem to be targeted towards more experienced brewers. He has a solid looking cyser recipe, and just recently dropped a full apple to cider recipe video.
I plan on harvesting the rest of my apples today / tomorrow. Unknown how much of a yield I will get. I'm hoping to at least brew one gallon. Will update with more accurate weights once harvest is complete.
Variety of apples, I'm not sure. Best guess is something like a silken. An amature taste test says these are the closest apples from orchards in my area (souther Ontario, Canada) though at the same time not quite the same. Possibly thanks to the above-mentioned ailments to my tree this year but who knows.
Lastly, no masher or juice press here. I'm hoping to extract juice with your standard Breville countertop juicer (finally get a use for the thing) and maybe press the remaining pulp by hand with cheese cloth.
If at this point you don't see any glaring red flags to why I shouldn't brew with these at all, my questions are:
1. Mead vs Cyser for beginners: For my first year, I just wanted something that would turn out and not waste time. If successful, I can experiment more and get fancy in future years. Cyser sounds a little bit more interesting, but reading about adding honey it sounds like organic unpasteurized is a must? Thinking just something like this from Costco?
2. Recipes: Looking at both options, I've been looking at Doin' the most on youtube. He has some solid looking recipes but clearly skips a number of the basics of fermentation as his videos seem to be targeted towards more experienced brewers. He has a solid looking cyser recipe, and just recently dropped a full apple to cider recipe video.
I plan on harvesting the rest of my apples today / tomorrow. Unknown how much of a yield I will get. I'm hoping to at least brew one gallon. Will update with more accurate weights once harvest is complete.