Hello,
At this again and have had some great help in the past and hoping for a bit more to make this year's batch even better.
Last year I used "New England" apples - Mac's, Cortlands, Macouns. etc. - all I could get my hands on. No one sold any good Cider apples around me. But gave it ago, fermented with champagne yeast I believe, which made it very dry and higher ABV (which ended up a bit over 7%). Primary for about 2 weeks, secondary for 2 weeks and then went through Malo-lactic fermentation which I was told should help. Bottled some and aged some a few more months. However, it was very sharp, a bit like battery acid which did get a bit better with age, but never great. Also, it was obviously still and have not had success restarting fermentation for carbonation.
So, couple quick questions...
1) Have a bit better pick of apples this year as I got my hands on some Baldwins, a classic NE cider apple. Will mix in a few others, but that will be my base - best I can get for cider apples around here. Should help I hope.
2) After reading through forum a bit more, probably going to go with S04 ale yeast which will keep residual sugar up a bit. Will this help keep that "sharp" taste under control?
3) Assuming I should continue with Malo-lactic fermentation. This seems to take so long that any yeast that would help with carbonating would die off by this point.
4) After Malo-Lactic fermentation, any suggestions how long to age for smoothest flavor? Which would be better, in bottle or in bulk ageing?
5) How do I restart fermentation to carbonate before bottling? Just add priming sugar (about 20g per gallon from what I have read) or do I need to add more yeast as well?
I know this is a lot, but trying to learn from past experiences. Also, I'll try to post some pics of my homemade press. Worked OK last year until too much pressure started to snap the wood that held T-screw in place.
Thank you in advance!!!
Colin
At this again and have had some great help in the past and hoping for a bit more to make this year's batch even better.
Last year I used "New England" apples - Mac's, Cortlands, Macouns. etc. - all I could get my hands on. No one sold any good Cider apples around me. But gave it ago, fermented with champagne yeast I believe, which made it very dry and higher ABV (which ended up a bit over 7%). Primary for about 2 weeks, secondary for 2 weeks and then went through Malo-lactic fermentation which I was told should help. Bottled some and aged some a few more months. However, it was very sharp, a bit like battery acid which did get a bit better with age, but never great. Also, it was obviously still and have not had success restarting fermentation for carbonation.
So, couple quick questions...
1) Have a bit better pick of apples this year as I got my hands on some Baldwins, a classic NE cider apple. Will mix in a few others, but that will be my base - best I can get for cider apples around here. Should help I hope.
2) After reading through forum a bit more, probably going to go with S04 ale yeast which will keep residual sugar up a bit. Will this help keep that "sharp" taste under control?
3) Assuming I should continue with Malo-lactic fermentation. This seems to take so long that any yeast that would help with carbonating would die off by this point.
4) After Malo-Lactic fermentation, any suggestions how long to age for smoothest flavor? Which would be better, in bottle or in bulk ageing?
5) How do I restart fermentation to carbonate before bottling? Just add priming sugar (about 20g per gallon from what I have read) or do I need to add more yeast as well?
I know this is a lot, but trying to learn from past experiences. Also, I'll try to post some pics of my homemade press. Worked OK last year until too much pressure started to snap the wood that held T-screw in place.
Thank you in advance!!!
Colin