I have made apple wine, with some success. I pasteurized the cider, 60 gallons, @140 degrees (multiple batches). It worked. Would the use of chemical additives be just as effective? My intention was to kill the native yeast. Or maybe I'm wrong?
I had a great amount of trepidation about heating the cider, but the result was good. Lots of work seemed to be the drawback. It's supposed to kill the natural yeast.I use sorbate + K-meta when backsweetening, and never had a problem.
I'm not in favor of heating wine.
I make yearly batches of apple wine using unpasteurized cider from a local Ohio orchard. The orchard keeps the cider refrigerated to just above freezing. Maybe I’ve been lucky but I’ve never found the need to pasteurize it or use Kmeta to kill the native yeast. My recipe is to add some pectic enzyme then ferment the cider until it’s dry with EC1118 yeast. It seems like once the EC1118 gets rolling the native yeast doesn't stand a chance.I have made apple wine, with some success. I pasteurized the cider, 60 gallons, @140 degrees (multiple batches). It worked. Would the use of chemical additives be just as effective? My intention was to kill the native yeast. Or maybe I'm wrong?
This is why I'm here, to learn. I've read that the 1118 will rule over the natives. I nearly max out the sugar in order to let the 1118 reach that 17 percent. Your formula nearly matches mine except to skip the pasteurization process. It looks like a lot less work this year! Thank you.I make yearly batches of apple wine using unpasteurized cider from a local Ohio orchard. The orchard keeps the cider refrigerated to just above freezing. Maybe I’ve been lucky but I’ve never found the need to pasteurize it or use Kmeta to kill the native yeast. My recipe is to add some pectic enzyme then ferment the cider until it’s dry with EC1118 yeast. It seems like once the EC1118 gets rolling the native yeast doesn't stand a chance.
After fermentation is complete I rack it to a carboy and back-sweeten to taste by adding more cider. I give it a dose of Kmeta and potassium sorbate to stop additional fermentation then to speed things up I clear it using Dual-Fine (chitosan and kieselsol).
It’s quick, cheap, and easy, and makes excellent apple wine.
I misunderstood -- I thought you were pasteurizing after fermentation, not before.This is why I'm here, to learn. I've read that the 1118 will rule over the natives. I nearly max out the sugar in order to let the 1118 reach that 17 percent. Your formula nearly matches mine except to skip the pasteurization process. It looks like a lot less work this year! Thank you.
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