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English Cider Recipe Recipe supplied by: Loren Miraglia, Home Cider Maker, San Diego, CA Classic cider yeast. Ferments dry, but retains flavor from apples. Sulfur is produced during fermentation, but will disappear in first two weeks of aging. Can also be used for wine and high gravity beers.
Attenuation: >80% Flocculation: Medium. Optimum Fermentation Temperature: 68-75°F.
Juice 5 Gallons Fresh Apple Juice, unpasteurized, unfiltered. Use the best quality juice. Nutrients 2.5 teaspoons White Labs Yeast Nutrient & Energizer Yeast WLP775-English Cider Yeast Pitch yeast at 70°F, ferment for 2-4 weeks. Age for 3-5 months at cellar temperature (50°-60°F). Keg or bottle when done (fruit can be added at this stage if desired).
Traditional New England Cider Submitted by Southern Maine Homebrewers
O.G. 1.120. F.G. stop it where you please.
1 vial WLP775 English Cider Yeast 50 gallons untreated cider 30 lbs honey 50 lbs light brown sugar 20 oz yeast nutrient 1 - 50 gallon oak bourbon barrel
Starter:
5 gallons local cider, straight from the press. Heat to 170 deg F. Hold for 20 min. Cool and pitch yeast.
1 week later...
Agitate the 5 gallon starter and transfer into the barrel.
Collect 45 gallons of cider from a local orchard. Heat-pasteurize the cider, honey and sugar as noted above. This helps to dissolve the sugar also. We did this in several stages with 15 gallon kegs. Aerate by splashing a few gallons at a time into food grade or fermenting buckets. Transfer to the barrel. Add yeast nutrient. Stir the mixture well with the handle of a brewing spoon.
Start on Columbus Day. It will be clear and ready for a Memorial Day lobster and clam bake!
Notes and special considerations.
Barrel platform: We used 4 pallets so that the bottom of the barrel is above the top of a carboy on the floor. Using a reciprocating saw and 2 x 4’s we cut rounded wedges to fit the curve of the barrel lying on its side. The keg was placed on the pallets. The wedges were fitted to the barrel and nailed to the pallets.
Noticeable fermentation started within 2 hours. A blow off tube was needed for the first 30 days.
We divided the batch when it got down to 1.020 as some folks like it sweet. Those of us who prefer it dry are finishing it with WLP715 Champagne Yeast.
Most locals here do not pasteurize. They prefer natural spontaneous fermentation. We prefer WLP775!
Hoppy Fermentations!