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Apples To Cider - How To Make Cider at Home (2015) PDF

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The key takeaways are that the book discusses the history and process of making different types of cider, including traditional cider, ice cider, and sparkling cider using the méthode champenoise method.

The book discusses the history and types of cider, how to taste cider, selecting and harvesting apples, the fermentation process, and techniques for making different styles of cider like traditional still cider, ice cider, and sparkling cider.

The book discusses the process for making cider at home, including selecting and pressing apples, fermenting the cider, and techniques like carbonating cider or making ice cider or sparkling cider using the méthode champenoise method.

t+o

Apples Cider

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t+o

Apples Cider
How to make cider at home
april white with stephen wood of Farnum Hill Ciders

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2015 by Quarry Books


First published in the United States of America in 2015 by
Quarry Books, a member of
Quarto Publishing Group USA Inc.
100 Cummings Center
Suite 406-L
Beverly, Massachusetts 01915-6101
Telephone: (978) 282-9590
Fax: (978) 283-2742
www.quarrybooks.com
Visit www.QuarrySPOON.com and help us celebrate food and culture one spoonful at a time!
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written
permission of the copyright owners. All images in this book have been reproduced with the
knowledge and prior consent of the artists concerned, and no responsibility is accepted by the
producer, publisher, or printer for any infringement of copyright or otherwise, arising from the
contents of this publication. Every effort has been made to ensure that credits accurately
comply with information supplied. We apologize for any inaccuracies that may have occurred
and will resolve inaccurate or missing information in a subsequent reprinting of the book.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
ISBN: 978-1-59253-918-5
Digital edition published in 2015
eISBN: 978-1-62788-253-8
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data available
Cover and Book Design: Laura McFadden
Page Layout: tabula rasa graphic design
Printed in China

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In memory of Terry Maloney of West County Cider, Colrain, Massachusetts

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Contents
9 introduCtion
15 ChApter 1 | What Is Cider?
29 ChApter 2 | Tasting Cider
49 ChApter 3 | Starting with Apples
71 ChApter 4 | Your Cider Room
83 ChApter 5 | Your First Batch of Cider
99 ChApter 6 | Your Second Batch of Cider
111 ChApter 7 | Your Third Batch of Cider
and Beyond

133 ConClusion
136
139
140
142
142
145
147

Glossary
Resources
The People Behind Farnum Hill Ciders
About April White
Photographer Credits
Acknowledgments
Index

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Introduction
Cider is nothing more than apples, fermented. It seems simple, until
you taste the end result of the fermentation. Good cider, like good
wine, starts with good fruit. The fermentation process brings forward the hidden aromas, tastes, and sensations of those apples.
When blended and fermented, the most celebrated cider apples
often called inediblereveal flavors such as apricot, black tea, honey,
and pine. These flavors balanced with acidity, astringency, and
bitterness, create a combination that has made cider a popular
drink for centuries.
Cidermaking, too, seems simple. The basic process is straightforward. It requires minimal ingredients and equipment, most readily
available from home wine or brewing supply shops. It requires
minimal space, making it a manageable at-home project. But good
cidermaking also requires patience, persistence, and practice.
The crew behind Poverty Lane Orchards and Farnum Hill Ciders has
been making still and sparkling ciders for two decades. It is a learning
process, even after hundreds of batches. In that time, they have also
watched the apple and cider industries change, and an interest in
well-made cider and home cidermaking grow. In this book, they
share their years of experience and the philosophy of cidermaking
they have developed: For these cidermakers, the cidermaking
process begins with the apple.
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THE FARNUM
HILL CIDERS
STORY

The seeds of Farnum Hill Ciders were


sown in the 1960s, when Poverty
Lane Orchards was planted on the
site of a former dairy farm. Its northern New Hampshire hills were planted
with McIntosh and Cortland, then two
of the leading varieties of wholesale
apples. Stephen Wood was introduced
to apple farming in 1965. He was
eleven years old when his father and
a partner purchased the farm. No one
was thinking about cidermaking at
Poverty Lane Orchards then, at least
not beyond the occasional barrel of
New Englandstyle cider fermenting
haphazardly over the winter.
Few people were thinking about
cidermaking anywhere at the time.
The popularity of cider in the United
States had waned with Prohibition
almost five decades earlier, and taste
for cider in traditional cidermaking
regions throughout Europe was
declining, too.
When Wood began to manage the
farm in the late 1970s the focus was
still on packing classic New England
apples for sale throughout the region,
but the apple industry was changing
rapidly. Imported fruit began to
arriveshiny Red Delicious apples
from the West Coast and tart Granny

Smiths from South Americareducing


demand for Cortlands and McIntosh.
Wood needed a way to distinguish
Poverty Lane Orchards in the nowcrowded apple market. In thinking
about the future of the orchard, he
looked to the past, to many nearly
forgotten varieties of heirloom eating
apples and to the inedible varieties
traditional in Europes main cider
apple-growing regions. Those inedible
apples were part of the continents
long cidermaking tradition.
In travels through England in the 1980s,
Wood met the cidermakers behind
many of the countrys storied ciders
and learned from them. He began
experimenting with growing traditional
European cider apples in New England,
at first dedicating just 5 acres (2 ha) of
the then90-acre (36 ha) orchard to the
unheard of idea of modern American
cider, and he began experimenting
with cidermaking techniques. Some of
that early cider was tasty. Some was
terrible. But by the mid-1990s, Poverty
Lane Orchards was turning those
inedible European apples with obscure
names such as Dabinett, Medaille dOr,
Kingston Black, and Stoke Red into
delicious Farnum Hill Ciders.

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s,

l
d,

e
r,

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INTRODUCTION | 11

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THE FARNUM
HILL CIDERS
PHILOSOPHY

For Wood, cidermaker Nicole LeGrand


Leibon, and the rest of the crew
behind Farnum Hill Ciders, cider is all
about the apple. A cidermakers
responsibility is to coax the best from
the fruit without unnecessary additives or techniques that would
obscure the apple. The Farnum Hill
Ciders still cidermaking process,
outlined in chapter 5, is a largely
hands-off one. A cidermakers main
task is to find the best apple juice
available and provide good conditions
for fermentation to occur.
Finding high-quality apple juice for
cidermaking has long been a challenge, but as more people become

cidermakerscommercial or hobbyist
more orchards are cultivating cider
apples to meet the demand.
As interest in cidermaking and, even
more importantly, cider drinking has
increased, Poverty Lane Orchards
has found like-minded commercial
and home cidermakers in diverse
apple-growing regions. Cidermakers
such as E.Z. Orchards, Eves Cidery,
and Eden Orchards share the
Farnum Hill Ciders philosophy, while
making very different ciders. (Their
cidermaking processes for cidre,
mthode champenoise, and ice cider
are outlined in chapter 7.)

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CIDERMAKING TIP

A Note for the Home Brewer


The process of making cider is most similar to the process of making wine.
For the home brewer used to making beer, this can be a shock. Theres
simply less to do and fewer opportunities to affect the final product.
Cidermaking is an exercise in patience. Cider does not benefit from frequent
attention. Instead, cider is best when left alone for much of the fermentation
process. And cider doesnt benefit from unnecessary additives that hide the
natural flavors of the apple. Cider, like wine, is an agricultural product and
each batch you make will be unique.

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ChApter

What Is Cider?
What is cider? In the United States, thats a harder question than
you might think.
In American English, cider can be, simply, the juice pressed from an
apple. This fresh, sweet liquid is bottled and sold as sweet cider, a
staple of the New England fall. But the word cider can also refer to
something more complexthe juice pressed from an apple and
turned, through the magic known as fermentation, into a delicious,
alcoholic hard cider.
Elsewhere in the world, particularly in regions with strong cidermaking traditions, there is little confusion between sweet cider and
hard cideror cidre or sidra, as it is known in France and Spain,
respectivelybut there can be much disagreement about what
makes for the best cider.

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CIDER
HISTORY

Hard cider can trace its history back


two millennia. Interest in the apple
goes back even further. Wild apples
are depicted in cave art from before
8000 BCE.
It is believed that the species of apple
that has become one of the most
widely cultivated crops on the planet
comes from the Tian Shan Mountains
of what is now Kazakhstan. Trade
routes between the Mediterranean
and the Far East are credited with
spreading the fruit. And with the apple
came cider. Cider was practical, a way
to use and preserve excess apples
from the harvest. Although the
science was not understood, cider was
also a safe alternative to water, which
often carried diseases. Ciders alcohol
level was high enough to make it
inhospitable to many bacteria, but low
enough that even children drank cider.
Although much of early cidermaking
is lost to history, there are references
to cider as early as 55 BCE. By the
eighth-century reign of Charlemagne,
whose empire encompassed much of
Europes top apple producing regions
including Northern Spain, cider (or
poatum, as it was known) was produced on royal estates.

of cider apples that cidermakers still


talk about today. In the seventeenth
century, the cider tradition took firm
root in England. And, as explorers set
out from England, Spain, and France for
the new world, they took with them
both apple seeds and grafting wood,
which grew especially well in the
English colonies on the East Coast of
North America, and an interest in cider.
Cider became commonplace in the
colonies and stories abound of
widespread production, copious
consumptionPresident John Adams
is said to have drunk cider every
morning, for his well-beingand even
of its use as currency.
Throughout its history, the popularity
of cider waxed and waned for
numerous reasons. Cider production
and consumption rose and fell with
changes in growing conditions,
taxation policies, immigration patterns,
social movements and, simply, tastes.
In America, the temperance movement of the nineteenth and early
twentieth century halted ciders
riseand introduced sweet, unfermented, cider into the lexicon.

Modern cidermaking dates back mere


centuries to the apple orchards and
farms of Northern France and Southern
England. By the late-sixteenth century,
the Normans were cultivating varieties

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CIDERMAKING TIP

What Is Perry?
When pears are milled and pressed and
the juice is fermented, the resulting
alcoholic beverage is known as perry.
Though delicious, pears and perry have
never enjoyed the widespread popularity
of apples and cider.
Like the apples used to make cider, pears
cultivated for perry are typically high in
both sugars and tannins, with an astringency that makes them unpopular for
eating out of hand. The perry-making
process is similar to the cidermaking
process. If you have access to the juice
from perry pears, experiment with the
cidermaking process outlined in chapter 5.

s,

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C
S

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CIDER
SCIENCE

The cidermaking process, described


in extensive detail in this book,
is designed to promote alcoholic
fermentation. It is similar to the
process for turning grapes into wine.
There are innumerable variables in
cidermakingincluding the tastes
of the cidermakerand many
different styles, but the basic steps
are the same.

cidermakers for their reliabilitythe


juice is inoculated with specifically
selected yeasts. Cidermaking is mostly
a hands-off process; the yeast, not the
cidermaker, must do the work, but
cidermakers try to influence the
fermentation process by controlling
the nutrients available in the juice or by
adjusting the temperature. Typically, a
long, slow fermentation is the goal.

Cidermaking begins with ripe apples,


which have a high concentration of
sugar. The sugar is the food for the
yeast, which will convert it into alcohol
and carbon dioxide. A cidermakers
choice of apples has the biggest
impact on the cider produced. Most
cider is made from a blend of apples,
which are then pressed into juice. The
cidermaker is looking for a balance of
sensations and flavors, paying attention
to the acids and tannins of the cider
apples. The cidermaker may choose to
blend the juices again after fermentation (see chapter 7). The result of
blending at each stage is different,
something that the cidermaker
learns through experimentation and
experience.

Depending on the style of cider


being produced and the preferences
of the cidermaker, the cider may be
bottled before the fermentation
process is complete, immediately
after the process is complete, or after
a maturation period.

The chosen apples are milled into a


pulp, called pomace, and then pressed
to extract the juice. (Most home
cidermakers will begin the cidermaking process with juice.) The juice is
then fermented.
There are many styles of cider. In some
the juice is fermented spontaneously,
relying on the existing yeast. In other
stylesoften preferred by home

Fermentation tanks filled with cider

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CIDER STYLES

The topic of cider styles is much


debated among todays cidermakers,
who will often use the word traditional
to describe their ciders. As with wine,
easy categorization of an agricultural
product made in different geographic
regions, with different varieties of fruit,
by different techniques, for different
tastes, over thousands and thousands
of years is impossible.
For the home cidermaker, a discussion of cider styles is important not to
establish strict definitions or anoint
one approach as the best, but to
provide a basic understanding of
common, often overlapping, vocabulary. Styles defined by geography,
method of production, and taste
profiles will come up frequently in
conversations with fellow cidermakers
and on the back labels of cider
bottles.

Geography
A geographic style develops over
decades, or perhaps centuries, as
cidermakers in a specific region,
working with similar types of apples
grown in similar conditions learn from
and influence each other. Over time,
one approach to cidermaking becomes the standard against which the
regions cider drinkers compare all
other ciders. When enough time has
passed, the style is often described as
authentic or traditional, although by
that time, few people in the region
may still be making cider in that
method.

To categorize styles by region, one


must use a broad brush. Not all ciders
produced in a given region will adhere
to the style, and even ciders that do
adhere to geographic style will not
share every characteristic. The
particular source of the fruit or the
cidermakers own preferences will
influence the cider. Further, a general
geographic style may sometimes be
broken down into more specific
regional styles, though these distinctions are far more useful when
studying the history of cider than
when producing it or drinking it today.
Cider is made in apple-growing
regions around the world, such as
Germany, Finland, and South Africa,
but the most widely recognized styles
have emerged from the most established cider-producing countries:
England, France, and Spain. Although
relatively new to the cidermaking
scene, Quebec has also developed a
distinctive style of ice cider.

England
The United Kingdom produces nearly
half of the worlds cider. Its cidermaking
roots are in the west and southwest of
England. Many cidermakers speak of
the counties of Herefordshire, Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, Somerset, and
Devon with reverence. Historically, the
ciders made in the region were based
on the local bittersweet apples, with
strong tannins as well as noticeable
acid. They were fermented to full
dryness, and most often they were still,
not sparkling, beverages best served in
a pint glass.

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y.

Most widely available commercial


brands today describe themselves as
English-style ciders. Many are still or
somewhat fizzy, comparable to the
carbonation of a beer, and best
served in a pint glass, but most have
more sweetness and less of the
tannins traditionally associated with
the region. The term farmhouse cider
is frequently heard in reference to
English-style ciders. The term originally described the small-batch ciders
produced by local farmers. These
ciders were typically still and strongly
tannic. Today, the term is widely used
to give cider drinkers an impression
that their cider is natural and straight
from the orchard, whether that is a
true reflection of the process or not.

l,
n

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Traditional English-style cider is made


through a process similar to the one
described in chapter 5.

France
France is well known for natural cidre
with low alcohol, residual sweetness,
fruity flavors, and some sparkle. In the
traditional cidermaking region of
Normandyand specifically in Pays
dAugethe amber-hued cider tends
to be sweeter with a head of fine
bubbles. In the countrys other
traditional cidermaking region of
Brittany, the clearer cider tends to be
drier and is served in a bole, which
resembles a teacup.
The style developed, in part, from
the apples commonly grown in the
region: high-tannin, low-acid bittersweets. Many French ciders are made

using the wild yeasts present on the


apples. A process called keeving is
responsible for the sweetness and
fruity flavors and aromas for many
classic French ciders. In the keeving
process, the fresh juice is stripped of
nitrogen and other nutrients that
yeast need in addition to sugar to
thrive. The undernourished yeast
ferment the juice very slowly, without
the production of undesirable gases,
and die off before converting all the
juices sugars to alcohol, producing a
clear, sweeter cider.
For the home cidermaker, this
approach to cidermaking can be
difficult; undernourished yeasts are
also a cause of many cider flaws, and
unpleasant flavors and aromas.
The sparkle in traditional French cider
often comes from completing
fermentation in the bottle. However,
because mthode champenoise has
its roots in the Champagne region of
France, ciders produced by this
method are sometimes associated
with the country.

Spain
The Asturias and Basque regions of
Spain are home to the countrys
authentic cider production. In
Spanish, the beverage is sidra natural;
in the Basque language, it is sagardoa.
The ciders, made primarily with sharp
apples and wild yeasts, are traditionally similar: dry with a solid tannic
structure and a very slight effervescence, served young. A high level of
volatile acidity can give the ciders a

vinegar-like bite that sets them apart


from those produced in other geographic traditions. Because the ciders
are not filtered, the liquid is hazy.
There is also tradition in the consumption of Spanish ciders. Cider is
not poured from a bottle into a glass,
but thrown. The cider is poured just
a mouthful at a time from a height
into a tilted glass, hitting the side of
the glass before collecting in the
bottom. The splashy pour aerates
and lightly carbonates the liquid,
though the results last for only a
minute or two. The cider drinker is
meant to down the cider quickly,
tossing any collected sediment,
before asking for another.

Quebec
Cider has been made throughout
Quebec, and indeed, in many places
in Canada, for centuries, but its
unique ice cideror cidre de glace
style emerged only a few decades
ago. Like the traditional cider styles
that developed in Europe, Quebecs
style is peculiar to its geography.
The ice-cidermaking process takes
advantage of the regions frigid
winters. Through the natural cycle of
freezing and thawing, the sugars in
the apple juice (or, on rare occasion,
in the apples themselves) are concentrated before fermentation. The
finished ice cider is a full-bodied
after-dinner drink with an 8 to 12
percent alcohol. The style is also
popular in neighboring northern
New England and Northern New
York, which shares Quebecs climate.
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CIDER
METHODS

Although certain methods of cidermaking are often associated with


certain cidermaking regions, their use
is not strictly limited by geography.
Because these methods can produce
different results when used with
different fruit from different regions, it
can be instructive to discuss method
apart from geography. The main
distinction between the methods
discussed here is when fermentation
is completed: before bottling, in-bottle,
or before bottling with a second
fermentation in bottle.

Full alcoholic fermentation


before bottling
A cider that is fully fermented before
bottling will still be cider (unless
carbon dioxide is later added; see
chapter 7). Almost all ciders that are
fermented fully before bottling are
fermented to dryness; that is, there
are no residual sugars present in the
cider. This method is common in
traditional English cidermaking. It is
the method used to make Farnum
Hill Ciders and outlined in chapter 5.
Alcoholic fermentation finished
in bottle
When cider is bottled before fermentation is complete, the cider develops
a natural carbonation from the carbon
dioxide produced by the continuing
fermentation. This approach is
common in French-style cidermaking.
These ciders are fermented slowly,

often using wild yeast, and can be


bottled as a semi-sweet or dry cider.
In the bottle it will develop fine,
integrated bubbles, which may be
considered preferable to the larger
bubbles produced by adding carbonation after fermentation. This is the
method used by E.Z. Orchards and
outlined in chapter 7.

Second alcoholic fermentation


in bottle
Mthode champenoise relies on a
second alcoholic fermentation that
takes place in the bottle. The process
begins after a cider has undergone a
full alcoholic fermentation before
bottling. The dry cider is then inoculated with additional yeast and sugar
before bottling. The yeast and sugar
undergo a fermentation that creates
fine bubbles in the bottled cider as
well as some of the yeasty characteristics often associated with
Champagne. This is the method used
by Eves Cidery and outlined in
chapter 7.
The term secondary fermentation
can also be used to refer to malolactic
fermentation. This is different from
alcoholic fermentation. In malolactic
fermentation, malic acid is converted
into lactic acid. This leaves the cider
without noticeable acid and is
considered a flaw by some. (See
chapter 6.)

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CIDER TASTES

Still versus sparkling


Still cider, as classically produced in
England, is less common among
todays cider offerings. More often
youll encounter ciders that range
from slightly effervescent (similar to a
typical draft beer) to sparkling (like a
Champagne). As discussed, any still
cider can be carbonated, producing
larger bubbles, or a cidermaker can
produce smaller bubbles though
in-bottle or post-bottling fermentation.
Some of Farnum Hill Ciders are still,
while others are carbonated after
fermentation.
Acid levels
The apples used in the cidermaking
process are key in determining how
much acid will be present in the

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For the typical home cidermaker, the


most apparent distinctions between
ciders are the aromas, tastes, and
sensations experienced when
drinking the cider. These characteristics are the result of the apples and
method used to produce the cider,
but they are another way to divide the
world of cider into categories for
discussion and debate.

finished cider. However, some geographic styles favor acid (England,


Spain) while others (France) disfavor it.
Likewise, some methods preserve the
juices acid, while others encourage
mellow acid or even malolactic
fermentation.

Tannic structure
As with acid, tannic structure is
determined largely by the apples
used. The bittersweet cider apples
grown in the English countryside
typically contribute strong tannins to
ciders. The same is true for cider
made from bittersweet apples
through most cidermaking methods.
Residual and returned sugars
Semi-sweet ciders are made by
halting the fermentation before the
yeasts convert all of the sugars
present to alcohol. Geographically,
sweeter ciders are common in France,
where the keeving method stops the
fermentation. Finishing fermentation
in the bottle also allows for the
production of semi-sweet ciders.
Some ciders, particularly massmarket ciders, are sweetened after
fermentation like most champagnes.

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OTHER TERMS

There are countless other ways to


describe and categorize cider, some
more useful than others. Home
cidermakers will also encounter many
other alcoholic beverages produced
from apples.
Apple brandy: A spirit distilled from
cider, also known as Calvados (which
correctly refers to apple brandy
produced in the Calvados section of
France). Apple brandy is distilled twice
to 70 to 75 percent alcohol and
barrel-aged.
Applejack: Another name for apple
brandy, or a moonshine produced by
freezing and thawing hard cider to
concentrate the alcohol.
Apple wine: A fruit wine, in which
sugar is added to apple juice before
fermentation to increase the final
alcohol level.

Cyser: A mead-like drink in which


honey is added to apple juice before
fermentation.

Flavored cider: A drink in which


apple juice is fermented with the juice
of another fruit. In commercial
production, flavored ciders are often
flavored with additional fruit after
fermentation.
New England cider: A 7 to 13
percent alcohol drink, in which sugar,
molasses, or maple syrup is added to
apple juice before fermentation to
increase the final alcohol level. Raisins
are often also added. New England
cider is uncommon in modern cider
production.
Pommeau: A blend of apple brandy
and sweet cider, aged in oak. About 16
to 18 percent alcohol.

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CIDER TRENDS

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Over the past fifty years there have


been two dominant trends in commercial cidermaking. One is the rise of
large companies producing cider for
the mass market; the other is the
growth in small-batch commercial
production (as well, of course, as an
increasing number of home
cidermakers).

particularly in the United States, are


even more difficult to categorize. The
largest growth of cideries in recent
years has occurred in the larger
apple-growing regions: the Northeast
(particularly northern New England
and New York), the Mid-Atlantic
(dominated by Virginia), the Northwest, and Michigan.

Most mass-market ciders pay homage


to the traditions of English cidermaking in their marketing. The majority of
these cidersincreasingly found on
tap or in the supermarkets beer
sectionhave the slight fizz sometimes associated with commercial
English ciders. However, these
modern ciders are often sweeter and
fruitier than typical of the category,
with less of the styles bittersweet
characteristics.

As the modern cidermaking culture in


these regions is relatively new, no
distinct geographic style has developed yet. Instead, these small-batch
producers are experimenting with
many different methods of cidermaking and adapting old geographic
traditions to different apple varieties,
new technologies, and current tastes.

The small-batch producers whose


ciders are becoming more available,

Home cidermakers have this same


opportunity: to learn from ciders
history and then use those lessons to
make a cider they love with the
ingredients and equipment available.

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NOTES FROM THE CIDERY, STEvE WOOD

The Farnum Hill Ciders Style


By good luck alone, in the early 1980s, I got to know several

Its a good thing that apple trees take some time to actually

apple growers in Hereford and Somerset (two of the chief

bear crops, because it took us a fair long time to learn to

cider counties of England) and spent a fair amount of time

make cider that was even drinkable, let alone good. At first,

in their orchards, cider rooms, and homes.

we hoped to make an English-style cider and a French-style


cider. But by the late 1990s, we were regularly finding

We grew curious here at Poverty Lane Orchards. Our New

aromas and flavors in our ciders that wed never encoun-

Hampshire climates and soils are very different from those

tered in England or France. One happy day, we suddenly

of the west of England. Could New Hampshire grow any of

asked one another why wed been trying to make imitative

the extraordinary cider apples common across the ocean?

ciders instead of trying to just make something delicious

We began experimenting by grafting hundreds of cider and

and reflective of our apples and our land. This is the USA,

heirloom varieties to old settled trees. We planted our first

after all. On that day, the Farnum Hill Ciders style (if there is

cider orchard in 1989still something of an experiment. It

such a thing) was born.

was meant to be our only cider orchard. We had no idea


what we were about to do.

Weve learned a bit about cidermaking since those days.


Weve changed a few of the cider varieties we grow and use,

But, during that same time, apple market conditions were

and a few of our practices in the cider room. But the princi-

changing. We began to doubt the future profitability of

ples havent wavered. We want our cider to have a good

medium-sized wholesale New England orchards like ours.

tannic structure, plenty of fruit, a faint earthy background,

Within a few years, we knew we had to change as well or

and a nice bright acidity (especially at the end). We want to

give up growing apples. By then, we had a decade of

bring the character of our orchards, and the fruit we grow

horticultural experience with cider apple varieties. On the

here, to the bottle as handsomely as possible. And we want

strength of that meager experiencetogether with curiosity

never to complacently believe that we know exactly how to

and slight desperationwe pulled out many acres of

do it. Our ciders and orchards will continue to improve for as

productive McIntosh, Cortland, and other market apple

long as we remember how little we understand about apples,

varieties, and replanted them with inedible cider fruit.

land, and ciderand how much we have yet to learn.

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s,

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CHAPTER

Tasting Cider

Tasting cider is an important part of cidermaking.


You can learn the most from your cider tasting if you develop a
procedure and a vocabulary for tasting that controls as many
variables as possible and allows for consistent and objective evaluation of each batch of cider. The process in this chapter was developed over many years by the Farnum Hill Ciders crew.
Tasting begins with the apples, happens again when the apples are
blended and pressed, when the fermentation is completed, when
cider is racked, when the fermented batches are blended, and as
the cider matures. The apples and the juice are very different from
the fermented cider, showing fewer nuances and different flavors.
The crew regularly tastes other peoples cider, which they refer to as
OPC, to learn from other cidermakers.

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During the tasting process, the cidermakers do not pass judgment


on a cider. That comes later when they make decisions about what
to blend and sell. During the tasting process, they are intent only on
describing it. And the descriptions they use to do sobe it honey
and sweet cream or forest floor and barnyardare viewed as
neither positive nor negative.

P
F

It takes some practice to become comfortable with applying an


objective standard of evaluation to the fundamentally subjective
topics of smell and taste. But this process is as indispensable to the
home cidermaker as it is to commercial cidermakers.
You should plan to taste lots of cider to train your senses and begin
to understand the different types of cider available. You should also
plan to taste the apple juice before you begin the fermentation
process and to taste the cider when fermentation is complete. If
you plan to let the cider sit on the lees or to mature before bottling,
you may choose to taste the cider at other times in the cidermaking process. (Learn more about these topics in chapter 5.)
It takes a lot of practice, too, not to let the tasting process affect
your enjoyment of cider. When you are conducting a tasting, do so
carefully and analytically. When you pour a cider after work, just
drink it.

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PREPARING
FOR A TASTING

When preparing for a tasting, it is


important to control as many variables of the experience as possible.
You are looking for changes in the
juice and cider over time, so you want
to ensure that the changes you
perceive in the glass are not a result
of changes in the environment.

Where to Taste
If possible, taste in a room that is free
of noticeable aromas. (For instance,
tasting in the kitchen while dinner is
cooking is not the best choice.)
Similarly, you dont want to be wearing
strong perfumes or using strongly
scented soap during the tasting. And
dont taste with food, which will
change your perception of smell,
taste, and sensation.

CIDERMAKING TIP

Equipment for Tasting


Collect the following equipment before beginning a tasting.
Cider
Plastic tubing
Clean pitchers for juice or cider
Dry cider, neutral white wine, or distilled water,
as needed to top off the carboy

Equipment
You will need some easy-to-find
equipment for the tasting: cider;
plastic tubing; a clean pitcher for cider;
dry cider, neutral white wine, or
distilled water, as needed to top off
the fermentation container; a bucket
filled with warm water; a thermometer;
clean tasting glasses; a spit bucket;
and a notebook.
Using the same style of glasses for
each tasting is another way of controlling external variables. The style of
glass will affect your perceptions. A
overly narrow glass, such as a Champagne flute, leaves little room for your
nose, decreasing your access to the
aromas, while an overly wide glass,
such as a white wine glass, allows the
more volatile aromas to dissipate
quickly. The best glasses for tasting
juice and cider are standard winetasting glasses, which have a wide cup
that narrows toward the opening. The
wide cup allows you to easily swirl the
liquid and release aromas, and the
narrower opening funnels the aromas
while leaving room for your nose.
You will also want to use the same
notebook for each tasting. Youll want
to compare your notes to learn more
about your cider and your senses. For
the same reason, its also ideal to taste
with the same people each time.

Bucket filled with warm water


Thermometer

Collect all the equipment you need


before beginning the tasting.

Clean wine-tasting glasses


Spit bucket
Notebook

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PREPARING
THE CIDER

The plastic tubing will be used to


siphon some cider into the pitcher.
You want about 2 ounces (60 ml) of
cider per taster. If you take too much
cider from a carboy, you will have to
use more dry cider, neutral white
wine, or distilled water to replace it.
If you take too little cider, you wont
be able to fully evaluate it.
If you are tasting cider that has
finished fermenting, its important to
replace the removed cider with
another liquid to fill the carboy
completely and minimize exposure to
air. Add dry cider, neutral white wine,
or distilled water before resealing the
carboy.
If you are tasting bottled cider, you can
pour the cider directly into the pitcher.
Although you could skip the pitcher
and pour directly from the bottle,
tasters can be influenced by what they
expect a cider to taste like; its best to
remove visual clues, such as a

distinctive bottle or label. Tasting


blind removes another variable from
the experience.

T
P

Place the pitcher or pitchers of cider


in the bucket filled with warm water.
The water bath will bring the cider to
a proper tasting temperature more
quickly, which means the cider will
spend less time exposed to air, which
can change its properties. The ideal
tasting temperature is about 60F
(16C), which might be slightly warmer
than you would typically serve your
cider. At or just above 60F (16C), the
aromas, tastes, and sensations of a
cider are stronger and any flaws are
more noticeable. (See chapter 6 for
more on the most common flaws.)
Acidity is particularly temperature
sensitive. Use the thermometer to
ensure the cider is at the proper
temperature.
When the cider reaches 60F (16C),
you are ready to begin tasting.

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THE TASTING
PROCESS

Begin the tasting process by pouring


a small amount of cider into each of
the tasting glasses. Swirl the cider
around in the glass and then dump
the cider into the spit bucket. This
removes any foreign aromas. If you
are tasting multiple ciders in one
sitting, its important to take this step
between each one to avoid blending
the ciders.
Now pour about 1.5 ounces (44 ml) of
cider into each glass. This is the cider
you will be evaluating.

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Appearance
Rinsing the tasting glass

First, evaluate the appearance.


Although the appearance of a cider
does not always correlate with its
other characteristics, making a brief
note about the colorhoney, straw,
gold, or another descriptive that
makes sense to youwill familiarize
you with the range of hues typical in
cider and help you recognize when a
cider changes color in the maturing
process. You can also note the clarity
of the cider: Is it hazy or has it
dropped bright?

Evaluating the ciders appearance

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at the table. This process of verbalizing their notes has helped them
develop a precise vocabulary for the
tastings, a boon when you are tasting
as many batches over as many years
as they have.

Swirling the cider before smelling it

Nose
Next you will evaluate the aroma, or
nose. Swirl the cider in the glass to
more fully release the aromas. Empty
your mind of any preconceptions and
smell the cider.
This is not a quick process. You may
smell the cider for a minute or more,
identifying different aromas and
finding the right words to describe
each of them.
In the cider room at Poverty Lane
Orchards, the tasters begin calling out
the aromas they smell. Because the
cidermakers have been tasting
together for a long time, they are
comfortable agreeing with, refining,
clarifying, or disagreeing with a
description offered by someone else

For novice tasters, however, it may be


best to start silently, with each taster
writing down his or her notes before
discussion begins. This prevents one
tasters experience from overwhelming the others; the power of
suggestion is strong.
Once you have smelled the cider,
begin making notes. You will quickly
notice that the aroma of cider is
layered. There are certain scents that
you experienced first and others that
came later, regardless of the relative
strength of those aromas. The goal is
to list the aromas in the order you
experienced them. If you dont have
the exact word for an aroma, list an
approximate description with a
questions mark as you experience it,
and then return to it when youve
completed the list. Stick your nose
back in the glass and hunt for it
again. Can you find a better description for it?
In this part of the process, conversation can be helpful. Describe the
aroma in any terms that occur to you:
a color, a sound, a sensation, or a

memory. Your fellow tasters may


recognize what you are describing
and be able to help narrow in on a
word. You want to be as exact as
possible. Do you smell orange? Can
you be more specific? Is it a navel
orange or a clementine? Is it orange
peel or orange juice or orange
marmalade or orange popsicle?
As you taste you will develop a
vocabulary of words that are unique
to you and your fellow tasters. During
a Farnum Hill Ciders tasting, the term
BSA is often used. BSA is shorthand
for bittersweet apples and describes
the distinctive pear-like, leathery
aroma of bins of bittersweet apples in
storage. It is an aroma that the
Poverty Lane Orchards crew is very
familiar with, but it is unlikely that you,
as a home cidermaker, have the same
point of reference. You probably wont
use the term BSA in your tasting
notes; instead, youll be challenged to
find other words, with meaning to you
and your fellow tasters, to describe
the same experience.

Remember: You have a whole world


of aromas to draw fromand not just
food-related aromas. The Farnum Hill
Ciders tasting notes are filled with
comments about sweat and manure.
(And those arent necessarily bad
things.)

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Evaluating the ciders nose

CIDERMAKING TIP

Resetting Your Sense of Smell


Your nose can get tired. It becomes accustomed to the smell of
cider during the course of a tasting and is no longer as sensitive
to its aromas. To reset their sense of smell, the Farnum Hill Ciders
tasters rely on two tricks:

No one knows exactly why these actions reawaken the sense of

Rubbing the bridge of the nose

what tricks you use. During a Farnum Hill tasting, thats known as

Smelling themselves, often by ducking their nose into their shirt

being broken. Try again tomorrow.

smell, but theyve helped the crew through long tastings.


Sometimes though, a tasters perceptions will be off no matter

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Tasting the cider

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Taste
Human taste buds are a far more
limited tool than you imagine them to
be. The tongue can only perceive
acid, bitter, sweet, sour, salty, and
savory flavors. Your sense of taste is
truly your nose at work again, perceiving the changing aromas of a food in
your mouth. (For evidence, try tasting
with your nose plugged.) This scientific distinction, however, is not all that
important for cider tasting. In the
tasting process, all of the tastes and
aromas that you experience when
you first put the cider in your mouth
are considered to be the ciders taste.

Taking notes at a tasting

Taste the cider by drawing a small


amount into your mouth. Dont
swallow it. Swirl it around and spit it
into the spit bucket. This is akin to
rinsing the glass. Now draw a mouthful into your mouth. Again: Dont
swallow the cider. Instead swirl it
around to coat your mouth (this time
because different parts of the tongue
are more sensitive to different flavors)
and suck in some air through your
lips to aerate it. This takes some
practiceand sounds sillybut the
air helps release the aromas in
your mouth.

Start by evaluating the acidity and


bitterness of the cider. These are
perceived by the tongue alone. Which
of the two hits your senses first? How
quickly does the other arrive? Cider
tasting notes often read: Acid over
bitter or acid and bitter in balance.
Then describe the acidity and
bitterness.
Because these are not aromas or
flavors in the way they are usually
defined, it can be difficult to find
descriptive words. Most often, the
Farnum Hill cidermakers use shape,
size, or sensation descriptors. The acid
may be bright, round, sharp, or
flat. The bitter may be broad,
direct, or moderate, among the
many other descriptions that fill years
of notebooks.
Now, describe the taste as you
experience it. List the flavors in the
order they appear, as you did with the
aromas. Aim for precision in your
descriptionwhite grape, lemonade,
lime zest, fruit cocktail, compost,
leather, lumberwithout worrying
that youve never tasted some of them.

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T
Y

CIDERMAKING TIP

Tasting Process
Follow these steps, taking notes along the way, to evaluate ciders objectively.
1. Pour a small amount of cider into the tasting glass.
Swirl and discard.
2. Pour about 1.5 ounces (4 ml) of cider into the tasting glass
for evaluation.
3. Evaluate the appearance. Note the color and clarity.
4. Swirl the cider.

Next consider the mouthfeel. Mouthfeel is the sensation of cider in the


mouth. Specifically, you are evaluating
the body of the cider and its
astringency.
Astringency is different from bitterness, which is perceived by the
tongue. Astringency is often described
as a drying sensation in the mouth
and is related to the tannins present.
Describing these properties is straightforward once you have some
experience tasting, as they are
typically described in relative terms.
The body of the cider is usually said
to be light, medium, or full. The
astringency is described on a scale
from slightly to moderately to
very astringent.
Like the evaluation of the nose,
evaluating the taste and mouthfeel

7. Taste a mouthful of cider, swirl it around, and aerate it.


Dont swallow.
8. Evaluate the taste. Note the acidity and bitterness. Note the
flavors in the order you experience them.
9. Evaluate the mouthfeel. Note the fullness and the astringency.

5. Evaluate the nose. Note the aromas in the order you


experience them.

Mouthfeel

6. Taste a small amount of cider. Swirl it in your mouth and spit.

10. Spit the cider.


11. Evaluate the finish. Note the flavors in the order you
experience them.

can be a several-minute process. If


you want to, spit your first mouthful
into the spit bucket and taste again to
identify that elusive flavor.
Some tasters will swallow a small
amount of cider, believing that the
flavors change as they are swallowed
(as in beer tasting), but most spit as
you would in a wine tasting. Spitting is
an important part of the tasting
process when you are tasting several
ciders. The alcohol content of the
cider is enough to change your
perceptions as you go through the
tasting process. Even when you do
spit, a long tasting can wear you
down.

Finish
After you spit the cider, you will taste
its lingering effects, the finish. Most
often, youll hear tasters say, the finish
follows, meaning that the finish is a

continuation of the taste of the cider.


Sometimes, however, one taste will
dominate the finish. Approach the
finish the same way you approached
the taste of the cider. Start by evaluating the acidity and bitterness. Which is
apparent first? Then describe the
flavors in the order you experience
them, with attention to the differences
between the taste and the finish. Does
a flavor that was behind the scenes in
the taste dominate in the finish? Does
a flavor that was prominent in the
taste disappear in the finish?
The word clean may be applied to the
finish. In cider-tasting speak clean
means that the cider is free of
microbial defects and that the funkier,
darker aromas and flavors of the nose
have dissipated in the finish, leaving a
bright, pleasant aftertaste.

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TRAINING
YOUR NOSE

s
s
n
s

Tasting takes practice. The best way


to learn to confidently describe ciders
is just to sit down and do it. Over time,
you will develop your own vocabulary
for the aromas, tastes, and sensations
of cider.

You can also work to train your nose


and your mind to identify scents more
readily. Pay attention to the scents
around you and the things that you
eat every day and put words to those
experiences. Everyone has his or her

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own methods for storing the information. For instance, some people, while
smelling a honeydew melon, will
repeat the word honeydew in their
heads to solidify the mental connection. When you smell something
interesting, seek out the source. A
bouquet of flowers has a general
smell, but each type of flower in the
arrangement has a unique one. Smell
each flower until youve located the
hard-to-identify aroma and make a
mental note of the experience.

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CIDERMAKING TIP

Tasting vocabulary
The cidermakers goal is to develop a consistent and specific

If you smell citrus, stop and ask yourself: What kind of citrus?

vocabulary to objectively describe the aromas, sensations, and

Once youve focused in on lemon, consider what part of the fruit

tastes in each batch of cider. This way, you can compare batches

you are smelling. Is it the peel, the pith, the pulp? Is it a common

of cider. In the cider room at Poverty Lane Orchards, a consistent

lemon or a Meyer lemon? Does it smell cooked or sweetened?

vocabulary allows the cidermakers to discuss the nuances of

Would lemon curd or lemonade be a more apt description? Or

each batch.

perhaps you are experiencing a faux lemon aroma. Is it more


lemon candy or lemon furniture polish?

The goal is to be as exacting as possible when choosing words


to describe the cider. Try to avoid general terms, such as sweet,

Your vocabulary will be unique to you and your fellow tasters

floral, earthy, or citrus.

a reflection of your experiences. Following are just some of the


terms that have become a part of the vocabulary at Poverty Lane
Orchards. As you become a more-experienced taster, you may
add descriptive words unique to your cider-tasting experience.

Apricot

Dried leaves

Mango

Rose petals

Balsa wood

Dry twigs

Orange blossom

Scotch

Banana peel

Ferns

Orange juice

Solvent

Bing cherries

Forest floor

Orange peel

Strawberries

Black tea

Furniture

Orangina

Sweet decay

Bread

FYM (farmyard manure)

Overripe orange

Tart cherries

Brine

Green banana

Peach

Tropical jelly

Brown sugar

Green olives

Peach pit

Vanilla

BSA (bittersweet apples)

Green twigs

Pear

Vodka

Burnt matches

Guava

Pear skin

Warm spices

Butterscotch

Hefeweizen beer

Pineapple

Waterfall

Chocolate

Honey

Pomegranate

Whiskey

Compost

Leather

Pond

White grape

Cooked beets

Lime
Lime peel

PWLEO sweat (People


Who Like Each Other)

Work sweat

Cream

Lumber

Quinine

Dried apricot

D
W
L

Worry sweat

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DEFINING
WHAT YOU
LIKE

The tasting process is designed to be


an objective one, but the end goal is
subjective: The tasting process is a
tool to help you create a cider you like.
After you have objectively evaluated
the ciders, review your notes. Which
of the ciders did you like? Which of
the ciders didnt you like? What do the
ciders in each category have in
common?

The more you understand your own


likes and dislikes, the easier it will be
for you to make decisions about the
types of apples you use in your
cidermaking (see chapter 3) and your
goals if you choose to blend cider
(see chapter 7). The knowledge will
also help you pick a cider you like
from the shelves of your local liquor
store while you wait for your own
batch of cider to ferment or mature.

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OThER
OTHER
PEOPlES
PEOPLES
CIDER

The crew at Poverty lane Orchards


regularly taste their own cider as well
as other peoples cider (OPC), to learn
from fellow cidermakers successes
and mistakes. The ciders listed here all
share the cidermaking philosophy
that cider should be an expression of
the apple, but differ greatly in their
approach to cidermaking and the
desired result. If you have access to
these ciders through your local liquor
store, taste them yourselfremembering that cider varies from year to
yearand make notes before reading
on. If you dont have access to these
particular ciders, practice tasting on
others available in your area. Following are Poverty lane Orchards notes
on tasting the featured ciders.
The distinct processes for making
each of these ciders are outlined in
chapter 7.

Still CiderFarnum Hill


Dooryard Still Cider 1312
(7.5% ABV)
Label and Website Description
From the label: Farnum hill Dooryard
Still refers to the big central yard at
our home orchard . . . the label
presents various nonbubbly dry
ciders, some with rowdy tannins,
some with edgy notes rare in U.S.
ciders.
From the website: 1312 is still, altogether dry, a lucky blend of several
2012 fermentations. Its tannic structure comes chiefly from Dabinett,
Yarlington Mill, Major, and Somerset

Redstreak; its fruitiness from Golden


Russet; its acidity from Wickson,
Ashmeads Kernel, and Esopus
Spitzenberg. Aroma through finish, we
find peach and apricot (fresh and
dried), pineapple, various citrus fruits,
pear, smoke, and rocks, with pleasingly dynamic acid, tannin and fruit
throughout.
Tasting Notes
Appearance: Mid-straw, dead still, clear.
Nose: Peach, apricot (fresh and dried),
orange and peel, marmalade, pear,
smoke, rocks, grapefruit and peel,
citron, dried leaves, leather (bittersweet apple), distant farmyard
manure, lemon/lemon oil, general
citrus, mango, papaya, faint stinky
cheese, maybe horse, lime and peel,
dust, wood (not oak), roses (the day
before discard?), pineapple.
Taste: Bright acid in balance with
broad bitter. Faint implied sweetness.
Fresh and dried fruits from nose,
especially citrus, citrus peels, dried
apricot, peach, prominent bittersweet
apple and pear, wood (not oak), broad
distant funk in background (cheese/
barnyard/dried leaves), behind acid/
bitter and fruit.
Feel: Moderately full, moderately
astringent.
Finish: Acid and bitter carry in balance,
with fruits and funk from nose and
taste. A bit more dried fruit, especially
apricot, at the end. Clean.

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French-style CidreE.Z.
Orchards Willamette Valley
Cidre 2011 (6% ABV)
Label Description
E.Z. Orchards cidre consists of a blend
of vintage French cidre apple varieties
that we grow in our Willamette Valley
orchards. Our fermentation method,
like the traditional French mthode
champenoise, enhances mature apple
aroma, is low in acidity and finished
with a soft effervescence. Chill upright
before serving. To enhance clarity,
pour gently to reserve the lees
sediment at the bottom of the bottle.
Tasting Notes
Appearance: Copper. Faint haze. Tiny
rising bubbles.
Nose: Dried apricot and papaya, dried
cranberry and cherry, peach, faintly
acetic (nice vinegar), dried fruit/
homemade fruit leather, cotton candy,
avocado, wood, farmyard manure,
orange and peels, brown sugar, lemon
juice, horses, lanolin, peach pit, stewed
pineapple, lime and seltzer, cream/
orange and cream, acid heat, bark,
forest floor, dried leaves.
Taste: Acid over sweet over bitter.
Slightly acetic in mouth. Lime and
seltzer, all fruits from nose (particularly
dried cherry and cranberry), with
vitamins, fish oil (taste, not smell), fresh
and cooked apples.

Mouthfeel: Quite full, moderately


astringent.
Finish: Acid and bitter in balance. Fruits
from taste carry mostly in balance,
animals fade. Strong peach. Clean.

Mthode Champenoise
CiderEves Cidery
Bittersweet (9% ABV)
Label Description
This cider is made from a blend of
traditional English, French and
American cider apples. Like wine
grapes, true cider apples have an ideal
balance of tannins, acid and sugar
needed to produce a fermented
beverage. A secondary bottle fermentation creates natural carbonation.
Golden, bubbly and semi-dry, Bittersweet is crisp and fruity with a hint of
earthy tannins. Pairs well with most
food. Served chilled.
Tasting Notes
Appearance: Pale gold, rising bubbles,
clear.
Nose: Apple concentrate, apples in
cold storage. Sweet and tart. Pear.
Fructose, grapefruit, McIntosh and
baked apple, sweet fruit cocktail,
vanilla, nutmeg and warm spice,
cooked tropical fruits, guava paste/
jam. Very concentrated fruit. Fried
bananas, coconut (shell), cooked
winter squash, green leaves, strawberry, warm pineapple.

Taste: Sweet, but more tart than


expected from nose. Strong acid,
sweet, then bitter. Moms apple pie,
fresh bread/bakery (yeast), boiled
apple cider, citrus peels, pink grapefruit, strawberry and leaves.
Mouthfeel: Full, moderate-high
astringency, very fizzy.
Finish: Faithfully follows nose and
taste. Acid and sweetness carry, bitter
balanced in background. Apple (fresh,
cooked, stored, and boiled), pear,
guava jam, warm spice, warming
alcohol. Clean.

Ice CiderEden Vermont


Ice Cider Heirloom Blend
(10% ABV)
Label Description
Made from a unique blend of
traditional and heirloom apple
varieties, this delicious ice cider has a
complex, balanced flavor and a long
finish. 100% of the apples used are
grown in Vermont. In addition to
McIntosh and Empires, Russets
proved full-bodied sweetness, Caville
Blanc provides acidity and citrus
notes for balance and Ashmeads
Kernel provides natural tannins for
structure. Serve it with artisanal
cheeses, charcuteries and desserts
with autumn spices.

T
A

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T
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fa

M
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Tasting Notes
Appearance: Gold. Dead still. Clear.
Nose: Apple, pear, lemon oil, alcohol,
very ripe peach, dried apricot, boiled
cider, wood/furniture, green twigs/
sappy springtime note, cream,
beeswax, wet dead leaves, sweet
cherry, pipe tobacco, orange oil,
candied orange peel, candied citrus,
whiskey sour, oak barrel/vanilla,
candied ginger, mulled tart fruits.
Taste: Acid, sweet, tiny bitter follows.
Acid in good balance with sugar.
Apples in all stages, pop of quinine
and strong tea, rich dried fruits
(apricot, mango), boiled cider, very
faint cedar. General fruit for miles.
Mouthfeel: Very full, rich, barely
astringent, nice acid sting.
Finish: Acid and sweetness carry in
balance with all fruits from taste,
strong black tea underneath. Clean.

After the harvest

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NOTES FROM THE CIDERY, STEvE WOOD

Tasting Cider
Anyone who makes food or drink should learn how to

worked, with only one person writing. Thats what we do

evaluate their product. Tasting is really nothing more than an

today. We still follow the same structured approach and

effort to objectify characteristics that are essentially subjec-

have developed an evolving descriptive language that is

tive, at least well enough to enable those of us who grow the

very useful to us at every stage of our job. We have the

apples and make ciders to speak intelligently to one another.

good fortune of a collective sensory memory; three of the

Its no use to gather the crew together over a glass of cider to

five who started doing this together are still here. Others

mutter, This is pretty good. We should try to make it better.

come and go. But we almost always have a handful of

All the tedious, pretentious wine (and food) language that

people around who have learned the rudiments of tasting.

wrecks so many dinner conversations is based on something

Among other things, weve learned that almost anyone with

real: an effort by professionals to speak to one another in a

a healthy nose, tongue, imagination, and command of

language that has objective meaning.

language can do this quite well.

When we first started making cider, we had no clue about

We taste at every step of cidermaking, from the orchard to

tasting. I started to spend a fair bit of time at winemakers

the bottle. We bite and spit apples in the orchards as they

sensory analysis sessions. We took a cider industry tasting

ripen. We taste them again at the press, as theyre being

class in the UK. None of this really taught us exactly how to

blended and turned into juice. We taste the juice on its way

taste, but we began to understand that regular people could

to fermentation. But the really hard tasting job begins once

learn how to do this, and we were encouraged to start tasting

the ciders have finished fermentation when we need to

cider in a more rigorous way. In the late 1990s, five of us

begin blending finished ciders.

began to meet for regular tasting sessions, in the late


morning, around our dining room table. We blinded our-

We have reams of tasting notes from years of work. But you

selves to what we tasted, and we wrote our own individual

wont see these notes on the backs of our bottles. Once its

notes in silence before we spoke. We structured our work

in the bottle, we dont want to ruin the party by encourag-

very tightly and examined five elements in every sample:

ing someone to drone on about dried apricot, guava,

appearance, nose, taste, mouthfeel, and finish.

leather, and soft cheese elements in our cider. We want it to


be sipped, enjoyed, and used to lubricate conversations on

After a couple of years of this effort, we gained the confi-

more interesting topics.

dence that we could taste together and speak as we

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CHAPTER

Starting with Apples

Cider begins in the orchard. Very few home cidermakers pick and
press their own apples, and even fewer grow their own apples, so
you might be tempted to skip this chapter. Dont. Home cidermakers who will buy the juice for cidermaking from an orchard still
need to understand the apple. Apples are the mainand some
would say the onlyingredient in cider.
Buy the highest quality juice you can find for your home cidermaking.
Thats the best advice you can get about cidermaking. The difference
high-quality ingredients will have on the finished product is dramatic.
Dont buy apple juice in the supermarket to make cider. Overlooking
issues of quality, store-bought juice often has additives that make
fermentation difficult or impossible.

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I
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In the
Orchard

every decision an apple grower


makesfrom what varieties of apple
trees to plant to how close to plant
those trees to one anotheraffects the
fruit that the trees produce and the
cider that you can make from them.

It is often said that the bin of apples


that looks the worst is worth the most.
cider apples are not judged on the
same criteria as dessert apples. apples
dont have to be attractive or consistently sized to have a great flavor.

For that reason, smaller orchards


focused on growing cider apples
look very different from commercial
orchards growing dessert apples, as
apples designed for eating are called.
commercial orchards growing dessert
apples often plant small trees very
densely, with as many as 1,000 trees
per acre (0.4 ha). the trees, often
irrigated, are flanked by grassless
strips of dirt that allow more water
and nutrients to flow to the trees
and prevent pests, and the apples
are picked from the tree before they
achieve complete ripeness, with
the prettiest apples fetching the
highest prices.

In the bittersweet cider apple orchards


at Poverty Lane, apples are grown on
big trees, planted just 200 trees to the
acre (0.4 ha), and grass flanks the trees.
the orchard looks like the classic
new england farm that it is, but these
decisions serve an apple-growing
purpose. For instance, the grass
provides a soft landing for the cider
apples, most of which are picked off
the ground.
When growing cider apples you are
looking for extremely ripe fruit, just on
the edge of rot. the texture of the
apple may be soft or chewy, but that
isnt a concern in a process that
involves pressing the apples for the
juice. For the cidermaker, the key is
picking apples after all the fruits
starch has been converted to sugars.

Planting apple trees


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Spring in the Orchard


Making a batch of cider is, in truth, a
yearlong process. the process begins
in late winter or early spring as the
apple trees, which have been dormant
for the winter, begin to awaken. as the
weather begins to warm, the tight,
scaly buds of the winter apple tree
begin to swell in anticipation of spring.
at the orchard, the winter and early
spring are a time to prune the trees,
grooming them for a fruitful growing
season. as the days grow warmer and
the ground thaws, the pruning brush
is turned into mulch to nourish the
soil and the trees. new apple trees are
also planted in the first days of spring;
it will be several years before those
new trees produce an apple crop.
Some varieties will produce a good
crop in the third leaf, or year; others
wont produce a full crop until the
eighth leaf.
Spring is a time of rapid change in the
apple orchard. First, the long-dormant
trees develop a light gray fur on their
scaly buds. this is known as silver tip.
next, the trees show green tip, a tiny
sliver of green on the buds. a few days
later, you will see quarter-inch (6 mm)
green and then half-inch (1.3 cm)

green, as the buds continue to grow. If


you look closely you will see that each
flash of green is a cluster of four or five
buds gathered tightly around a central
bud. If you were to dissect one of the
buds, you would see flower organs
developing.
For the apple growersparticularly
ones who practice a minimal-intervention approach to pest management
observing the orchard carefully is key.
Its important to understand how the
weather and other environmental
factors are affecting the trees, and to
watch out for signs of pests or other
enemies of the orchard that might
affect the seasons burgeoning crop.
next, the trees begin to produce
leaves. Mouse ear is the term for the
moment the first tiny green leaves
pop out. they do resemble mouse
ears. next, the tight cluster of buds
separates slightly. this is called floret
separation.
the progression of an apple trees
growth through a gently warming
spring is predictable, but no less
dramatic for that. Shortly after floret
separation comes king pink, when
the center bud cracks, revealing a hint

of pink. depending on the weather,


every bud will turn pink within a day
or two, a stage known as full pink.
the surest sign that spring has arrived
comes shortly thereafter, when the
center bud blooms, king blossom.
Within a week, the apple orchard will
be awash in blooms, a beautiful
moment known as full bloom.
this is a critical moment for the apple
trees, which must be pollinated to
produce apples. Bees and other
insects attracted by the nectar of the
apple blossoms spread the pollen
from tree to tree; most apple trees are
not self-pollinating, which means they
must receive pollen from another
apple tree, not simply from another
flower on the same tree. apple
growers hope for sunny, fair weather
during full bloom. rain and wind can
damage the blossoms and discourage the bees and other insects.
after this period of pollination, the
trees lose their bloompetal falland
tiny apples, just an eighth of an inch
(3 mm), begin to form. If you dissect
these tiny fruits, you can see their
developing seeds, a sign that pollination occurred. If pollination has not
occurred, the tiny fruit will simply fall
from the tree.

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Summer in the Orchard


as the trees begin to produce apples,
some will fall from the tree. this is the
tree deciding how many apples it can
support for the season. the apple
grower often intervenes in this
process. Frequently, an apple grower
will further thin the crop to ensure the
tree can produce high-quality, and not
just high-quantity, fruit. the apple
grower also has ways to encourage a
larger crop from trees that are under

producing. a tree that is strategically


damaged will often be shocked into
producing more apples.
through the summer, the orchardist
is on careful watch to prevent or
eradicate pests, from apple scab to
deer. Many apple growers will run
leaf and soil tests to evaluate when
the trees should be fertilized. and
there is always mowing and pruning
to be done.

Warm and sunny summer days with


the occasional soaking evening rain are
the apple growers ideal through the
summer months. Passing afternoon
thundershowers are their nightmare.
extreme conditions during a thunderstorm, especially hail, can damage
trees, but the bright sunlight that
comes after the storm, intensified
through the magnifying-glasslike lens
of each raindrop, is also a danger,
threatening heat damage.

Summer at the orchard


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Fall in the Orchard


as the summer days shorten into fall,
the apple grower hopes for drier
weather and a slow and steady
temperature decline. the wish for
drier weather is for the apple growers
well-being as well as for the trees:
harvest comes with many outdoor
chores.
the size of the harvest depends on
innumerable variables, but the
weather is key. no season is ideal, but
the hardest seasons for the apple
grower and the apple trees are ones
with extreme temperature changes
or weather events. nothing confuses

a tree more than a stretch of warm


days in the middle of winter or a cold
snap in July.
cider apples are most often picked from
the ground. the apples fall from the tree
at the peak of ripeness and those that
dont release their hold as easily are
loosened with a gentle tap to the tree
with a long pole. a tree is picked several
times over the course of a week to ten
days; each time the pickers, working by
hand, take only the ripest fruit.
In american cider orchards, most
apples are picked by hand. In european cider orchards, harvest is more

often mechanical. One machine


shakes the trunk of the tree, sending
the apples to the ground, and another
collects the apples.
different apple varieties mature at
different rates, so picking can occur
from the early fall through the late fall.
Because Poverty Lane Orchards is
located in the cold climates of
northern new england, this can mean
that the late-harvest apples are
exposed to temperatures well below
freezing during the nights. cidermakers who work with this type of fruit
believe that these frostsbut not a
deep freezeimprove the fruit.

W
w
t
th

Harvesting cider apples


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Winter at the orchard

Winter in the Orchard


When the deep freeze comes, the
work in the orchard comes to a halt.
the trees prepare for hibernation,
throwing off their leaves and

developing a scaly covering to protect


the buds. there is plenty of winter
pruning to be done, but in the cider
orchard the attention turns from the
apple trees to the cider room.

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the aPPLe

the apple tree produces apples for


the purposes of spreading the apple
seeds hidden inside the fruit. In a
natural environment, the sweet fruit
attracts animals that eat and excrete
the seeds. the cidermaker interrupts
this process, taking the apples for the
purpose of cidermaking, not seed
distribution.
Most home cidermakers start the
cidermaking process with juice, but a
basic understanding of the terms used
to describe apples can be helpful.
When talking about apples, apple
growers most often consider the
sizeapples can range in size from
tiny -inch (2 cm) fruit to 3 -inch
(9 cm) fruitshape, skin, and flesh of
the apple.
an apples shape is often described as
conical (tall and tapered from the
shoulders, or stem end, to the calyx,
or bloom end), cylindrical (tall and
untapered) or flat (more broad than
tall). Shape is typically a lesser concern for cidermakers.
the skin of an apple contains some of
the flavor, aromas, and other compounds that will make their way into

the juice and the cider. the skin can


be described by feel (smooth or
rough, dry or oily), thickness (thick or
thin) and, most often, color. apples
start their growing life as green fruit
and then develop a variety of colors
from green to yellow, orange, and red.
apples are often described has having
a background or ground color and a
surface or blush color. this combination of colors can give apples a
striped, splotched, or streaked
appearance. Some varieties of apples
are also described as being russeted,
which means they have a brownish,
leathery layer on the skin. the color of
the skin does not affect the juice and
cider, but the tannins and other
compounds present in the skin can
shape the cider.
the flesh of a ripe apple contains
most of the flavors, aromas, and other
compounds, such as tannins and
acids, that will be found in the pressed
juiced and the fermented cider. the
texture of the flesh can be described
as fine grained (sometimes considered greasy in pressing) or grainy
(which can be dry in pressing). Its
flavors, and the acids and tannins, can
be described in numerous ways. (See
chapter 2.)

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a SaMPLInG
OF aPPLeS

Because apples are an agricultural


product, where and how the apples
are grown can have a big impact on
their taste and texture. You wont find
all of these applesor these exact
apple characteristicsin your region,
but this sampling will give you a taste
of the apples grown by Farnum hill
and other leading cidermakers
around the world and how they are
used in cidermaking.
typically, cidermakers mix the juice of
several apple varieties harvested
around the same time before beginning fermentation. Only a few
varieties have all the necessary
characteristics to produce a balanced
cider on their own.
When cidermakers talk about apples,
they often divide them into two loose,
unofficial categories: cider apples and
commercial apples. the first category is
for those apples that are grown
primarily for cidermaking. the home
cidermaker usually has to seek these
apples out from small, local producers,
but the effort is rewarded with more
nuanced, balanced cider. commercial
apples are more easily accessible to the
home cidermaker; commercial apples
are often divided into dessert or eating
apples and baking apples. although
many common apples are not suited
for cidermaking, varieties such as
Golden delicious, Idared, and Jonathan
are widely available. these apples have
properties which make them a reasonable stand-in for more traditional cider

Idared

apples. taste the apples to evaluate


their usefulness in cidermaking.

cidermakers divide cider apples


further into categories that describe
their main characteristics: bittersweet, which provide tannins;
bittersharps, which provide both acid
and tannins; sweets, which provide
flavor and aroma; and sharps, which
provide acid.
If the exact varieties listed below arent
widely grown in your region or did
not produce a large crop this season,
dont despair. If you think about
balance and select apples that will
provide the necessary sugars, acid,
tannins, and flavors you can create a
good cider from the available fruit.
as a note: Both early- and late-season
apples can produce delicious, balanced
cider. however, early-season apples
tend to produce ciders with lower
alcohol content than late-season apples.

B
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th
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a
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ta
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s
B
th
a

A
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B
w
b
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s

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Ashton Bitter

Dabinett

Ellis Bitter

Bittersweet Cider Apples

apple flesh: a balance between finegrained and grainy, under a thick skin

Dabinett
this old english bittersweet originated
in Somerset county in the early
1900s. today, the cold-hardy apple
remains a mainstay of traditional
english ciders. the slightly flattened
orange- and red-striped apple is hard
to eat, but its notably harsh tannins
are exactly what make it a popular
cider apple.

Bittersweet apples provide a ciders


structure. their tannins can make them
unpleasant for eating out of hand, but
those same tannins provide the
underpinnings for a good batch of
cider. tannins are responsible for the
astringent and bitter characteristics in
cider. Generally, cidermakers are
looking for two types of tannins: soft
tannins, such as those found in
Yarlington Mill, and harsher tannins,
such as those found in dabinett.
Bittersweet apples are low in acid, so
they are blended with other, more
acidic apples to create a balanced cider.

Ashton Bitter
a popular early-season apple in
england in the 1970s and 80s, ashton
Bitter has a squashed, conical shape
with orangey-red stripes on a yellow
background. the ashton Bitter apple
tree does not produce the sizeable
crops needed for large-scale commercial cidermaking, but has value for
small-batch cidermaking.

apple flavor: Very harsh tannins, with


only a faint apple taste
Use in cidermaking: harsher tannins
in early-season cidermaking

Chisel Jersey
Like dabinett, chisel Jersey is an old
english variety. Some believe the two
apples to be related. chisel Jersey has
a similar shape and coloring and
ripens at the same time, but its
tannins are even more aggressive
than the harsh dabinett tannins.

apple flesh: Somewhat grainy; can be


dry when pressed

apple flesh: Somewhat grainy

apple flavor: the first thing that


strikes you is hard tannins, bitter and
astringent, followed by leather and
apple flavors.

apple flavor: direct, astringent tannins


with leather and citrusy fruit flavors in
the background

Use in cidermaking: Prized for its


tannins; a workhorse apple for
Farnum hills late-season ciders

Use in cidermaking: harsher tannins.


(Surprisingly, though, the juice of the
chisel Jersey is less tannic than the
apple, and after fermentation more
fruity flavors emerge.)

Ellis Bitter
held in high regard by cidermakers as
a versatile apple, ellis Bitter traces its
origin to nineteenth-century england.
to the untrained eye, the conical,
orange-red apples resemble Major
apples.
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apple flesh: a balance between


fine-grained and grainy

B
a
a
th

apple flavor: Middle-of-the-road tannins


Use in cidermaking: a good all-purpose
apple that keeps well, often used to
balance early fermentations

Harry Masters Jersey


a conical, pale red, english apple,
sometimes called Port Wine, harry
Masters Jersey resembles Yarlington
Mill in flavor and use. It matures earlier
in the season than Yarlington Mill.
apple flesh: Fine-grained; the apples
mill easily, but can be loose or greasy
in pressing
apple flavor: Similar to Yarlington Mill
with soft tannins
Use in cidermaking: Softer tannins in
early- to mid-season cidermaking

Major
commonly found in old farm orchards of devon and south Somerset,
these english apples have soft tannins
often used to balance the hasher
tannins of many bittersweets.
apple flesh: a balance between
fine-grained and grainy; presses easily
apple flavor: Soft, round tannins and
fruity characteristics
Use in cidermaking: Softer tannins in
early-season cidermaking

Medaille dOr
a late blooming but early ripening
French apple, Medaille dOr has a
tough golden yellow skin covered in

Medaille dOr

Yarlington Mill

brown russet. the apple is tiny, but


the tannins are huge.

Yarlington Mill
another classic English
Another
english cider apple,
Yarlington Mill has been a popular
blending apple for more than a
hundred years. The
the reddish-pink apple
is tall, tapering toward the calyx.
Yarlington Mill apples have softer
tannins than many bittersweets,
which means the apples have a less
aggressively bitter bite when tasted.

apple flesh: Grainy


apple flavor: So bitter and astringent
as to make other bittersweet apples
seem mild in comparison
Use in cidermaking: extremely harsh
tannins in early-season cidermaking;
used sparingly

Somerset Redstreak
For apple growers, Somerset redstreak is a frustrating biennial variety. a
plentiful crop one season promises a
scarce one the next. the beautiful,
small, red apple should not be confused with the older, similarly named
redstreak, a bittersharp variety.
apple flesh: a balance between
fine-grained and grainy
apple flavor: although the tannins can
vary based on growing conditions,
they are usually softer.

Apple flesh: Fine-grained; the apples


apple
mill easily, but can be loose or greasy
in pressing
Apple flavor: Soft, round tannin with
apple
subtle fruit flavors and less leathery
flavor than many bittersweets
Use in cidermaking: Softer tannins in
mid- and late-season cidermaking;
Farnum Hill
hill often blends Yarlington
Mill with the more harshly tannic
dabinett.
Dabinett.

F
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to
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s

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b

U
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to
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a
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ta

A
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Use in cidermaking: Beautiful, softer


tannins in early-season cidermaking

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Bittersharp Cider Apples


Bittersharp apples are high in both
acid and tannins, though the tannins
are typically not as aggressive as
those found in bittersweet apples.

Foxwhelp
The
the name Foxwhelp dates to the
1600s, but its unlikely that cidermakers today are fermenting the
same Foxwhelp apples as their
English
english forerunners. In the intervening
centuries, the name has been applied
to numerous varieties of apples,
including H.
h.P.P.Bulmers
BulmersImproved
Improved
Foxwhelp.
Apple
apple flesh: The
the most common
modern variety is a large apple with
soft flesh.
Apple
apple flavor: The
the green apple with red
stripes has less astringency and
bitterness than many bittersharps.
Use in cidermaking: The
the mid-season
apple can be useful in blending.

Kingston Black
Kingston Black is notable for being
one of the few cider apples grown
today that will make a delicious cider
all on its own. The
the small, deep red
apple, which originated in Englands
englands
Somerset County
county in the nineteenth
century, has a balance of sugar,
tannins, and tartness.
Apple
apple flesh: Moderately grainy; easy
to press

Foxwhelp

Kingston Black

Apple flavor: Considered by some to


be an edible apple, with structured, but
not harsh tannins and a light sourness

Use in cidermaking: For early season


blending. Redstreak can add acid
without adding significant flavor.

Use in cidermaking: Often fermented


by itself, producing a barely acidic
cider with reasonable tannic
underpinnings

Redstreak
Like Foxwhelp, the English Redstreak
apple is a subject of much lore and
confusion. Centuries-old cider texts
describe an ideal cider apple, with all
the attributes necessary for creating a
well-balanced, single-variety cider. For
years, cidermakers have searched for
that apple. Todays Redstreak has red
streaks on a yellowish-green background, but it is a small, unexceptional
bittersharp used in blending.
Apple flesh: Mushy when ripe

Stoke Red
Apple growers dont love Stoke
Redthe trees are notoriously tricky
to growbut cidermakers are fond of
the small, flat, orange-and-red striped
apples, which originated in Somerset
County, England. Stoke Red are no
longer planted widely but, unlike
many bittersharps, the current variety
is believed to be unchanged from the
one cidermakers used a century ago.
Apple flesh: Somewhat grainy; mushy
Apple flavor: Very strong with dominant acidity and harsh tannins
Use in cidermaking: A wonderful source
of acid in mid-season blends; produces
a low- to medium-alcohol cider.

Apple flavor: Nice, round acidity with


some tannic structure

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Sharp Cider Apples


When fermented, sharp cider apples
create cider with bright acids and
flavors from herbs to fruit to flowers.

Ashmeads Kernel
an old english cider apple that thrives
in north america, ashmeads Kernel is
also delicious for eating, with an
abundance of fruity and floral flavors.
the apple is classically beautiful,
round with a flowery calyx and a
textured brown russet over an
orange-yellow background.
apple flesh: Very grainy
apple flavor: the apples fruity and
floral flavors and acidsugar balance
produce a high-alcohol, high-acid
cider with rose-like aromas.
Use in cidermaking: Fermented on
its own for blending. the finished
cider provides floral, fruity acid to
late-season blends.

Esopus Spitzenburg
esopus Spitzenburg originated in Ulster
county, new York, in the eighteenth
century. the slightly conical, orangered apple was reputedly a favorite of
thomas Jefferson, who tried, but failed,
to cultivate the apple at his home in
Virginia. Unlike many cider apples,
Spitz, as it has been nicknamed by
fond cidermakers, is also good for
eating, cooking, and drying.
apple flesh: dense; not grainy

Esopus Spitzenburg

Golden Russet

produces green herblike flavors in


fermentation.

Sweet Cider Apples

Use in cidermaking: Spitz produces a


high-alcohol cider that is also high in
soft, bright acids, making it a favorite
for late-season blends.

Wickson
this tart, red apple was developed on
the West coast for cidermaking. Its
small size means that it is rarely grown
for eating, but it is a tasty treat fresh
as well as in cider.
apple flesh: Fine-grained; crisp, white,
and juicy
apple flavor: this herbal, spicy apple
creates a pale, aromatic, high-acid
cider that suggests white grapes.
Use in cidermaking: Fermented on its
own for blending. the finished cider
provides grapelike acid to mid- and
late-season blends.

apple flavor: Intense acid balances


out high sugar for a rich apple that

Sweet cider apples are often less


coveted than their high acid or high
tannin counterparts, but they can add
sweet, fruity flavors to cider.

Golden Russet
Golden russet apples are round with
a flowery calyx and a sweet, fruity
flavor with acid. For the home cidermaker, Golden russet may be one of
the easiest-to-find fruits that can be
fermented alone into a fruity, low-acid
cider that develops complexity
through maturation.
apple flesh: Yellow; slightly chewy
apple flavor: this generically fruity
apple can produce cider with flavors
of peaches, pears, mangoes, and
pineapple.
Use in cidermaking: In blending,
Golden russet adds fruit flavors
without changing acidity. can be
fermented alone.

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tUrnInG
aPPLeS
IntO JUIce

S
F

the process of turning apples into


juice is a relatively straightforward one:
apples are milled into pomace and
then the pomace is pressed to extract
the juice. the juice is collected and the
pomace is discarded. this process is
the same for sweet ciderwhich can
be consumed right off the pressor
hard cider, which is then fermented.
there are many different types of
mills; some grind the apples while
others slice or grate. there are also
many different types of presses. at
Poverty Lane Orchards, the pomace is
pressed in a vertical rack-and-cloth
press. the pomace is placed on
burlaplike cloth between wooden

frames. Slowly, a hydraulic piston rises


pressing the pomace. the juice flows
out of the pomace, strained by the
cloth, and the solids remain behind.
through the harvest, the orchards
press can produce 800 gallons
(3,028 L) of sweet cider a day. Large
commercial presses produce tens of
thousands of gallons a day. regardless of the press used, each bushel of
apples (a bushel is about 42 pounds,
or 19 kg) produces about three gallons
(11 L) of juice. the six gallons (23 L)
of juice you will use to make your
first batch of hard cider started as
two bushels, or 84 pounds (38 kg),
of apples.

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SOUrceS
FOr JUIce

For the home cidermaker, finding a


source of high-quality juice can be the
most difficult part of the cidermaking
process. at a minimum, you must
start with juice without any additives.
Many cidermakers also prefer to use
unpasteurized juice (and it is essential
for making cider through spontaneous fermentation; see chapter 7) but
the sale of unpasteurized cider is
regulated.
the key to finding the best juice is
asking the right questions. Start by
contacting local orchards or home
brewing suppliers, which may sell
juice from cider apple orchards.
Fellow home cidermakers are a
good resource for juice sources
in your region.
tell the orchard or home brewing
supplier what you are looking for.
Because an apples availability and
characteristics can vary by region or
growing season, its easier to talk
about the qualities you are looking

fora high level of tannins, for instancethan to ask for specific


varieties. It can be easy to get caught
up in the lore surrounding different
types of apples; dont automatically
assume the apples labeled heirloom
are the best cidermaking apples
available. they may not have been
bred or cultivated for cidermaking.
If possible try the juiceor the
applesbefore purchasing six gallons
(23 L) for your carboy. You arent
necessarily looking for delicious juice,
so dont be seduced by the aromatics
that are likely to change during
fermentation. Instead, evaluate the
balance of sweetness and acidity, and
look for noticeable tannins.
Most importantly, though, dont let the
quest for the perfect juice prevent you
from getting your start as a home
cidermaker. cidermaking is process.
Start fermenting with the best juice
you can find and continue your hunt
for even better juice for the next batch.

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NOTES FROM THE CIDERY, STEvE WOOD

An Apple Grower and His Apple Trees


the orchards on Poverty Lane were first planted in the early

new ones. and an apple grower needs to be willing to make

1960s, on former crop and grazing land. I started working

apple trees do his bidding. apple trees (like Labradors) are

here in 1965, when I was 11. I was pretty much raised with

among the most forgiving creatures on the earththey will

those trees. I began managing the orchards in 1973, and

accommodate all manner of well-intentioned errors by a

bought the farm in 1984. One of my earliest jobs was

person with a pruning saw. But its a mistake to think that

mulching each of 5,000 trees with hay, with a pitchfork.

they need us. the only reason for a human to do anything

Louisa, long before we were married, spent hard hours on

to an apple tree is to make it perform a job. We work on the

her hands and knees bridge-grafting many of these trees to

trees for our own sakes, not for theirs.

save them from rodent damage. Our sons, harry and Otis,
grew up sword fighting with applewood sticks in these

at Poverty Lane Orchards and Farnum hill ciders, weve

orchards, and riding on the shoulders of apple pickers. Only

been working for years to learn how to grow good apples

a hard person could avoid developing affection for trees

and make delicious cider. the main thing weve learned is

hes known for so long.

that all the best ciders are made in the orchard, not in the
cider room. they are made by cidermakers who respect

But its important to avoid anthropomorphizing old tree

the fruit, the trees, and the land. Many winemakers and

friends too much. an apple grower needs to be able to pull

cidermakers put their signature on their bottles. We know

trees out of the ground from time to time, to make room for

that if anyone should sign our bottles, its the trees.

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CHAPTER

Your Cider Room

For the home cidermaker, the equipment and ingredients you need
to stock your cider room to produce that firstor fiftiethbatch of
cider are simple, inexpensive, easy-to-find, and dont take up much
room at all.
At Poverty Lane Orchards, the cider room is an enormous barn
with a concrete floor. It is home to a cider press, 275-gallon (1,041 L)
plastic tanks of fresh apple juice, towering stainless-steel tanks,
and old oak barrels. A table in the middle of the room is piled high
with cider bottles, both full and empty, and notebooks filled with
handwritten tasting notes. In a closet just big enough for two, is a
chemistry labs worth of glass beakers and tools to measure the
characteristics too subtle or important to be left to taste alone.
A forklift might rumble by.
Dont worry: Your cider room doesnt need a forklift.

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Where tO
MaKe cIder

You can make cider almost anywherebut your decisions about


where to make your first batch of
cider can affect the final product.
Small-scale cidermaking doesnt
require a lot of space. a five- or
six-gallon jug (19 or 23 L) typically
takes up less than one square foot
(929 cm2) of space (you will be using
two) and the other cidermaking
equipment you will need for your first
batch is minimal. Serious cidermakers
dedicate a cider roomperhaps just
a portion of the garageto their
batches. Storing all your cidermaking
supplies together like that is convenient, but not necessary.
the most important thing to consider
when choosing a place to make cider
is temperature.

Temperature
the yeast you will use to ferment your
juice and produce cider is temperature sensitive. When the yeast is first
introduced into the juicea process
called pitchingand for the first
several days of the fermentation
process, the batch is best stored some
place with a consistent temperature
of 65F to 70F (18c to 21c). the
yeast will multiply quickly and grow
strong at this temperature.

after a few days, when the mixture is


bubbling steadily, you will move the
batch to the coolest spot you can find
for the rest of the fermentation. the
cooler temperatures slow the fermentation process, which preserves more
of the fruity aromas and flavors of the
juice. the fermentation will continue,
slowly, at temperatures as low as 35F
(2c), but most yeast prefers a home
that is 40F to 60F (4c to 16c).

Sometimes this is as simple as


starting the batch near your furnace
and then moving it to a distant corner
of the basement.
Once you have moved the batch to a
cool location, its best to leave it
undisturbed until the final steps of the
cidermaking process. If, however, the
temperature of this cider room
suddenly changesif for instance,
your cider room is the rarely heated
spare bedroom but you suddenly
have houseguestsrelocating to
another cool space is preferable to
overheating the batch.
If you cant find any cool place to store
the batch as it ferments, it might be
time to reconsider your home
cidermaking plans: Would you have
more options at a different time of
year? do you want to share the
project with a friend who has a better
spot for a cider room?

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eqUIPMent

Whether experienced or novice, the


cidermaker doesnt need a lot of
expensive equipment to make great
cider. Buy the following basics from a
local or online winemaking or home
brewing supplier.

Containers

For your first batch of cider, you


will need two containers. the first
container is for fermentation. the
second (slightly smaller) container
is for storing the cider for aging or
drinking.

r
the best choice for the home cidermaker is a glass carboy. a carboy is
simply a jug with rigid sides and a
narrow neck and mouth. they are
available from any home brewing
supplier in a variety of sizes, in either
plastic or glass. Both materials are
suitable for home cidermaking, but
a glass carboy is often preferable
because it is easier to clean. all
carboys are transparent, and will
allow the cidermaker to observe the

fermentation process better than an


opaque vessel.
Some home cidermakers choose to
ferment cider in a bucket, also available from a home brewing supplier.
Great cider can be made in a bucket,
but the process is more prone to error.
the shape of the carboy is its
advantage. Youll fill the first carboy
almost completely with juice. Because
the neck of the carboy is narrow, only
a limited amount of juice is exposed to
air. In the wide bucket, a much larger
amount of juice is exposed. during the
fermentation process, the carbon
dioxide produced by the yeast forms
a protective layer over the developing
cider, preventing the cider from
coming in contact with oxygen, but
when fermentation is complete, the
carbon dioxide dissipates, leaving the
exposed cider vulnerable to oxidation.
the cider in the bucket, with its large
surface area, is more at risk.

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this same principal explains why you


want a smaller, second carboy for
storing the cider. When you transfer
the cider from the first carboy to the
second, you will leave behind the
leesthe remnants of the yeast and
fruit solids. that means that the
volume of cider produced will be less
than the volume of the original juice;
plus, you will want to taste and
evaluate your cider at this point in the
process. Because you always want
to fill the carboy to the neck when
storing finished cider, the second
carboy must be smaller than the first.

Glass versus Plastic


Most home cidermaking equipment is
available in both plastic and glass
versions. Its the cidermakers choice.
Plastic equipment can be more
durable, but glass has the advantage
of being easier to clean and often
higher quality.
When choosing between plastic and
glass, consider the tools use. Plastic
is perfect for easily broken tools such
as a graduated cylinder, while a glass
container is often preferable for
fermentation. a glass container allows

you to observe the batch throughout


the process.
Its important to note that there are
many different types of plastic. Some,
such as the low-density plastic you
find sweet cider packaged in, are not
good for storing cider. Others, such as
the high-density plastic used to make
food-grade buckets, are suitable.

CIDERMAKING TIP

First-Batch Shopping List


One 6-gallon (23 L) glass carboy

Narrow-range litmus paper

One 5-gallon (19 L) glass carboy

Hydrometer, measuring specific gravity

6 gallons (23 L) of the best apple juice


you can find

Two carboy bungs, one solid and


one bored

100-milliliter graduated cylinder

Campden tablets

Plastic crate

Airlock

Empty plastic jug

Red Star Pasteur Champagne yeast or


Lalvin dV10 yeast

Plastic tubing

Bottles and seals, for bottling

Thermometer

Yeast nutrients, optional


Carboy brush

A
C
B

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C
K

A
J

E
L
N
D

B
L
F

All the equipment you will need to make cider: 6-gallon (23 L) and 5-gallon (19 L) glass carboys (A), Carboy brush (B), Empty plastic container (C),
Carboy bungs (D), Airlock (E), Plastic tubing (F), Hydrometer (G), Thermometer (H), Litmus paper (I), Campden tablets (J), Graduated cylinder (K),
Bottles and seals (L), Yeast (M), High-quality apple juice (N), Plastic crate (O)

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Carboy Bung

a bung seals the juice in the carboy.


You will need two bungs, one solid
one and one bored with a hole
through the middle for the addition of
an airlock. a bung can be made of
rubber, silicon, or cork. the only real
requirement is a tight fit in the mouth
of the carboy.

a
c
th
th
in
is
s
lo
w
w
m
s

Airlock
an airlock is used during the fermentation process to let carbon dioxide
produced by the yeast escape from
the carboy while preventing air from
entering. there are two main types of
airlocks: an s-shaped airlock and a
three-piece airlock. Both function
similarly, with water added to the
airlock, allowing the carbon dioxide to
bubble out, but sealing the carboy
against oxidation.

Plastic Tubing
Basic flexible food-grade tubing,
available from any wine or home
brewing supplier or your local
hardware store, is needed to transfer
the fermented ciderand not the
leesfrom the first carboy to the
second carboy.

Use narrow-range litmus paper to measure pH.

Thermometer

Narrow-Range Litmus Paper

all you need is an inexpensive glass


lab thermometer. You need an
accurate temperature reading at
several steps in the cidermaking
process, but theres no need to
measure the temperature to the
decimal place, so you dont need a
fancy electronic thermometer.

Measuring the phor acidityof your


juice is an important part of the
cidermaking process, but you dont
need to buy a ph meter. a ph meter
can be expensive and require maintenance and calibration. Simple,
inexpensive, narrow-range litmus
paper will measure the ph effectively.
Look for litmus paper that focuses as
closely as possible on ph between 3
and 4.5. Litmus paper that measures a
large range wont be sensitive enough
to allow for an accurate reading.

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Hydrometer and Cylinder


a hydrometer and a graduated
cylinder are essential to measuring
the amount of fermentable sugar in
the juice. the best source for an
inexpensive hydrometer and cylinder
is a home winemaking supplier. When
selecting a hydrometer, you want to
look at the measurement scale. Some
will measure specific gravity, others
will measure brix, and still others will
measure both. these are just different
scaleslike Fahrenheit versus

celsiusfor measuring the same


thing. If your hydrometer measures in
one scale and your cider books
explain the process in another, you
have some math to do. In this book
we use specific gravity.

a glass carboy. Place the carboy in the


crate to make it easier to carry and to
prevent it from banging against
anything, such as a concrete cellar
floor. a clear plastic or glass jug will be
helpful when transferring the juice
and cider between containers.

Other Equipment
there are some simple household
items that will make the cidermaking
process easier for you: a plastic milk
crate and a clear plastic jug. a milk
crate is typically the right size to hold

When you are ready to bottle your


cider, you will also need bottlesthis
can be anything from beer or wine
bottles to growlersand something to
seal them with.

a
h

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InGredIentS

apples are the most important


ingredient in your cider (see chapter
3)but sulfur dioxide, yeast and,
optionally, yeast nutrients, will improve
the final product.

yeasts for cidermaking are tolerant


of sulfur dioxide, forgiving of minor
temperature changes, and proven
to be strong enough to ferment the
cider to full dryness.

Sulfur Dioxide

the practice of using sulfur dates back


centuries, when sulfur was burned in
cider barrels. today, campden tablets,
which are made of potassium metabisulfite, are used by home cidermakers
to add sulfur dioxide to the cider. they
can be purchased from a home
winemaking supplier.

there are numerous options when it


comes to yeast. each experienced
cidermaker swears by a different strain
or brandor several yeasts combined
an allegiance that comes after much
experimentation. Some yeasts impart
specific flavors or other characteristics
to the cider, but for the purposes of
your first batch of cider, choose a
strong yeast that ferments cleanly,
allowing the flavors of the apples to
shape the cider. Farnum hill ciders are
made using Lalvin dV10 and red Star
Pasteur champagne yeast (which,
despite its name, is not for making
sparkling wines). Both are known for
strong fermentations, even in less-thanideal circumstances, and they have
neutral effects on the flavor and aroma
of the finished cider. these yeasts are
available from winemaking suppliers.

Yeast

Yeast Nutrients

Yeast is essential to the fermentation


process. Without it, your juice will
never become cider. although some
cidermakers rely on natural fermentationutilizing the yeasts on the
apple skins or in the air and on the
surfaces of the cider roomit can be
an unreliable method, especially for
the novice cidermaker. Most cidermakers choose to treat their juice
with sulfur dioxide to eliminate the
natural yeast, and then inoculate with
a yeast specifically designed for
making cider or wine. the best

It is not essential to add yeast nutrients, but they can contribute to a


healthy, strong fermentation, which is
the best defense against the development of unpleasant aromas and
flavors. the yeast is gobbling up the
sugar in the juice and converting it to
alcohol and carbon dioxide, but yeast
needs other nutrients, such as
nitrogen and thiamine, to remain
healthy. You can use any brand of
yeast nutrient you find at winemaking
and home brewing suppliers.

Sulfur dioxide, also known by its


chemical formula SO2, is used in
cidermaking as an antimicrobial agent
and an antioxidant. It is typically added
twice in the cidermaking process: first,
before the yeast is added to discourage the development of undesirable
yeast or other organisms, and later,
when the fermentation is complete
to prevent oxidation and malolactic
fermentation.

B
P
F
S

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BeSt
PractIceS
FOr
SanItatIOn

cleanliness is important, but maintaining your cidermaking equipment isnt


difficult. hot water is the number one
option for cleaning your tools. (dont
use scented detergents.) there are
other solvents available, but they are
rarely necessary. If you do choose to
clean with something such as sodium
percarbonate, soda ash, or caustic
soda, follow the package directions
and safety precautions carefully. the
best rule of thumb is to do the best
cleaning job you can without going
overboard. Sight and smell will
typically tell you if youve done a
thorough job or not.

Cleaning a Carboy
a carboy, with its narrow mouth, can
be the most difficult piece of cidermaking equipment to clean. a glass
carboy makes your job easier because smooth glass is easier to clean
and because you can see the inside
surfaces of the container. as with all of
your cidermaking tools, hot water is
typically sufficient for cleaning, unless
your inspection of the container
reveals something especially gross.

n-

Use a flexible brush to clean the carboy.

a flexible carboy brush can be


helpful in cleaning every surface of
the carboy with hot water. a bottlewashing attachment for your sink is
another option. Often sold by home
brewing suppliers, this tool directs a
jet of hot water into the bottle or
carboy.

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NOTES FROM THE CIDERY, STEvE WOOD

A Commercial Cider Room


We store and pack apples and make cider in barns that

the other day it was 18 degrees below zero (28c) here in

were originally built for cows and milk. the first of them was

northern new hampshire. We couldnt clean barrels on the

built in the late-eighteenth century. In the early 1980s, after

loading dock or do anything else with liquid out of doors.

years of adapting our work to the buildings, we began to

the heated area of our barns is too crowded with tanks and

adapt the buildings to accommodate our work. We poured

barrels to wash indoors, and wed never get the rinse water

concrete, raised ceilings, moved buildings, all in the effort to

across our flat floors to our tiny drains anyway. We had to

pack and store apples and make a little sweet cider on the

wait for a warmer day to work with the barrels.

side. Oops.
Its a good thing we like the results of slow, cool fermentaBy the mid-90s, we had begun to get more serious about

tions, because Im not sure what wed do if we didnt. We use

real cider and less hopeful about packing apples. the

yeast that ferments reliably to dryness regardless of the

buildings wed rejiggered for handling apples were all wrong

cold. We work around the frigid days, and choose warmer

again when it came to cidermakingsmall floor drains,

(above freezing) days to do our outdoor winter cider work.

perfectly flat floors, high ceilings (for stacking apple bins

In the summer, we scramble in the other direction, keeping

22 feet [6.7 m] high), and no provision for warming or

the cider cool in our apple storages and only working

cooling large volumes of liquid or getting water quickly to

outside when its not brutally hot.

an indoor drain. We became squeegee masters.


I guess it works outwere usually pleased by our ciders.
every cidermaker deals with some version of our problems:
temperature, space, and water.

Were thinking of putting up a building designed for cidermaking, but in the meanwhile, well work with what we have.

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CHAPTER

Your First Batch


of Cider

While the fall is often thought of as cidermaking season, you can


start your cider project any time you have all the necessary ingredients and equipment on hand, a warm space for starting fermentation, and a cool place for storing the cider during fermentation.
(See chapter 4.)
The method outlined in this chapter is the one used to produce
Farnum Hills still cider. The whole process will take about one month
or longer if you choose to let your first batch of cider mature.
As always, it begins with the apples. Find the best fresh, sweet,
pure apple juice you can buy, and get started. See page 67 for
more information on finding high-quality apple juice.

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t
T
CIDERMAKING TIP

Timeline for First-Batch


In Advance

About Day 3 to Day 7

About Week 2 to Week 4

Purchase the necessary equipment


and ingredients.

Wait and watch as the fermentation


process begins.

Wait and watch as the fermentation


process slows.

When fermentation is underway, move


the open carboy to a cool space.

Test the pH of the cider.

Day 1
Purchase the best apple juice you
can, transfer it to the carboy, and
add sulfur dioxide.
Taste the juice and test the pH and
specific gravity.

Day 2

About Week 2
Add the bored bung when any frothing
has stopped.

Continue to wait until fermentation


stops and sediment falls out of the
cider.
Rack the cider
cider. and add sulphur dioxide.

Add the airlock when fermentation is


less vigorous.

Month 2 and Beyond

Add yeast nutrients, if using.

Bottle the cider.

Let the cider mature.

Pitch the yeast and place the open


carboy in a warm space.

ADDIng SuLfuR DIOxIDE


As soon as you get your juice into the
carboy, you should add sulfur dioxide
(S02) most likely in the form of
Campden tablets. At this point in the
process, sulfur dioxide acts primarily
as an antimicrobial agent, suppressing
unwanted yeasts and other organisms in preparation for your addition
of yeast. Follow the instructions on
the Campden tablets package to add

50 parts per million of sulfur dioxide


to the juice.
Wait twenty-four hours before
pitching the yeast. This ensures that
the sulfur dioxide has time to disperse
and do its work. You may see the juice
lighten somewhat in color during this
waiting period, because sulfur dioxide
also helps to prevent oxidation.

Add sulfur dioxide to juice as an antimicrobial


agent.

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teStInG
TESTIng

It is helpful to know the ph and


specific gravity of the juice you are
starting with to give yourself a better
understanding of the cider you are
making. You also want to taste the
juice and record your tasting notes, so
you can assess how those flavors and
characteristics change in the cidermaking process. (See chapter 2.)
Following the instructions on the
package of the litmus paper, test and
record the ph of the juice. a juices ph
is a measure of the strength of the
juices acidity. You are looking for a ph
below 3.7, which is acidic enough to

Measure the temperature of the juice,


and then, following the package
instructions for the hydrometer, test
and record the specific gravity of the
juice. the hydrometer measures the
soluble solids in the juice, essentially
measuring its fermentable sugar. the
specific gravity of the juice will give you
a sense of the amount of alcohol that
will be present in the finished cider.

CIDERMAKING TIP

Specific Gravity and Potential Alcohol

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prevent the growth of many microbes


and allow for the effective use of sulfur
dioxide in the form of campden tablets,
another antimicrobial measure.

Specific
Gravity of
Juice (S.G.)

Potential alcohol
by Volume
of cider (aBV)

1.040

5.1

1.045

5.8

1.050

6.5

1.055

7.2

1.060

7.8

1.065

8.6

1.070

9.2

1.075

9.9

1.080

10.6

1.085

11.3

1.090

12

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t

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PItchInG
the YeaSt

WaItInG

Begin by removing about one gallon


(4 L) of the juice from the carboy into
a clean jug or other convenient
container.

carboy. then return enough of the


remaining juice to the carboy to leave
a small amount of headspace below
the neck.

Following the package instructions,


hydrate the yeast in a container of
warm water, stirring to combine, and
let the mixture stand for twenty
minutes to proof. the yeast will be
frothing. then feed the yeast with a
small amount of juice from the gallon
jug and allow it to continue to froth for
about ten more minutes. this step
makes the yeast stronger and may
acclimate it to the sulfur dioxide
present. Pour the frothing yeast
mixture into the carboy, making sure
you get all the yeast into the carboy.
rinse the yeast container with some
juice from the gallon (4 L) jug into the

Place the open carboywithout a


bung or airlockin a warm place to
encourage fermentation. the ideal
temperature is a consistent 65F to
70F (18c to 21c). Placing the carboy
in a sturdy milk crate is a good idea
because you will move it during the
fermentation process; the milk crate
will make the carboy easier to carry.
as fermentation progresses, the
carboy may expel a frothy mixture
that will drip down the sides of the
container. a cookie sheet or tray
under the carboy will protect the floor
or furniture.

Fermentation will start slowly. You can


check on the process each day to
watch the progress. at first, it will look
like nothing is happening. then small
bubbles will appear. then the juice will
begin bubbling vigorously and may
spew froth out of the mouth of the
carboy. this can take several days or

as long as a week, depending on


factors such as the temperature. If the
carboy is frothing, you can use a wet
cloth to clean the outside of the
container. dont use soap or other
cleaning agents that could contaminate the cider. Otherwise, leave the
carboy undisturbed.

Pitching the yeast


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MOVInG the
carBOY

When vigorous fermentation is


underway, you should move the
carboy to a cooler place if available.
the ideal temperature is a consistent
40F to 60F (4c to 16c). at this

addInG the
BOred BUnG

the carboy is still open. It needs to


remain open until the fermentation
has slowedyoull see strong streams
of bubbles, but any frothing will have
stopped. If you put the bung in before
fermentation has slowed, the pressure
building up inside the carboy will, at
best, expel it. at worst, it will shatter
the carboy. When the fermentation
has slowed down, place the bored
bung loosely in the mouth of the
carboy. dont add the airlock yet. the
bung is a test. If, after a day, the bung
remains in place without any frothing,
you can push the bung fully into the
mouth. If the bung is soon expelled or
covered in froth, remove the bung,
clean it, and wait a day to try again.

point in the process, you must be


careful not to introduce air into the
cider. Move the carboy with a minimal
amount of sloshing or agitation.

a
a

Insert the bored bung when fermentation


has slowed.

F
t

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al

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addInG the
aIrLOcK

FeedInG
the YeaSt

Two common types of bored bungs and


airlocks

Add the airlock to prevent oxidation.

after you have secured the bored


bung, wait a day before adding the
airlock. the fermentation process is still
producing enough carbon dioxide to
create positive pressure and prevent
damaging air from entering the carboy
through the hole in the bung.

When you are ready to add the airlock,


add water to the airlock and insert it
into the bung. If the bubbles are rising
rapidly in the airlock, remove it. Its too
soon. You can test the airlock again
the next day. If the bubbles are regular
but not rapid, leave the airlock in place.

at this stage, you can consider


feeding the yeast a bit. Use the
minimum amount (or even less) that
the package recommends and follow
the instructions for adding the
nutrients to the carboy. the key is to
add the nutrients to the fermenting
liquid very slowly. the nutrients are
more soluble than carbon dioxide and

will drive some of the carbon dioxide


out of solution in your carboy. If you
just dump the nutrients in, expect a
frothy volcano and be ready to mop
your floor. If you add it gently and
slowly, expect to see the liquid get a
bit excited, then settle back down to
a happy fermentation. When it has,
replace the airlock.

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WaItInG

Once the airlock is in place, you


should leave the fermenting cider
undisturbed. Just watch the progress.
You will see the rapid fermentation
slow and then, over the course of
several weeks, come to a near stop.

Lees, which is made up of solids from


the juice and expired yeast, will have
built up at the bottom of the carboy
during the fermentation process. even
after the fermentation has finished, the
lees will continue to fall to the bottom
and the cider will become clearer.

teStInG

When the fermentation has nearly


stopped and you see only the
occasional rising bubbles, its time to
test the cider.

harsh. thats fine. the flavor typically


mellows as the cider matures. then,
using the litmus paper, test the ph of
the cider. the ph level will have risen
some during the fermentation
process, but that change will not be
clearly detectable on narrow-range
litmus paper. (If it is noticeable, see
chapter 6.) You can also test the
specific gravity using the hydrometer
to confirm that the fermentation is
completed. Fully fermented cider will
have a specific gravity of 1.00 or lower.

Working quickly to minimize the


ciders exposure to air, remove the
bung and airlock from the carboy
and start by smelling the cider. the
cider should smell pleasant. If you
detect rotten eggs, compost, decay,
cabbage, or garlic, your cider may
be in trouble. (See chapter 6 for some
potential solutions.)
Use the plastic tubing to siphon a
small amount of the cider for your
evaluation. taste it. It may taste a little

replace the bung and airlock and


wait until fermentation has stopped
completely.

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CIDERMAKING TIP

n
e

Equipment
for Racking
Full carboy
Campden tablets
Empty carboy
Plastic tubing
Utility tape
Scissors
Glass for your first taste of cider
Extra clean container for excess
cider
Dry cider, neutral white wine, or
distilled water, as needed
Solid carboy bung

racKInG

When there are no bubbles visible,


fermentation has stopped completely.
If all has gone well with the fermentationthere were no unpleasant odors
or a dramatic increase in ph when
you testedyou can leave the cider
on its lees for a week or two without
seeing any change beyond increasing
clarity. If these flaws are apparent, see
chapter 6 for some potential solutions.
More time on the lees could exacerbate the problems.

r.

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racking is simply transferring the


cider from the carboy in which it
fermented into the second carboy,
where it will mature. Youll do this by
siphoning the cider through the
plastic tubing, leaving the lees behind.
this is also the time to add more
sulfur dioxide, this time primarily to
prevent oxidation and malolactic
fermentation (in which a bacteria
converts malic acid to lactic acid) or
other bacterial activity.

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read these instructions for racking


carefully and collect all the necessary
equipment before beginning the
process. It is important to work
efficiently to minimize the amount of
time that the cider is in contact with
the air.
Begin by moving the full carboy to a
table, being careful not to agitate the
liquid and disperse the lees. the full
carboy needs to be at a higher level
than the second, receiving carboy to
siphon the liquid. allow the full carboy
to sit undisturbed for twenty-four
hours so the lees can settle after the
move.
When you are ready to rack, place the
empty carboy near and below the full
carboy. Follow the instructions on the
package of the campden tablets to
prepare 30 to 35 parts per million of
sulfur dioxide, which will be added
later in the racking process.

remove the bung and airlock from the


full carboy and lower the plastic tubing
into the cider until it is an inch (2.5 cm)
above the lees, with the mouth of the
tubing against the side of the carboy.
You can secure the tubing in place at
the neck of the carboy with utility tape
to prevent it from dropping into the lees.
Its important not to disturb the lees,
which will make the cider cloudy again.
Place the other end of the plastic
tubing near the empty carboy and
use your mouth to create suction,
drawing the cider into the tubing. as
the cider begins to flow, siphon a
small amount of cider into a glass and
then insert the tube into the receiving
carboy, resting the mouth of the
tubing at the bottom of the container
to minimize the amount of air introduced into the mixture. (Some
unwanted aromas can be treated with
a splashy racking, which intentionally
introduces air. See chapter 6.)

When the receiving carboy is about


half full, add the prepared campden
tablets.
Be cautious again when you near the
end of the siphoning process. You
dont want the receiving carboy to
overflow, so have an extra clean
container on hand for excess cider.
and you dont want to suck lees or air
into the carboy. Leave some cider
behind if necessary.
You need to fill the receiving carboy
completely, into the neck and within a
half-inch (1.3 cm) of the bung, to
reduce the surface exposed to the air.
You will likely have more than enough
cider, but if you dont you can use dry
cider, neutral white wine, or even
water to top off the carboy.

close the full carboy with a solid bung.

U
th
sm

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.
h
y

To rack, place the full carboy on a table.

Place the empty, smaller carboy at a lower level.

Lower the plastic tubing into the full carboy,


with the mouth of the tubing against the side.

Use your mouth to create suction. Place


the end of the plastic tubing in the empty,
smaller carboy.

Siphon the cider into the smaller carboy.


Have an extra container available for any
excess cider.

If necessary, top off the carboy with dry cider,


neutral white wine, or water before adding
the bung.

g.

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taStInG

this is your first taste of your first


batch of cider. the first question is:
do you like it? now taste the cider
the same way you tasted the juice,
making notes about the aromas,
flavors, and other characteristics you
detect in the cider. (See chapter 2.)
If you love the cider and want to drink
it now, its time to bottle it. But most

MatUrInG

BOttLInG

ciders made from tannic and acidic


apples benefit from some time to
mature. Your cider will change over
time, and those changes are more
reliable and positive in a larger
container than in a smaller container.
(If you find off-aromas or other flaws in
the cider, see chapter 6 to diagnose
the problem and find troubleshooting
techniques.)

If youve chosen to mature your cider,


you can taste the change over weeks
or months or even years. Wait a
month between tastings. (always top
the cider off with dry cider, neutral
white wine, or water to fill the carboy
after tasting.) typically, over time, the
tannins in the cider round out,

becoming less astringent, and acids


soften, becoming less harsh. Often as
these changes occur, other attractive
aromas and flavors develop.

the bottling process is very similar to


the racking process. If youve allowed
the cider to mature, you may find a
thin layer of lees at the bottom of the
carboy. Follow the same procedure of
inserting the tubing and siphoning

the cider into the selected bottles.


the key here is to fill the containers
completely and seal them tightly.

Store the cider in a cool place as it


matures. Leave it undisturbed.

congratulations! Youve completed


your first batch of cider. enjoy it.

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NOTES FROM THE CIDERY, STEvE WOOD

Our First Ciders


In the days when we were growers, packers, and shippers

We had unfathomable (to us) fermentation problems, yeast

of McIntosh, cortland, and red and Golden delicious, and

problems, acidity problems, and all manner of other

Farnum hill ciders didnt even exist, we often put a barrel of

problems, producing a lot of cider that took a lot of self-

cider down to ferment. We did it the way other folks in new

delusion to like. the main thing we learned in those days

england did in those dayswe filled a used whiskey barrel

was that its very easy to persuade yourself that the cider

with indifferent sweet cider, added a few raisins and some

youve worked so hard to make must be delicious and to try

brown sugar, put the barrel somewhere it wouldnt freeze,

to choke it down, but that if its really worse than a cheap six

and made an airlock with a bung, some wax, a piece of fuel

pack or jug of wine, you should probably admit the truth,

line, and a jug of water. Sometimes it froze, and sometimes it

dump out the cider, find something else to drink, and try

didnt. So sometimes we made rough hard cider, and other

again. thats as true today as it was then.

times we inadvertently made apple booze. We usually bottled


it in late winter or early spring. It was fun and made for rowdy

happily, after a few years, we began to get the hang of it

parties, but was always a reliable headache in a glass.

(with generous help from cidermakers and winemakers


around the world). a couple of barrels even tasted genu-

But, when we started grubbing out our old dessert orchards

inely good to us. In 1995, we finally became a bonded

and replanting them with real cider fruit, we had to get

winery and started selling a few cases of cider. the cider we

serious about learning to make good cider. We knew we

sold in those first years wouldnt stand up to our standards

wanted it to be delicious and to reflect the fruit and the land

today. We didnt yet know what sort of cider we wanted to

where it grew, but we didnt know much else. We studied all

(or were able to) make from these unfamiliar apples, but at

we could find on the subject, in the United States and in

least those early ciders had pleasing bittersweet character

europe. When our orchards finally started to produce a few

and good acid and fruit.

good cider apples, we filled dozens of carboys and fermented them wherever we could (a walk-in cooler in the

Weve learned a lot since we put those first carboys in our

barn, the basement of a house, and so on). We made

basement. theres no reason for you to wander through

hundreds of gallons of perfectly horrid stuff.

the same tortuous learning adventure. If you follow


the directions in this chapter, your first carboy will be a
thousand times better than our first ones were.

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CHAPTER

Your Second
Batch of Cider

If your first batch was delicious, drink it! Then follow your notes and
the steps in chapter 5 again and see if you can replicate the results.
Take thorough notes with each batch. There are innumerable variables
when it comes to cidermakingsome that you can control and some
that you cantand the best cidermakers are careful observers who
practice their cidermaking skills with batch after batch.
If your first batch didnt please you, ask yourself, Why? Perhaps the
cider is flawed, or perhaps you made a good cider that simply isnt
your idea of what good cider should taste like.
For the small-batch home cidermaker, there are three much-feared
flaws: the presence of excess hydrogen sulfide, which can smell of
rotten eggs or cabbage and garlic; unintentional malolactic fermentation, which dulls the acids in the cider; and acetic fermentation,
which turns your cider into cider vinegar.
Its important to note that these common flaws are not all that
common. Dont be in a hurry to diagnose one or the other during
the fermentation process or at racking. Dont overreact at the
slightest aroma coming from your carboy. If the evidence of one

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of these flaws is clear, however, there may be steps you can take to
correct themor, if the cider is too flawed, to learn from the mistake
and start fermenting your next batch of cider.
There are other, even less common flaws, such as mousiness (the
presence of a strong, mouse-like smell), from which there is no
reasonable rescueexcept another batch of cider.

E
H
S

When acting to remedy a perceived flaw, remember that every


action you take to correct a flaw can have other, unintended consequences on the cider. Sometimes the best course of action is to
learn to love your flawed cider, or pour it out and start again.

CIDERMAKING TIP

The Big Three


These three flaws, though not common in home cidermaking,
are of concerned conversation among home cidermakers.

Excess Hydrogen Sulfide


Produces: An unpleasant aroma of rotten eggs
Caused by: Sulfur compounds in the fruit at pressing, stress
on the yeast, autolyzing yeast

Corrected with: Immediate racking, addition of sulfur dioxide,


and storage at a cool temperature if diagnosed at the start of
malolactic fermentation; with the addition of purchased acid
or the use of the cider for blending with a more acidic cider if
malolactic fermentation has already occurred.
Prevented by: Early racking, addition of sulfur dioxide immediately
after fermentation and storage at a cool temperature or the addition
of sulfur dioxide before racking while the cider is on the lees

Occurs: At any point before racking


Diagnosed by: Smell, during fermentation or at racking

Acetic Fermentation

Corrected with: yeast nutrients during fermentation, splashy


racking, copper pennies

Produces: Apple cider vinegar

Prevented by: Healthy yeast environment, less time on the lees

Occurs: During or after alcoholic fermentation

Unintended Malolactic Fermentation

Caused by: Acetobacter bacteria


Diagnosed by: Smell, during the alcoholic fermentation, or taste,
during racking or maturing
Corrected with: Acetic fermentation cannot be corrected, but
you can make delicious apple cider vinegar

Produces: Cider without noticeable acid


Caused by: Lactobacillus and other bacteria
Occurs: During or after alcoholic fermentation

Prevented by: Clean equipment, efforts to prevent juice and


cider from exposure to oxygen, storage at a cool temperature

Diagnosed by: Sight, after the completion of alcoholic


fermentation, or smell and taste, during racking or maturing

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ExCESS
HyDROgEn
SuLfIDE (H2S)

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Hydrogen sulfide is a compound that


gives cider the unpleasant aroma of
rotten eggs.
There are three main culprits in the
production of excess hydrogen
sulfide. Sulfur compounds may have
been present on the apples and
transferred to the juice at pressing.
(Some common fungicides used in
orchards, even when applied following
best practices, can leave a residue of
sulfur compounds.) The yeast may
have struggled to get the necessary
sugar and additional nutrients it
needed during fermentation or have
been otherwise stressed, which can
cause the production of excess
hydrogen sulfide and other off-gases.
Or excess hydrogen sulfide may have
been produced by autolyzing (decomposing) yeast while the cider sat on
the lees awaiting racking.

Diagnosing
The presence of excess hydrogen
sulfide gas can be diagnosed during
fermentation or at racking. It is
diagnosed by nose. Excess hydrogen
sulfide produces a strong smell that
is often compared to rotten eggs.
Hydrogen sulfide is a normal byproduct of yeast metabolism and will
always be produced in a small amount
during fermentation. Very low levels of
hydrogen sulfide can contribute to the
ciders pleasing complexity. However,
if the levels are excessive the cider
will just smell plain bad.

Smell the fermenting cider during fermentation to diagnose some potential flaws.

The causes of excess hydrogen


sulfide production during fermentation are not completely understood,
but many factors contribute including
low levels of nutrients for the yeast,
the use of sulfur in the orchard, and
high levels of suspended solids in the
juice. If present in strong concentration, it can develop into compounds
that smell of cabbage or garlic or
even compost and sewage. The
human nose is extremely sensitive to
all these compounds. However, the
human brain is easily fooled by
expectation and fear. If you expect to
smell these aromas near the airlock or
in the tasting glass, you may convince
yourself that you do. Asking another
person to smell and describe the
aromas coming from the airlock or
the tasting glass, without offering your
own descriptions, is one way to
double-check your impressions.

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Correcting
If you confidently diagnose the
presence of excess hydrogen sulfide
during fermentation, its time to feed
the yeast. yeast nutrients are available
from winemaking and home brewing
suppliers. follow the directions in
chapter 5 to feed the yeast.
If excess hydrogen sulfide is present
at the time of racking, there are two
potential remedies that make sense
for the small-batch home cidermaker.
These remedies are more effective if
the scent is on the rotten egg end of
the spectrum than they are if the
scent is on the far more concentrated
compost end. The first takes place
during racking.
In the typical racking process, every
precaution is taken to limit the
amount of air the cider is exposed to
when it is siphoned from one carboy
to another. The opposite is true if
excess hydrogen sulfide is present.
Instead of lowering the plastic tubing
to the bottom of the receiving carboy,
you will position the plastic tubing
near the neck for a splashy racking.
A splashy racking, as the name
implies, splashes the cider into the
receiving carboy, which can blow off
the hydrogen sulfide.
Splashy racking is often effective in
reducing hydrogen sulfide. youll smell
the difference immediately near the
neck of the carboy or in the tasting
glass. But splashy racking also

introduces oxygen into the cider,


which can change the ciders flavors
or exacerbate other flaws that are
present, and it can blow off other,
desirable aromas. If you do a splashy
racking, its doubly important to add
sulfur dioxide, in the form of Campden tablets, at this stage. (See chapter
5.) Sulfur dioxide will help prevent
excessive oxidation of the cider.
The second potential remedy is
employed after racking. It can be used
in conjunction with a splashy racking,
but if the splashy racking was ineffective, your cider may be beyond
remedy. for this hydrogen sulfide
solution, you will need clean pennies
made before 1982. Before 1982, the
penny was made of pure copper.
Copper reacts with the hydrogen
sulfide and eliminates it.
Experiment first in your tasting glass.
Sniff the cider. If you smell rotten eggs,
drop a penny into the cider. Swirl the
glass and then blow to remove any
lingering aromas. Sniff the cider again.
If a small amount of hydrogen sulfide
was present, it should be gone. you
can take this same approach with
your carboy, adding a small handful of
clean, copper pennies to remove the
hydrogen sulfide.
In a commercial cidery with hundreds
of gallonsand thousands of dollars
at stake, there are more extreme
measures available, such as the
addition of copper sulfate and

ascorbic acid, but for the home


cidermaker, dealing with just a few
gallons, these treatments are overly
elaborate.

Preventing
for home cidermakers who are not
growing and pressing their own
apples, it can be impossible to control
the presence of sulfur compounds in
the juice at the start of the fermentation process. The cidermaker can,
however, work to provide a hospitable
environment for the yeast, preventing
the stress that can produce excess
hydrogen sulfide by following the
advice in chapter 4 and chapter 5,
including choosing a strong yeast,
adding the recommended amount of
sulfur dioxide before fermentation,
proofing the yeast properly before
pitching it, and feeding the yeast as
the fermentation settles down.
At the end of fermentation, hydrogen
sulfide production by autolyzing yeast
can be prevented by limiting the
amount of time that the cider sits on
the lees. This is a balancing act,
because time on the lees can also
improve the clarity and complexity of
a cider. However, if a cider smells of
rotten eggs at the end of the fermentation process, or a cider that did not
have an aroma of rotten eggs at the
end of the fermentation process
begins to acquire one as it sits on the
lees, it should be racked immediately.

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e
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unInTEnDED MALOLACTIC fERMEnTATIOn


During malolactic fermentation, malic
acid is transformed into lactic acid.
Because malic acid is a strong, sharp,
bright acid and lactic acid is a weaker,
broad and duller acid, the result of
malolactic fermentation is a bigger,
richer, fatter sensation in the mouth.
In some winesfor example, many
new World chardonnaysmalolactic
fermentation is an intended process.
grapes contain several different types
of acid, so the malolactic fermentation
creates a full mouthfeel by converting
the malic acid without eliminating the
dominant tartaric acid and the other
acids that give the wine its balancing
acidity.
Apples, however, contain primarily
malic acid, so malolactic fermentation
in cider production most often
produces a dull, unbalanced cider.
unintended malolactic fermentation
is caused by lactobacilli, bacteria that
are also used in the production of
cheese, pickles, and other foods.
Some winemakers inoculate their
wines with bacteria that causes
malolactic fermentation. Most cidermakers work hard to avoid it.

Diagnosing
The odds that your cider room has
been infected with a lactobacillus are
low, but if the bacteria are present,

malolactic fermentation can occur


during or after the alcoholic fermentation. It can be diagnosed at the end of
the alcoholic fermentation or during
racking.

process will retard or stop the malolactic fermentation process. Store the
racked cider below 60f (16C) to
further reduce the chances of
continued malolactic fermentation.

If, after the alcoholic fermentation has


completely stopped, the cider begins
to bubble again, it is most likely
undergoing malolactic fermentation,
which can progress very quickly.

If malolactic fermentation has already


occurred when you diagnose it, there
are several options.

At racking or during subsequent


tastings if you allow the cider to
mature, you can detect malolactic
fermentation by mouth. Has the cider
lost palpable acidity? In your tasting
notes, did you describe the cider as
having a big, full mouthfeel, and
stewed or very ripe fruits and earthy
flavors? These are indications of a
malolactic fermentation. During
malolactic fermentation, you will also
see a rapid rise in the pH level as the
acid is converted.

Correcting
Many common strains of lactobacillus
are sensitive to sulfur dioxide and
temperature fluctuations.
If you diagnose malolactic fermentation in progress by sight (through
rising bubbles) as the finished cider
sits on its lees awaiting racking, rack
the cider immediately. The addition of
sulfur dioxide during the racking

Some cidermakers choose to add


malic acid to replace the bright acidity
which is lost during malolactic fermentation. Other acids, such as tartaric or
citric or an acid blend, can also be
added to cider that has undergone
malolactic fermentation. These acids
are typically available from a winemaking or home brewing supplier. unfortunately, these purchased acids can
impart an intense, artificial-tasting
sharpness, similar to that found in tart
candies. If you choose to use additional
acid, follow the package instructions,
starting with the smallest dose.
Other cidermakers will keep the
finished cider for blending with
another batch. (See chapter 7.) The full
mouthfeel of the cider that underwent
malolactic fermentation could be the
perfect balance for a sharper, thinner
cider produced in another carboy.
Most cidermakers, though, will just
enjoy their cider. Cider that has
undergone malolactic fermentation is
not, perhaps, what you were hoping

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to make, but the flavors that develop


are far different from those of batches
not exposed to lactobacillus. The
bright, tropical, and citrus descriptions
that usually fill your tasting notes will
likely be replaced with stewed fruits
and woody flavors.

Preventing
If youve never had a batch of cider
undergo malolactic fermentation
and you have no reason to believe
that your cider room hosts lactobacillus, there is no reason to take
preventive measures. unintended
malolactic fermentation is rare in
home cidermaking.

Add sulfur dioxide at racking to help prevent


some potential flaws.

If, however, you have been in the


minority of home cidermakers who
have been victim of unintended
malolactic fermentation, you can
reduce the chances of a reoccurrence

by following many of the same steps


that you would take to halt a malolactic fermentation you diagnosed before
racking.
Racking soon after the end of the
alcoholic fermentation, adding sulfur
dioxide as recommended during the
typical racking process, and storing
the racked cider below 60f (16C)
will help to prevent malolactic
fermentation. If you wish to leave the
cider on the lees for a longer period
of time before racking to allow the
cider to drop bright and develop
additional flavors, you can reduce the
chances of malolactic fermentation
by adding sulfur dioxide at this point,
instead of waiting for the racking
process. follow the instructions on
the package of the Campden tablets
to prepare and add 30 to 35 parts
per million of sulfur dioxide.

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ACETIC fERMEnTATIOn

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Acetic fermentation is the process


through which alcohol is converted
into acetic acid, the distinctive
component in vinegar. Acetic fermentation occurs when a strain of acetobacter bacteria is present and the
cider is exposed to oxygen and
moderate temperatures.

Diagnosing
Acetic fermentation can occur during
or after alcoholic fermentation. It can
be recognized by smell during the
alcoholic fermentation or by taste
during or after racking. Cidermakers
often recognize the presence of
acetic acid by the catching sensation the sourness of vinegar causes
at the back of the throat as you
swallow the cider.

Correcting
If acetic fermentation has occurred
or is underway, there is no way to
reverse the process. you are now
making apple cider vinegar.
you can encourage the acetic
fermentation by exposing the cider to
more oxygen. unlike the cidermaking
process, the vinegar making process
thrives on oxygen. Transfer the liquid
to an open container and stir once a
day to promote acetic fermentation.
Temperature also affects acetic
fermentation. Store the liquid between
60f to 80f (16C to 27C ).

The acetic fermentation process will


take three to four weeks. Taste the
developing vinegar until it reaches the
desire strength. During the vinegar
making process, a vinegar mother
may form. This jellylike substance or
film is a collection of cellulose and
acetobacter. It is harmless and can be
strained out to halt acetic fermentation. It can also be reserved to
inoculate future batches of vinegar.

Preventing
Acetic fermentation requires the
presence of acetobacter and oxygen
and a moderate temperature.
To prevent acetic fermentation in
future batches, be sure you clean all
the necessary equipment before
starting alcoholic fermentation to
prevent the introduction of acetobacter. Each step you take to avoid
exposing the juice or cider to oxygen
also reduces the chances of acetic
fermentation. Adding sulfur dioxide to
the juice, using an airlock, racking
carefully, and topping off the racked
carboy are all steps in the cidermaking process that also prevent acetic
fermentation. Storing your cider at
below 60f (16C) is also a smart
preventive measure.

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OTHER
POTEnTIAL
fLAWS

Some far less common flaws include


the following:

Mousiness
A little-understood flaw, mousiness is
easily detected in tasting. It is most
frequently described as the aroma of
mouse droppings, although some
people perceive it as bread-like. It is
thought to be caused by slow-developing strains of lactobacillus or
brettanomyces bacteria. The defect
typically arises during storage. It cant
be corrected.

Discoloration
Exposure to oxygen is the most
common culprit when your cider
changes color. Oxygen will give most
cider a brown tone, much like an
apple bitten and exposed to air. To
avoid this, take all precautions to limit
exposure to oxygen.
Exposure to metal during the pressing
process, far rarer, can also cause a
change in cider color. If the juice was
exposed to iron or copper, the cider
can take on a black or green hue. This
discoloration is most likely to occur
when cider is exposed to air after
bottling. you can use citric acid to test
if metal is the cause. Divide the bottle

into two glasses and add a pinch of


citric acid to one. If the glass with citric
acid changes color significantly more
slowly, metal exposure is likely the
cause. Although there are techniques
used at the commercial scale to
remediate the cider, for the home
brewer there is little recourse.

I
L

Haze
A cider that hasnt dropped bright
before racking and bottling is said to
have a haze. This haze or sediment
can be caused by microbes, pectin or,
very rarely, a high level of tannins. If
the cider tastes good, this is not
usually a problem for home cidermakers. Bottle the cider while hazy or
simply give the cider more time to
drop bright.
Microbial haze can usually be avoided
by good sanitation practices. Pectin
haze can be prevented or partially
remedied with a pectolytic enzyme.
And tannic haze, the most rarely seen
version, can sometimes be fined from
cider using gelatin and bentonite
available at a winemaking supplier. Be
aware, however, that fining a tannin
haze can remove the appealing
structure of a cider.

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I DOnT
LOVE IT.

This is the most common flaw with a


home cidermakers first batch of cider:
your cider doesnt have any major
defects that render it undrinkable. you
just didnt make a cider that is to your
taste. Think about wine. Even wine
lovers dont love every well-made
wine they encounter. Each wine
drinker has a preference for particular
grapes or growing regions. Its similar
with apples.
Dont worry if your first batch of cider
isnt your ideal cider. It takes a lot of
practice, a lot of trial and error, and a
little luck to accomplish that.

r,

kHopefully, you like the cider well


enough to be proud of your efforts
and to enjoy it. At the very least, you
need to taste it, following the objective
process outlined in chapter 2. What
do you smell? What do you taste?
How would you describe the mouthfeel? How would you describe the
finish?

n
m

now think about the cider subjectively. Which of those aromas, flavors,
and sensations do you like? Which
ones dont you like? Compare the
tasting notes from your first batch of
cider with your tasting notes for some

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ciders that you love. What do you feel


is missing from your cider?
for the purposes of this exercise, your
observations about acidity, bitterness,
and astringency will be the most
helpful. These three components can
greatly affect how you feel about your
first batch of cider. And they are the
most easily manipulated in your next
batch of cider through the apples you
start with. Are you lacking the acidity
that brings the cider to life in your
mouth? Look for juice with more
sharp apples for your next batch. Are
you lacking the bitterness that
balances acidity or the astringency
that provides a solid structure for your
cider? Look for juice with some
bittersweet apples for your next batch.
The more nuanced flavor profile of a
cider is more difficult to tailor. It takes
time and tasting to learn which mix of
apples (and even what growing
environment in the orchard) will create
the aromas of leather or stone fruit or
moss you most prefer. Talk to experienced cidermakers and apple growers
in your region for more guidance or,
once you have more experience,
experiment with post-fermentation
blending. (See chapter 7.)

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NOTES FROM THE CIDERY, STEvE WOOD

Dont Fear the Stink


At the cidery, we reckon our job is to let the apples make

that would be very unpleasant if they had a lot of it, but

the cider, and try not to ruin it by our work. We try to keep

thats delightful in the little bit. Think of the agricultural

our hands off the cider as much as we can, until its ready to

countryside. The pleasant, reassuring aroma you smell is

drink. That doesnt mean that we dont pay attention to the

probably farmyard manure. Very nice during a walk on the

cider while its fermenting and maturingwe pay constant

hill, pretty nasty in the manure pitits all a matter of

attentionwe just dont intervene any more than we

concentration.

absolutely need to. Once weve blended the apples, pressed


them into juice, blended again and started fermentation, we

Im not sure how to describe the line we try not to let the

try to leave things alone. We might feed the yeast a bit to

cider cross. Its something like walking down the hill toward

keep the colony happy. When the cider drops bright, well

the manure pit: Theres a moment when youve just gotten

rack it, to separate the lovely new cider from the lees. We

too close for pleasure. When we think were getting too

taste and blend a bit at racking, but then we pull our hands

close, we do something about it if we can. We also really try

away again.

to avoid malolactic fermentation, but weve blended some


delicious ciders from batches that have snuck through

If we smell something funky in the cider room, we chase it

unintended malolactic fermentation. We keep any ciders

down. nicole and I will smell our way around all of the tanks

that have gone wrong, until we need the tank or barrel

and barrels to discover the culprit. But we dont always do

again (unless we suspect theyre harboring some horrible

anything about it. We like faint funk in cider. If the cider is

microbe). Then, if we havent discovered a use for those

fermenting and starting to smell like rotten eggs, we reckon

ciders, they go down the drain. But we always learn from

the yeast is unhappy, and well feed it a little. On very rare

them, and quite often they prove useful in a blend.

occasion, we might move it off its lees to another vessel. But


we dont worry much about a little funk at the end of

Like good wine, good cider is pretty stable but constantly

fermentation.

changing. It takes a fair bit of experience to even grasp the


edge of understanding cider, and to learn how to work with

A lot of delicious food and drink has a bit of stink, along with

the apples, the yeast, the containers, and the environment

other aromas. Think of Brie, or certain black olives, or good

to produce a good one. To us, thats what makes cider cool.

Chteauneuf-du-Papethey all have a little bit of something

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CHAPTER

Your Third Batch of


Cider and Beyond

The first lesson of cidermaking is that the apples make the cider. The
second thing you learn is that good cidermaking is all about practice:
learning to smell, taste, and see the cues that the developing cider is
providing you, and how to respond (or not respond) to those signals.
The first time you make a batch of cider, it will probably be good. The
next time you follow that same process, drawing on your observations
from the previous batches, it will probably be better and so on. So,
dont be in a rush to move on from making the basic cider outlined
in chapter 5. But when you feel accomplished at making a consistent
cider, theres a whole world of cider to explore. At other respected
cideries, cidermakers experiment with mthode champenoise,
spontaneously fermented cidre, and ice cider. Other tools available
to the cidermaker include blending cider, returning sugar, and
introducing carbonation.
The other approaches to cidermaking outlined in this chapter have
one thing in common with Farnum Hill Ciders basic approach: The
cider is an expression of the fruit. The processes are very different
and the results of each process are unique, but the cidermakers
featured here share a belief that cider starts with the apple and that
the cidermakers job is to intervene as little possible to turn the
apple into a delicious fermented drink.

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BLEnDIng

Commercial cideries often blend fermented ciders to create the finished product.

As discussed in previous chapters,


commercial cideries rarely ferment a
single apple variety in a batch, preferring to balance the ciders characteristics with the best qualities of different
apples. Some cideries bottle directly
from the tank when fermentation is
complete; others blend finished ciders.
The blending process allows the
cidermakers to adjust the aromas,
tastes and sensations of the final
product naturally. The home cidermaker who has several unbottled
batches of fully fermented cider on
hand can also experiment with
blending.
The first step is tasting the ciders
objectively, as outlined in chapter 2.
When the tasting process is complete,
consider your ideal cider. Does it have
more or less acid? More or less
bitterness? The goal of blending is to
create something close to this ideal.

now, identify the batch of cider that is


Now,
most similar to your ideal. This will be
your base; the other batches of cider
will be used to add the other characteristics you desire. Perhaps you love
the funky flavors of a cider that
accidently went through malolactic
fermentation, but wish it had an acidic
component. If you have a more acidic
batch available, you can add that.
Work in small batches. The results of
blending can be surprisingand not
always desirable. Take notes on the
amount of each cider you add as you
prepare each blend. Stir or swirl the
blend gently, and allow it to sit for a few
minutes to fully combine the liquids.
Then taste the blends. Which is your
favorite? When youve found a combination you love, use your notes to
blend a full batch with the same ratios.

T
th

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CarboNaTIoN
CARBOnATIOn

Following the process outlined in


chapter 5 produces a classic cider
fermented to dryness. but sparkling
cider is popular with many cider
drinkers. one classic way to add
bubbles to a fermented cider is
through mthode champenoise,
explained in the next section. However, this process, which involves a
second fermentation in the bottle, also
changes the cider in other ways.
a relatively simple process is used to
add an effervescence to some still
ciders without making additional
changes to the flavors, aromas, and
sensations of the cider. Carbon
dioxide (Co2) is slowly added to the
cold cider in a steel tank.

The home cidermaker can experiment


with carbonation using the following:
a five-gallon (19 L) corneliusor
corneykeg with ball fittings, readily
available from home brewing suppliers;
compatible liquid and gas lines; and a
carbon dioxide cylinder.
a cornelius keg is a steel cylinder with
a removable lid (which allows for easy
cleaning) designed to hold a liquid
under pressure. There are two
connections, one with a short tube
to the top of the keg, and one with a
longer tube to the bottom. Typically
a cornelius keg is used to store and
dispense a carbonated liquid, such as
soda or beer. The liquid is dispensed
from the bottom of the keg and an

c
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To carbonate a still cider after racking, siphon


the cider into a cornelius keg.

Trickle carbon dioxide into the cornelius keg while agitating.

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CIDERMAKING TIP

Equipment and
Ingredients for
Carbonation
5 gallons (19 L) still cider
5-gallon (19 L) Cornelius keg
with ball fittings
Compatible liquid and gas lines
Carbon dioxide cylinder

Store carbonated cider in the cornelius keg.

inert gas is added to the top of the


keg to maintain the pressure. Home
cidermakers can add carbonation by
attaching the gas line to the bottom
of the keg instead. This allows the
carbon dioxide to bubble up through
the liquid. Over time, the carbon
dioxide will be absorbed into the
liquid, providing carbonation.
To carbonate your still cider, begin
with cold liquid, which absorbs carbon
dioxide more easily. Add the cider to
the keg. Close the keg, being sure the
gasket seals, and connect the gas line
and carbon dioxide cylinder to the

fitting reaching to the bottom of the


keg. Let the carbon dioxide trickle into
the keg for about 1 minute while
agitating the keg. (If you are using a
pressure gauge, look for 4 to 10 psi.)
Continue agitating the keg for several
minutes to aid carbon dioxide
absorption, and allow it to sit for a day.
Repeat the procedure on day two and
day three. Adding the carbon dioxide
over time produces fine bubbles,
which most cidermakers prefer over
large bubbles.

approach is to evaluate the cider with


your senses. Remove the gas line and
replace it with the liquid line to sample
a small amount of the cider. Does it
have the amount of carbonation you
prefer?
To dispense the sparkling cider into
glasses, use the liquid line. If you plan
to drink the cider over time, add the
gas line to the top of the keg to
introduce carbon dioxide above the
liquid as you dispense it.

There are tools available to test the


pressure of your keg, but the best

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RETuRnIng
SugAR

Sugar can be reintroduced to a


completely fermented, dry cider as is
common in champagne production.
Some cidermakers will choose to add
unfermented apple juice to the
completed cider, but the juice dramatically changes the flavor profile of the
cider. Instead, at Poverty Lane
Orchards, the cidermakers use small
amounts of white sugar, as needed, to
adjust a cider. The sugar has a more
subtle effect than apple juice.
White sugar can be used to make a
sweet cider or, as it is most often used
at Poverty Lane Orchards, to bring out
desirable fruit flavors that are muted
in the dry cider.
There are also dangers associated
with reintroducing sugar. The additional sugar can serve as food for any
remaining yeast or other microbes.
for this reason, only add sugar to fully
dry ciders, store them at a low
temperature, and use a cornelius keg
instead of glass bottles. A cornelius
keg is designed to withstand pressure
that microbes can produce.

To return sugar to your cider, rack the


cider into a cornelius keg. you can
draw off some cider, as in blending, to
experiment with, but the amounts of
sugar you will add are so small as to
make such small-scale experimentation difficult.
The amount of sugar to add is a
matter of taste. About 10 grams of
sugar per liter of liquid is returned to
most brut champagnes. (The addition
of sugar in Champagne production is
called dosage.) for the sweeter
extra-dry Champagne, winemakers
return up to 20 grams of sugar per
liter. A noticeably sweet commercial
cider may have as much as 40 grams
of sugar per liter. At Poverty Lane
Orchards, three to five grams of sugar
are added per liter to produce its
off-dry ciders.
Add the sugar, seal the cornelius keg,
and store your cider at a cool
temperature.

CIDERMAKING TIP

Equipment and Ingredients for Returning Sugar


5 gallons (19 L) still cider

Compatible liquid and gas lines

White sugar

5-gallon (19 L) cornelius keg with ball fittings

Carbon dioxide cylinder

Scale

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Mthode
ChaMpenoise

Mthode champenoise cider, so named


for its use in Champagne production,
uses a second, in-bottle fermentation to
produce sparkling cider with delicate,
persistent bubbles. The mouthfeel of a
sparkling cider produced through this
process will be different from one
produced through carbonation. This is
a low-tech way of creating bubbles,
but disgorgement, one step in the
process, does take some practice.
Here, Autumn Stoscheck and Ezra
Sherman of Eves Cidery in the finger
Lakes region of new york share their
well-practiced process for making
mthode champenoise cider.
The process begins with the production of a fully dry still cider. A home
cidermaker fermenting cider for this

process should follow the steps in


chapter 5, ensuring that the cider
ferments completely, with one
noticeable exception: In mthode
champenoise production, you add less
sulfur dioxide, in the form of Campden
tablets, at racking. Because sulfur
dioxide acts as an antimicrobial as well
as an antioxidant, too much sulfur
dioxide will create an inhospitable
environment for the second fermentation. Instead of the 30 to 35 parts per
million of sulfur dioxide called for in
the still cidermaking process, add 15
to 20 parts per million. Then rack as
described. With less sulfur dioxide
present, the cider is more susceptible
to malolactic fermentation. To reduce
the chances of this, store the cider at
cool temperatures after racking.

CIDERMAKING TIP

Equipment and Ingredients


for Mthode Champenoise
5 gallons (19 L) fermented cider,
with reduced sulfur dioxide

Crate

Cane sugar

Bottle opener

Plastic tubing

Safety goggles and gloves

Sparkling wine or Champagne yeast

Dry cider, as needed

Sparkling wine bottles

Notebook

B
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C
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fe
p
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c

B
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o
s
s
o
w
O
b
b
m
s
C
g
c
w
th
s
re

Four 2' 4' (0.6 1.2 m) pieces of wood

Crown caps and capper

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s
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ll

Bottling
Before bottling, however, the cider
should be warmed to 50F
50f (10C).
Collect the necessary equipment and
ingredients for beginning secondary
fermentation and bottling the cider:
plastic tubing for siphoning, cane
sugar, sparkling wine yeast, sparkling
wine bottles, and crown caps and a
capper.

a-

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Begin by calculating the amount of


yeast and sugar to add to the carboy
of cider. Most sparkling cider has less
sparkle than sparkling wines. Different
sugar levels produce different levels
of pressure, which is why starting
with a fully dry cider is essential.
Otherwise, the sugar calculations will
be incorrect and the pressure could
be dangerously high. Champagne
makers often add about 12 grams of
sugar per 750-milliliter bottle. At Eves
Cidery, cidermakers add 9.75 to 10.5
grams per bottle. Home cidermakers
can choose their preferred style
within an 8 to 12 gram range. For
for
those without a gram scale, 2 teaspoons of cane sugar per bottle is
recommended. (This will be about

8 to 10 grams of sugar, producing a


safe amount of pressure.) Be very
precise with your measurements to
avoid over pressurizing.
Once you have measured the proper
amount of sugar, use the plastic
tubing to siphon off a small amount of
cider. Dissolve the sugar in this cider
and return the sugar-cider mixture to
the carboy.
The sugar is food for the yeast, which
is added next. Choose a neutral
sparkling wine or Champagne yeast,
which can withstand the pressure and
higher alcohol levels of an in-bottle
fermentation. Follow the directions on
the package to measure and hydrate
the yeast before adding it to the
carboy.
Bottle immediately into bottles
designed for sparkling wine. (Do not
use thinner glass, such as the glass
used for beer bottles, which is likely to
shatter from the pressure produced
during fermentation.) Add a crown
cap to each bottle.

After you begin the secondary


fermentation, always wear gloves and
safety goggles when handling the
bottles, to prevent injury from shattered glass.
You should store the bottles in a cool
place through the secondary fermentation, which will take a least a month.
At 50F (10C), the fermentation
progresses slowly, which is desirable.
A slower fermentation produces finer
bubbles. A warmer, faster fermentation will produce coarser bubbles.

Riddling
Through the fermentation process,
you will riddle the bottles, turning
them and reorienting them to slowly
collect the dying yeast in the neck of
the bottle. The bottles will begin the
process horizontally and slowly move
to a vertical position. This can be
easily accomplished with a crate and
some pieces of wood. Fill the crate
with the bottles, neck down, and then
prop the crate with a pile of four 2' 4'
(0.6 1.2 cm) pieces of wood under
one side of the crate until the bottles
are almost horizontal. Each week, give

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CIDERMAKING TIP

Timeline for Mthode Champenoise


In Advance

About Day 2 to Week 5

Ferment a 5-gallon (19 L) carboy of cider, following the


process in chapter 5

Each week, riddle the bottles.

Purchase the necessary equipment and ingredients.

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About Week 5
Taste the cider.

Day 1

If the in-bottle fermentation is completed, disgorge the bottles.

Rack the cider, adding sulfur dioxide.

Recap the bottles.

Calculate and add the appropriate amounts of sugar and yeast.


Bottle in sparkling wine bottles with crown caps.
Place in a cool place on a crate for riddling.

In
p
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each bottle a one-quarter turn and a
light tap to dislodge some of the yeast
that has collected around the shoulders of the bottle and remove one of
the pieces of wood until the crate and
the bottles are sitting vertically,
upside down.
Many variables affect the length of the
fermentation process. Test your cider
after about five weeks, when the
bottles are sitting vertically, by opening
a bottle and using your senses to
evaluate it. If it is bubbly and you dont
taste any noticeable sweetness, the
fermentation is complete.
At this point, you can continue with
the process, or allow the remaining
bottles of cider to mature. Cider that is

finished earlier in the process typically


has more fruit flavors and aromas;
cider that sits on its lees typically has
the creamier mouthfeel and yeasty
flavors and aromas associated with
Champagne. Cider can sit for months
or years. As with the amount of sugar
to use, this is a stylistic choice. Eves
Cidery cidermakers prefer fruitier
ciders.

upright, allowing the sentiment to


settle to the bottom, a process called
bottle conditioning that is common in
beer making. The bubbles in the cider
will make the liquid hazy, but some
cidermakers appreciate this rustic
appearance. (If bottle conditioning is
your plan, the riddling isnt necessary.
Simply store the bottle on its side until
the fermentation is complete.)

Disgorgement

If you are going to disgorge the cider,


begin by collecting the necessary
supplies: bottle opener; safety goggles
and gloves; dry cider, as needed; and
crown caps and a capper. You
you could
also use a Champagne cork and wire
hood, but that requires additional
specialized equipment. Disgorging
makes a messespecially as you are

The final step in the mthode champenoise process is disgorgement,


removing the expired yeast from the
neck of the bottle where it collected
during riddling. The step is not essential, if you desire the flavor and aromas
of lees aging. The home cidermaker
can simply store the sparkling cider

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learning the technique. Work outside


or in a garage where the surfaces
can easily be washed, and dress
accordingly.
In most Champagne production, the
necks of the bottles are frozen with dry
ice which can make the disgorgement
process easier, but the home cidermaker can simply chill the bottles as
cool as possible without freezing,
keeping the bottles upside down to
capture the yeast in the neck. The
colder the bottle, the easier the process
will be because the cider will fizz less.
In the disgorgement process, the
pressure inside the bottle expels the
yeast and a small amount of liquid

from the bottle as it is opened. At Eves


Cidery, Ezra Sherman can disgorge a
bottle with a loss of just 10 or 15
milliliters of liquid. As you are learning
the process, you may lose as much as
50 milliliters of the 750-milliliter bottle.
Any cider you lose will be replaced
with still dry cider (or another neutral
liquid, if no cider is available).
Wearing safety goggles and safety
gloves, grasp the neck of a chilled
bottle, keeping the bottle upside down.
Hold the bottle in front of you. With the
other hand, grasp the bottle opener. As
you quickly turn the bottle right side
up, you will open the bottle, allowing
the pressure to expel the yeast while
keeping most of the liquid in the bottle.

To explain this motion in more detail:


If you are right handed, hold the
bottle by the neck in your left hand
upside down in front of your body.
Hold the opener in your right hand
and position it on the cap. Now use
your left hand to smoothly and
quickly swing the neck of the bottle
away from you (the base of the bottle
will come toward your body), bringing
the bottle right side up. When the
neck is about halfway through its arc
(about vertical), pop the cap with your
right hand.
Replace any liquid you lost and then
recap the bottles. The cider is now
finished. Store it in a cool place until
you are ready to drink it.

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Cidre

yeast is naturally present all around


us. Thats why many cidermakers start
the fermentation process with a dose
of sulfur dioxide to remove naturally
occurring yeasts before introducing
the yeast of their choice to the juice.
At E.Z. Orchards in Oregons Willamette
Valley, however, Kevin Zielinski makes
cider in a traditional style from
normandy, which relies on spontaneous fermentation from naturally
occurring yeast. The result is an
aromatic cidre with soft effervescence.
french cidre is dependent on the
quality of the apples or juice used. If
you have a relationship with an apple
grower, you can ask questions about
the available fruit or juice. you are
looking for juice made from extremely
ripe apples with low levels of nitrogen
(low levels of nitrogen are often
produced by older trees that are not
over-nourished), which provides a
better environment for a controlled
fermentation. In a high-nitrogen
environment, wild yeast will ferment
rapidly, which can reduce the desirable fruity flavors and aromas, and the
home cidermaker must work to slow
the fermentation. At the least, you
must start with juice that has not
been pasteurized or otherwise

treated. These processes are designed


to kill the naturally occurring yeast
and provide an inhospitable environment for fermentation.
french cidre is commonly made with
French
french bittersweets and bittersharps,
French
producing very low-acid ciders. But
the home cidermaker without ready
access to these traditional fruits can
experiment with most moderate- and
low-acid, high-tannin apples (with a pH
of 3.7 or more). The most attractive
cidre apples are often small, gnarled
fruits from neglected trees.
Begin by measuring the specific
60f (16C)
gravity of your juice at 60F
using a hydrometer. Typically, the
initial measurement will be about
1.050. Record this measurement in a
notebook, which you will use throughout the process to collect all temperature and specific gravity readings and
any additional observations about the
process. Then fill a five-gallon (19 L)
carboy with the freshly pressed juice,
and cork it with a solid bung. Place the
carboy in a cold place and allow the
juice to settle for several days to a
week. Sediment from the juice may
collect on the bottom of the carboy. If
it collects a half inch (1.3 cm) or more,

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rack the juice into a second carboy,


discarding the sediment. (The sediment would provide additional
nutrients for the wild yeast, which
could produce an overly rapid
fermentation.) Place the remaining
half gallon (2 L) of juice in the freezer
to top off the carboy later in the
process, as needed.
After racking, juice should reach
the shoulders of the carboy, leaving
ample headspace. If it doesnt,
you can thaw and add some of the
reserved juice, as needed.

Fermentation
Once you have racked the juice, close
the carboy with an airlock and place it
in a warmer environmentbetween
55F
55f to 60F
60f (13C to 16C)to begin
fermenting. In about five to seven
days, you will see evidence of fermentation, with small bubbles forming in
the liquid, especially around the
shoulders of the carboy. Over the next
two to four days, the fermentation will
pick up speed, creating a cap of brown
bubbles on top of the juice. When the
fermentation is moving quickly, the
airlock will bubble every three to four
seconds. (If you dont see any fermentation after two weeks, there is likely

not enough yeast present for spontaneous fermentation. Consider using


the juice to produce a different type of
cider that calls for a yeast inoculation,
as in chapter 5.)
Now that fermentation is underway,
place the carboy in a colder environment38F to 42F (3C to 6C) to
relax the fermentation. Fermentation
will slow significantly, with the airlock
bubbling about every thirty seconds.
This is desirable, as it increases the
fruity characteristics of the finished
cider. You will also control the fermentation through repeated racking to
remove the sediment or nutrients and
expired yeast as it collects on the
bottom of the carboy.
After a week of fermentation in this
cold environment, test the specific
gravity of the juice. When testing the
specific gravity, its important to bring
the small amount of juice to be tested
up to 60F (16C) so that the results of
each test are comparable. If the
specific gravity has fallen to about
1.040, it is time to rack the juice. You
can add additional juice, if desired, at
this point to reach the shoulders of the
carboy. Replace the airlock and return
the carboy to the cold environment.

After another week to ten days, test


the specific gravity again. At about
1.025, rack the cider again. Do not add
additional juice. Replace the airlock
and move the carboy to a 50F to
55F (10C to 13C) environment, to
finish the fermentation. At this point,
the fermentation process will be
moving very slowly, with perhaps
minutes between each bubble of the
airlock.
Wait ten days to two weeks before
testing the specific gravity again. If
you have a slow fermentation with a
reading of 1.008, you can consider
bottling this as a semisweet cider, in
which all the fermentable sugar has
not been consumed. If the specific
gravity is higher, however, bottling is
dangerous, as the cider will continue
to ferment in the bottle. Too much
in-bottle fermentation could create
enough pressure to shatter the bottle.
(For this reason, do not add unfermented juice to the cidre at this point
in the process.) Test again periodically
until the specific gravity measurement
reaches 1.006 to bottle a dry cider.
The fermentation will not be complete, as the cidre process is designed
for continued fermentation in the
bottle.

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CIDERMAKING TIP

Equipment and Ingredients for Cidre


5 gallons (21 L) of the best apple juice
you can find

Two 5-gallon (19 L) glass carboys

Bored carboy bung

Solid carboy bung

Airlock

Thermometer

Refrigerator

Sparkling wine bottles

Hydrometer, measuring specific gravity

Plastic tubing, for racking

Crown caps and capper

100-milliliter graduated cylinder

Bottling
Bottle your cidre into a bottles designed for sparkling wine, taking care
not to draw the lees into the bottles as
you siphon the liquid from the carboy.
Add a crown cap to each bottle.
Sanitation, important in all types of
cidermaking, is of particular importance when bottling cidre, which is
more susceptible to contamination
because it does not contain sulfur
dioxide. Cidre is also susceptible to
malolactic fermentation in the bottle,
which some cidermakers desire in
cidre and others dislike. (Without
adding sulfur dioxide, which could halt
in-bottle fermentation, sanitation and
cooler temperatures are the only
preventive measures available.)

Place your bottles upright in a 50f to


55f (10C to 13C) environment, out of
direct sunlight. Lees will continue to
collect at the bottom of the bottle as
fermentation continues, producing
bubbles in the cidre. After two to three
weeks, open a bottle to evaluate the
level of carbonation. If there is already a
high level of carbonationthe bottle will
open with a strong pop and youll see
aggressively streaming bubbles after
pouring a glassreturn the cidre to the
carboy to ferment to dryness before
rebottling, taking care to limit the ciders
exposure to oxygen. If carbonation is
present but not overwhelminga slight
hiss when you open the bottle, bubbles
collecting at the edge of the liquidit is
progressing as planned. Test again in a

month. The goal now is to have


subdued yeast, which continues to
change the cidre in positive ways.
The process from the start of fermentation to bottling can be two to four
months. for
For many cidermakers,
longer is the goal. The slower fermentation often produces more nuanced
flavors and aromas and, in the bottle,
finer, more integrated bubbles. The
slower the fermentation, the easier it
is to bottle a semi-sweet cider as well.
In the bottle, the fermentation process
can also take up to four months
(the yeast may remain viable for as
long as eighteen months). Typically,
the slower the initial fermentation, the
slower the in-bottle fermentation.

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CIDERMAKING TIP

Timeline for Cidre


In Advance

About Week 5 to 6

Purchase the necessary equipment and ingredients.

Test the specific gravity again. If it reads about 1.024,


rack the carboy.
Place the carboy in a warmer environment 50F to 55F
(10C to 13C) to finish fermentation.

Day 1
Purchase the best apple juice you can. Measure the
specific gravity.
Transfer juice to a carboy and place it in the refrigerator.

About Week 8
Test the specific gravity again. When it reads 1.006 to 1.008,
consider bottling.

About Week 1
Rack the juice into a second carboy.
Place the carboy with an airlock in a warm place 55F to 60F
(13C to 16C) to begin fermentation.

Store bottled cidre at 50F to 55F (10C to 13C) out of direct


sunlight for in-bottle fermentation.

About Week 10 to 11
Open a bottle to evaluate carbonation.

About Week 2 to Week 3


Watch for initial signs of fermentation, then signs of rapid
fermentation.
Move the carboy to a colder place 38F to 42F (3C to 6C) to
relax the fermentation.

About Week 14 to 15
Open a bottle to evaluate carbonation.

After Week 15
About Week 4

Drink the cidre or allow it to continue to mature.

Test the specific gravity. If it reads about 1.040, rack the carboy.
Return the carboy to a cold environment 38F to 42F (3C to 6C).

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ICE CIDER

Ice cider is apple dessert wine, a


full-bodied after-dinner drink with a
balance of the sweetness and acidity
of apples. Ice cider, which originated
in the cold climate of Southern
Quebec, is also known by the french
as cidre de glace. unlike many
fermented apple products, ice cider
tastes primarily of apples.
At Eden Orchards in West Charleston,
Vermont, Eleanor and Albert Leger
make delicious Eden Vermont Ice
Cider from apples as varied as Empire,
McIntosh, Roxbury Russett, and
Esopus Spitzenburg. The apples are
harvested at the peak of ripeness and
kept in cold storage until the temperatures plummet, and then the apples
are pressed.
Ice cider is made in the traditional
way, picking fully ripe apples, pressing
them, and using the freezing temperatures of the cold winter to concentrate
the liquid. Over six to eight weeks,
the natural fluctuations in outdoor
temperatures separate the water from
the concentrating apple sugars. The
concentrate is then fermented in a
process similar to the cidermaking
process (as outlined in chapter 5).
However, the fermentation process is
halted before the cider ferments to
dryness, resulting in a sweet-tart ice
cider with at least 13 percent residual
sugar and 9 to 12 percent alcohol
by volume.
Ice cider is typically bottled in 375milliliter glass bottles; at Eden Orchards,

about eight pounds (3.6 kg) of apples


go into each bottle.
The home cidermaker can replicate
the Eden Vermont Ice Cider process.
If you live in a cold climate, where
10f
temperatures regularly drop to 10F
(12C) at night, you can make the
cider outside. If not, a commercial
freezer will serve the same function.
Ice cider production does take more
space than other apple fermentations.
The process of concentrating the juice
can reduce its volume by about 75
percent. Starting with eighteen gallons
(68 L) of juice in four five-gallon (19 L)
carboys will give you between 4 and
4.5 gallons of ice cider, or 40-to-45
375-milliliter bottles. you
You can make ice
cider in smaller quantities, but the
need for frequent testing of the
specific gravity during the cidermaking process will use some cider. Its a
long process for the eight or ten
bottles you would produce starting
with a mere 4.5 gallons (17 L) of
unconcentrated juice.
The best ice cider is made from a
balanced blend of apples. There are few
apples that have both the sweetness
and the acidity needed to produce a
tempting ice cider. (Eden Orchards
does make a single-variety Honeycrisp
ice cider.) Ice cider does not depend on
hard-to-find bittersweet apples common in hard cider production. A blend
at Eden Orchards may have less than
5 percent bittersweets. The balance is
made up of baking apples for acidity,

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dessert apples for sweetness, and


heirloom apples for aromatics and
complexity. The juice is delicious. (As
with any cider production, choose a
juice without additives.)
Start by tasting your juice to help you
decide what the final specific gravity of
your ice cider will be. Specific gravity is
correlated with alcohol content, and a
finished ice cider typically has 9 to 12
percent alcohol by volume. (See chart
on page 85.) Eden Vermont Ice Ciders
are typically between 10 and 11 percent
alcohol by volume; its a stylistic choice
that the cidermakers reach by tasting
the original juice. Taste your juice. If it
is very sweet, it may make a better 11
or 12 percent alcohol ice cider. If it has
some tartness to it, it may make a
better 9 or 10 percent alcohol ice cider.

Concentrating the Juice


To begin, fill each of the 5-gallon
(19 L) plastic carboys with 4 gallons
(17 L) of juice. Plastic carboys wont
shatter as the ice expands and are
lighter and easier to work with. Seal
each carboy with a solid bung and
place the carboys in a very cold
environment. If the temperature in
your area is regularly dropping to 10F
10f
to 15F
15f (12C to 9C) at night and
isnt rising above 32f
32F (0C) during the
day, you can place the carboys
outside. If the weather isnt cooperating with your cidermaking, use a
commercial freezer. Commercial
freezers typically maintain a temperature of about 4f
4F (16C).

If your juice is outside, the natural


fluctuations will freeze and thaw the
juice, concentrating it. Store the cider
outside for fifteen to eighteen days,
depending on weather. If the cider is
in a freezer, you will take the juice out
of the freezer periodically to achieve
this same result. Freeze the juice for
five days; then remove it for one day.
Return the juice to the freezer for
another five days; then remove it for
another day. Return the juice to the
freezer again for another five days.
As the cider freezes and thaws, water
will separate, concentrating the
apples sugars in a syrupy liquid. The
water will begin to rise to the top of
the carboy, forming a whiter layer of
ice; the concentrate, a brownish liquid,
will drop to the bottom. This separation will be obvious, but not distinct;
dont expect a clean line between the
ice and the concentrate.

Separating the Concentrate


After fifteen to eighteen days, its time
to separate the concentrate from the
ice. You will build a makeshift stand
with a 5-gallon (19 L) bucket and
some pieces of wood to create a
stand that will hold the plastic carboy
upside down over the bucket.
Remove one of the carboys from
the freezer and place in the stand.
It can take several hours for the
concentrate to drop from the ice, so
you want to keep the environment
you are working in relatively cold.
If the ice begins to melt, diluting the
concentrate, you can return the

carboy to the freezer until the water


has solidified again.
Achieving the proper concentrations
of sugar is essential in ice cidermaking. The concentrate should have a
specific gravity of 1.155 to 1.165 at this
point in the process. Use a thermometer, hydrometer, and a graduated
cylinder to measure the temperature
of the concentrate and, following the
package instructions for the hydrometer, test and record the specific
gravity. If it is not in the proper range,
return the concentrate to the carboy
and continue the freezing and
thawing process.
If the specific gravity is between 1.155
and 1.165, repeat the separation process
with the remaining carboys. You
should have between 4 and 4.5
gallons (15 to 17 L) of concentrate in
the bucket. Pour the concentrate into
a 5-gallon (19 L) glass carboy for
fermentation.

Fermentation
The first step is to warm up the
ice-cold concentrate. Its probably
about 25F (4C) following separation.
Place the carboy in a warm place to
bring the temperature up to 55F
to 57F (13C to 14C). You dont have
to worry about warming the liquid
quickly, but you dont want to leave it
sitting around too long once youve
reached the proper temperature.
Following the package instructions,
hydrate the yeast in a container of

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CIDERMAKING TIP

Equipment and Ingredients for Ice Cider


18 gallons (68 L) of the best apple juice
you can find

Pieces of wood, as needed

Airlock

Thermometer

Refrigerator

Four 5-gallon (19 L) plastic carboys

Hydrometer, measuring specific gravity

Plastic tubing

4 solid bungs

100-milliliter graduated cylinder

Home brewing filtration system

Commercial freezer, as needed

Wine thief

Bottles and seals, for bottling

One 5-gallon (19 L) plastic pail

Campden tablets

One 5-gallon (19 L) glass carboy

Lalvin BA11 or another basic


saccharomyces cerevisiae wine yeast

warm water, stirring to combine, and


let the mixture stand for twenty
minutes to proof. The yeast will be
frothing. Then feed the yeast with a
small amount of concentrate and
allow it to continue to froth for about
10 more minutes. This step makes the
yeast stronger and cools the temperature of the yeast mixture. The yeast
mixture needs to be within 7 degrees
of the concentrate mixture. Add
concentrate slowly every 10 minutes
until the yeast mixture is in range. This
step is known as atemperating. Then
pour the yeast mixture into the carboy,
making sure you get all the yeast into
the carboy.
Store the carboy at 57f to 60f (14C
to 16C) during the fermentation. The
process of fermentation will look
similar to that described in chapter 5.
Add a bung and airlock.
In ice cidermaking, it is important to
test the specific gravity every couple

of days. using the wine thief, thermometer, hydrometer, and graduated


cylinder, measure and record the
specific gravity. In the beginning of
the process, the specific gravity may
drop as much as .006 points per day.
Quickly, however, it will slow to a drop
of .002 points per day. This is ideal for
ice cider fermentation.
If the specific gravity is dropping too
quickly, place the carboy in a cold-water
bath to slow the fermentation process.
If it is dropping too slowly, as can
happen near the end of the process,
you can speed up the fermentation
by placing in the carboy in a place
that is 60f to 65f (16C to 18C).
The process of fermenting ice cider
takes an average of 6 weeks, but
numerous variables, including temperature, can affect the actual length
of fermentation in your carboy. As you
near your target specific gravity reading,
test the concentrate every day. As

A
e

soon as you reach the chosen specific


gravity, its time to halt fermentation.

Halting Fermentation
Ice cider is not fermented to dryness.
That means you still have yeast and
nutrition for the yeast in your carboy
when you have reached the desired
specific gravity. For
for the home
cidermaker, the easiest way to halt
fermentation is to add sulfur dioxide
and shock the yeast with cold
temperature. Fully
fully stopping the
fermentation is essential to the ice
cidermaking process.
Follow the instructions on the package
follow
of the Campden tablets to prepare
80 to 100 parts per million of sulfur
dioxide and add it to the carboy. Store
the carboy in a place with a consistent
temperature of 30F
30f to 45F
45f (1C to
6C). A refrigerator typically works
best. Allow the carboy to sit undisturbed for four days. Dying yeast will
settle on the bottom of the container.

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After four days carefully rack the ice


cider into a clean carboy, leaving the
yeast behind. Return the racked ice
cider to the refrigerator. After one
week, rack the cider again, discarding
the yeast, and return it to the refrigerator for a month. After a month,
rack the cider for third and final time.
The goal is to remove all the yeast
from the ice cider.
A home brewing filtration system will
ensure that you have accomplished

this. After the final racking, run the ice


cider through the coarse, medium
and fine filters before bottling. (If you
dont want to use a filtration system,
you run the risk of remaining yeast
that will restart the fermentation.
Prevent this by storing the ice cider at
30F to 45F (1C to 6C) after
bottling.)
Finally, bottle and seal the ice cider in
375 milliliter bottles. It can be consumed immediately, but ice cider

typically improves as the flavors


mellow with maturing. Try your ice
cider at six months and again at two
years and note the changes. Eden
Orchards releases its ice cider after
one year, but cidermaker Eleanor
Leger prefers it after two years of
maturation.
Serve your ice cider at 40F to 50F
(4C to 10C) for the best expression of
its aromas and taste.

s.

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CIDERMAKING TIP

Timeline for Ice Cider


In Advance

About Week 4 to 10

Purchase the necessary equipment and ingredients.

Test the specific gravity every couple of days to ensure the


proper speed of fermentation.

Day 1
Purchase the best apple juice you can. Taste the juice and
determine the goal specific gravity/alcohol by volume.
Transfer juice to carboys and place in a very cold place.

About Day 2 to Week 3


If you are storing the carboys outside, allow the natural temperature fluctuations 10F to 32F (9C to 0C) to freeze and thaw the
juice. If using a freeze, freeze the juice for 5 days and thaw for
one day. Repeat twice more.

About Week 10
Once you have reached your goal specific gravity, halt fermentation by adding sulfur dioxide and chilling the ice cider. After four
days of chilling, rack the ice cider.

About Week 11
Rack the ice cider a second time and continue to chill.

About Week 15
Rack the ice cider a third time. Filter the ice cider with a home
brewing filtration system. Bottle ice cider.

About Week 3
After fifteen to eighteen days of freezing and thawing, separate
the concentrate from ice and test for proper specific gravity, 1.155
to 1.65. Transfer concentrate to carboy, add yeast, and begin
fermentation.

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NOTES FROM THE CIDERY, STEvE WOOD

Respecting the Apple


In most of this book, the methods suggested for making

glass is to go through the exacting process of preparing a

cider at home are based on how we make farnum Hill

second fermentation from the results of the first, bottling it,

Ciders. Many of our closest colleaguesDiane flynt at

maturing it, riddling the bottles, and disgorging and corking

foggy Ridge in Virginia, Dan Wilson at Slyboro in new york,

them. Most ciders dont really benefit from that elaborate

Mike Beck at uncle Johns in Michigan, and otherstake the

process, and some actually lose their first appeal. But Autumn

same basic approach. Their ciders are very different from

Stoscheck and Ezra Sherman at Eves Cidery show that it can

ours, and from each other, but theyre all delicious examples

be done brilliantly. Taste Eves for a bubbly standardif you

of this general method.

can even approximate, in your cider, Eves concentrated fruit,


jam, warm spice, and balanced sweetness and acid, youve

Then there are our colleagues included in this chapter, who

done better at mthode champenoise than we ever will.

use completely different methods of cidermaking that can


produce equally delicious resultsin the right hands.

Last: we never used to like ice cider. For


for our money, most of
it is cloyingly sweet, with indifferent acid and some vague

All of our early experiments with natural fermentations at

reminder of fresh apples. But Eden Ice Cider, made in

farnum Hill were microbial disasters. But Kevin Zielinski, an

northern Vermont by Eleanor and Albert Leger, is the

able apple grower in Salem, Oregon, has figured it out. By a

nectar of the gods. These ciders are stunningly balanced,

happy combination of cleverness and luck, he has some

with just the right bright acidity to balance their amazing

strain of wild yeast around E.Z. Orchards that ferments

fruity sweetness. Yet


yet their fruit and sweetness and acid

reliably, and doesnt seem to mind a little stress. unlike

arent the main pointthey have some sort of hedonistic

many of his natural cidre counterparts, he is careful not to

gravitas. Theyre the opposite of cloyingpotent, rich, full,

allow the microbes to run the entire show, and to finish his

and beautifully clean. We adore this stuff.

cidre cleanly in a bottle. Anything resembling vinegar scares


us to death here, but we love the faintly acetic bite of Kevins

So, delicious cider is delicious cider, but it can take many

cidres, complementing all the dried fruit, forest, animal, and

forms, and be made in many different ways. But one thing

other aromas and flavors he coaxes out of his apples.

has become clear to many of us cider folks, over the years


(including all the colleagues named here): The most

We tried mthode champenoise here as well. geysers from

delicious ciders in the world, by our lights, are either made

bottles and alcoholic heatwere done with that one too, we

by apple growers, or by non-growers who pay profound

think. The only way to get tiny, consistent rising bubbles in a

attention to the apples they use, and their provenance.

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Conclusion
In Somerset, Normandy, and the Basque region hundreds of years
ago, cidermakers learned from one another. They traded information about which apples and fermentation processes made for the
best cider. They experimented with new varieties and methods that
are now considered classic and authentic. It was these collaborations that led to the geographic styles often called traditional.
Todays cidermaking community is more geographically diverse,
connected by airplanes and the internet, not country back roads,
but the same kind of information exchange is improving modern
cidermaking. Cider drinkers, for their part, faced with an increasing
number of cider options, are discovering that there are many
different approaches to cider for many different tastes, much as
mass-market beer drinkers discovered during the craft beer boom.
At Poverty Lane Orchards, a knock at the loading dock door of the
cider room is as likely to be a neighbor clutching a growler to be
filled with one of Farnum Hill Ciders Dooryard batches as it is to be
an apple grower or young cidermaker seeking grafting wood or
fermentation advice. For the crew behind Farnum Hill Ciders, fostering a community of like-minded cidermakers is nearly as important
as making cider itself.

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Home cidermakers are a growing


community within this cider world
and can similarly influence it, asking
their local farmers for cider apples,
supporting other cidermakers and,
simply, sharing a great cider with a
friend at the bar.
Already, an increased interest in
cidermaking has led to an increase in
the cultivation of cider apples. This era
of cider is too young to lay claim to a
style, but the philosophy shared by
the cidermakers in this bookthe idea
the cider should be an expression of
the applesis taking hold, both among
cidermakers and cider drinkers.
Theres one piece of advice every
would-be cidermaker needs: Its all
about the apple. for home cidermakers who have practiced the
techniques in this book and want
to continue to improve their cidermaking skills, that means seeking
out ever-better cider apples and
continuing the tradition of
cidermaking.

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Glossary
Some terms home cidermakers will
encounter, as they apply to the
cidermaking process:
Acetic fermentation: The process
through which alcohol is converted
into acetic acid, the distinctive
component in vinegar. Acetic fermentation occurs when a strain of acetobacter bacteria is present and the
cider is exposed to oxygen and
moderate temperatures.
Airlock: A piece of the equipment
used during the fermentation process
to let carbon dioxide produced by the
yeast escape from the carboy while
preventing air from entering
Alcohol by volume (ABv): A standard measure of alcohol in an alcoholic
beverage, expressed as a percentage
of total volume. Cider typically has an
ABV of 5 percent to 12 percent.
Alcoholic fermentation: Process
by which yeast converts sugars into
alcohol and carbon dioxide

Apple brandy: A spirit distilled from


cider, also known as Calvados. Apple
brandy is distilled twice to 70 to 75
percent alcohol and barrel-aged.

Bung: A stopper used to seal a barrel


or carboy; made of rubber, silicon or
cork and available in solid and bored
versions

Applejack: Another name for apple


brandy or a moonshine produced by
freezing and thawing hard cider to
concentrate the alcohol

Campden tablets: Tablets of


potassium metabisulfite used to
add sulfur dioxide to cider

Apple wine: A fruit wine, in which


sugar is added to apple juice before
fermentation or to support a secondary fermentation to create a lightbodied beverage
Astringency: The drying sensation
in the mouth associated with tannins
in cider
Bittersharp apples: Cider apples high
in both acid and tannins
Bittersweet apples: Cider apples low
in acid and high in tannins

F
to
p

F
Carboy: A jug with rigid sides and
a narrow neck and mouth, ideal for
fermenting cider
Cornelius keg: A steel cylinder with a
removable lid designed to hold a
liquid under pressure; ideal for adding
carbonation to cider
Cyser: A meadlike drink in which
honey is added to apple juice before
fermentation
Disgorgement: The final step in the
mthode champenoise cidermaking
process in which expired yeast is
removed from the bottle

Body: The viscosity of a cider


Brix: A scale of measurement used to
measure the sugar content of juice

D
fu
s

Drop bright: The process through


which sediment falls out of a cider,
leaving a clearer liquid

F
a
o
a

H
fe

H
p
u
a

H
m

Ic
d
ju

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Dry: A term for a cider that has been


fully fermented, leaving no residual
sugar
Farmhouse: A term originally used
to describe the small-batch ciders
produced by local farmers
Finish: The aftertaste of a cider

Keeving: A cidermaking process in


which pomace is left unpressed for
several days stripping it of nitrogen
and other nutrients that yeast need
to thrive
Lees: The apple solids and expired
yeast that collect on the bottom of a
container of cider

Mouthfeel: The sensation of cider in


the mouth
New England cider: A 7 to 13
percent alcohol drink, in which sugar,
molasses, or maple syrup is added to
apple juice before fermentation.
Raisins are often also added.
Nose: The aromas of a cider

Flavored cider: A drink in which


apple juice is fermented with the juice
of another fruit, or flavored with
additional fruit after fermentation
Hard cider: A drink made from
fermented apple juice
Hydrogen sulfide: A sulfur compound that can, in excess, cause the
unpleasant aroma of rotten eggs
and compost in cider
Hydrometer: An instrument for
measuring a ciders specific gravity
Ice cider: A full-bodied after-dinner
drink made from fermented apple
juice with an 8 to 12 percent alcohol

Litmus paper: Acid-sensitive strips


used to measure pH
Malic acid: The predominate acid
in apples
Malolactic fermentation: The process
through which lactobacillus and other
bacteria convert malic acid to to lactic
acid.

Oxidation: The effects of exposing


cider to oxygen
pH: A measure of the strength of acid
in a solution
Pitching: Adding yeast to apple juice
Pomace: The pulp of the apple after
it is milled, used for pressing

Maturation: A process of aging cider

Mthode champenoise: A method of


cidermaking using a second, in-bottle
fermentation to produce sparkling
cider with delicate, persistent bubbles
Mousiness: A cider flaw caused by
slow-developing strains of lactobacillus or brettanomyces bacteria. It is
most frequently described as the
aroma of mouse droppings.

Pommeau: A blend of apple brandy


and sweet cider, aged in oak. About
16 to 18 percent alcohol
Proofing: The process of hydrating
and feeding the yeast prior to introducing it in the cidermaking process
Rack: The process of moving cider off
its lees during the cidermaking process

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R
Residual sugar: The sugars left in a
semisweet ciders made by halting
the fermentation before the yeasts
convert all of the sugars present to
alcohol
Riddle: The process of rotating and
reorienting bottles during mthode
champenoise cider production to
collect the lees in the neck
Semi-sweet: A description of a cider
with noticeable residual sugar
Sharp apples: Cider apples that are
high in acid and low in tannins
Sparkling: A description of a cider
with noticeable dissolved carbon
dioxide

Specific gravity: The measure of


soluble solids in a liquid; used to
determine a juices sugar content

Tannin: A substance present in


apples that provides the structure,
astringency, and bitterness in cider

B
p
2

Still: A description of cider with no or


very slight effervescence

volatile acidity: A term used to


describe the presence of acetic acid
in cider

B
B
t

Wine thief: A ridged, narrow tube


with openings at both ends designed
for extracting liquid from a container

B
e
G
2

Sulfur dioxide: An additive that


serves as an antimicrobial and
antioxidant in cidermaking
Sweet apples: Cider apples that are
low in acid and tannins, and add fruit
flavors and aromas to cider
Sweet cider: The nonalcoholic
fresh-pressed juice of the apple, sold
for consumption

Yeast: A single-cell fungus that


converts sugars to alcohol
Yeast nutrients: An additive that can
be used to provide yeast with a
hospitable environment for alcoholic
fermentation

C
C
P

J
M
G
g

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Resources
Boulton, Roger et al. principles and
practices of Wine Making. Springer,
2012.
Brown, Pete and Bill Bradshaw. Worlds
Best Ciders: taste, tradition and
terroir. Sterling Epicure, 2013.
Burford, Tom. apples of north america:
exceptional Varieties for Gardeners,
Growers, and Cooks. Timber Press,
2013.
Copas, Liz. a somerset pomona: the
Cider apples of somerset. Dovecote
Press, 2001.
Jolicoeur, Claude. the new Cider
Makers handbook: a Comprehensive
Guide for Craft producers. Chelsea
green Publishing, 2013.

Lea, Andrew. Craft Cider Making. good


Life Press, 2011.
Margalit, yair. Winery technology and
operations: a handbook for small
Wineries. Wine Appreciation guild,
1996.
Proulx, Annie and Lew nichols. Cider:
Making, Using & enjoying sweet &
hard Cider. Storey Publishing, 2003.
Rankine, Bryce. Making Good Wine:
Manual of Winemaking practice for
australia and new Zealand. Macmillan,
1995.

Scott Laboratories. Fermentation


handbook. Available at
www.scottlab.com
Smith, Clark. postmodern Winemaking:
rethinking the Modern science of an
ancient Craft. university of California
Press, 2013.
Watson, Ben. Cider hard & sweet:
history, traditions and Making Your
own. The Countryman Press, 2013.
Zoecklein, Bruce W. et al. Wine analysis
and production. CBS Publishers &
Distributors, 1997.

Scott Laboratories. Cider handbook.


Available at www.scottlab.com

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y
C

The People Behind Farnum Hill Ciders


fAMILy

Stephen Wood has grown apples at


Poverty Lane Orchards since his
teens. In the 1980s, he planted the first
substantial acreage of specialized
cider apple varieties in the united
States, which necessitated learning to
make consistently delicious dry ciders,
which necessitated planting more
cider apples, and so on. He works
on every aspect of apple and cider
production, and on cider events and
organizations. He also collaborates
with new cider orchardists and
cidermakers to expand the range of
American orchardbased ciders.

Louisa Spencer (Wood) works mostly


on explaining and promoting farnum
Hills ciders through writing, speaking,
graphic and package design, and
tastings.
Their sons, Harrison Wood and Otis
Wood, grew up at the orchard. Each of
them jumps in on any work needed,
in the fields or the cider room,
whenever he is home.

H
C

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yEAR-ROunD
CREW

Brenda Bailey manages the Poverty


Lane/farnum Hill office year-round,
runs the retail stand every fall, and
keeps everyone in touch with what
everyone else is doing every day.
She started in 1980 packing apples
for wholesale.
fitzgerald Campbell understands,
shows, and teaches how fruit trees
need to be pruned and trained;
he also runs field crews and does
carpentry. He started in 1992 on
the seasonal picking crew.

Jacques Tourville maintains and


repairs a menagerie of tractors and
machines, does field work year-round,
and works in the cider room as
needed. from an orchard family, he
started at Poverty Lane in 2007.
Corrie Wolosin uses her skills in
marketing and sales to move ever
more farnum Hill Ciders off the hill to
meet ever more cider aficionados
across the states. She started in 2007.

nicole Legrand Leibon applies her


exceptional nose, palate, and experience to bringing farnum Hill Ciders
from the press all the way to the
bottle. She started at farnum Hill in
2000 after working in brewing, tea,
and commercial yeasts.

Jeffrey Williams works in the fields


and in the cider room, and keeps the
Poverty Lane home farm looking
civilized in all four seasons. Wanda
Lloynds works on cider production
most of the year, but also energizes the
orchard retail and pick-your-own in the
fall. Lucille Rogers works in the orchard
retail stand. John Smith and Ryan
Bishop work in the cider room and
orchards, and they run the cider press.

When orchard work hits peak load,


the normal workweek goes away.
Dozens of different varieties must be
picked when they reach their best
not too soon, not too late. As October
progresses, freezing nights increasingly threaten to destroy the fruit left
on the trees. Every harvest, a crew
brings in the fruit, presses cider, packs

apples for retail and wholesale, and


takes the pressure. Everybody works
long, hard hours. Most crucial every
year are the people with experience in
the orchard: James gerlack first
worked the harvest in 1988; William
Crawford, Kenneth Woodhouse, and
Vivian Currie in 1992; and Wayne
Brown in 2013.

of

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HARVEST
CREW

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About April White


April Whites craving for good food
and great stories has taken her from
the kitchens of Philadelphia to the
goat farms of Tuscany, the paladares
of Havana, and the tchouk huts of
West Africa. The award-winning food
writer penned Chickens in Five

Minutes a day with the staff of


Murray McMurray Hatchery and
Get Your Goat with goat farmer
Brent Zimmerman. She is also the
author of the philadelphia Chefs
table and other cookbooks. See
her latest work at aprwhite.com.

Photographer Credits
Robert Alexander/gettyimages.com, 64 (left)
Brenda Bailey Collins, 8; 11 (top); 13; 14; 17; 18; 27; 41; 45; 4857; 59; 61
(middle & right); 63; 65; 69; 88; 91; 93; 101; 109; 110115; 131; 140; 143
gardenpix/alamy.com, 62 (right); 95
graham Corney/alamy.com, 77
Jack Hobnouse/alamy.com, 61 (left); 132
Jeff Morgan 08/alamy.com, 62 (left); 117
Shutterstock.com, 7; 58; 64 (right); 66; 135; 144; 146
Susan Teare Photography/susanteare.com, 11 (bottom); 12; 19; 28; 3339;
42; 47; 70; 75; 76; 81; 82; 8486; 89; 97; 98; 104
Wikipedia, 60

Cover images:
Susan Teare Photography/susanteare.com, top, left; bottom, (middle & right);
back jacket, top, (left and right)
Brenda Bailey Collins, top, right; bottom, left; spine; back jacket, middle & bottom

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W
d
H
c
a
W
h
w
I
th
th
le
to
o
o

Im
d
c
p
s
y
h

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Acknowledgments
When I began this project, I had no
doubt that I would find the farnum
Hill Ciders crew to be experienced
cidermakers; I was already well
acquainted with their delicious ciders.
What I couldnt have anticipated was
how welcoming and patient they
would be with this ever-curious writer.
I am grateful to Stephen Wood and
the entire crew for their hospitality,
their generosity in sharing hardlearned cider knowledge, and their
tolerance of every question, even
ones that came early in the morning,
on weekends, and on holidays.
Im also indebted to Steve for introducing me to like-minded cider
colleagues who share the apples first
philosophy that drives this book and
share Steves generous nature. Thank
you to Autumn Stoscheck, who, with
her husband Ezra Sherman, makes

mthode champenoise cider at Eves


Cidery in the finger Lakes region of
new york; to Kevin Zielinski at E.Z.
Orchards in Oregons Willamette
Valley, who makes cider in a traditional style from normandy; and to
Eleanor Leger who, with her husband
Albert Leger, makes ice cider at Eden
Orchards in West Charleston, Vermont. They all shared their cider
experience enthusiastically and
without hesitation. I also want to
recognize Jocelyn Kuzelka of Panacea
Wine Consulting, who offered advice
and clarity on the not-at-all small
issues of microbiology in cidermaking.
finally, gratitude to those who turned
these cidermakers lessons into the
book you hold in your hands: Clare
Pelino of ProLit Literary Consultants,
photographer Susan Teare, and the
team at Quarry Books.
april White

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Index
acidity
[text TK]
acetic fermentation, 100, 105
bittersharp apples, 63, 122
bittersweet apples, 61, 122, 126127
blending and, 112
Englishstyle cider, 20, 23
Frenchstyle cider, 21, 23, 122
ice cider, 126127, 130
litmus paper, 76, 85, 90
malolactic fermentation, 91, 99,
100, 103104
maturing and, 94
secondary fermentation and, 22
sharp cider apples, 64
Spanishstyle cider, 21, 23
sweet cider apples, 64
tasting and, 37, 38, 94, 107
temperature and, 32
troubleshooting, 107
Adams, John, 16
airlocks, 76, 89
alcohol. See also fermentation.
apple brandy, 24
applejack, 24
apple wine, 24
early-season apples, 60
historic ciders, 16
ice cider, 126, 127
New England cider, 24
pommeau, 24
potential alcohol, 85
Quebecstyle cider, 21
specific gravity, 85
sugar and, 19, 23, 78
tasting and, 38
antimicrobials. See sulfur dioxide.
apple brandy, 24
applejack, 24
apples. See also juices; trees.
acidity and, 23, 61, 122, 126127
apple-to-juice ratio, 66
Ashmeads Kernel, 64
Ashton Bitter, 61
bittersharp, 60, 63, 122

bittersweet, 60, 6162, 122


Chisel Jersey, 61
cidre and, 122
colors of, 58
commercial orchards, 51, 60
Dabinett, 61
dessert apples, 51
early-season apples, 60
Ellis Bitter, 6162
Esopus Spitzenburg, 64
flesh of, 58
Foxwhelp, 63
Golden Russet, 64
Harry Masters Jersey, 62
harvest, 56
ice cider and, 126127
Kingston Black, 63
late-season apples, 60
Major, 62
Medaille dOr, 62
picking, 51
Redstreak, 63
ripeness of, 51, 56
russeted, 58
seeds, 58
shape variations, 58
sharp apples, 60, 64
size variations, 58
skins, 58
Somerset Redstreak, 62
Stoke Red, 63
sweet apples, 60, 64
textures, 51, 60
Wickson, 64
Yarlington Mill, 62
apple wine, 24
Ashmeads Kernel apples, 64
Beck, Mike, 130
bees, 52
bittersharp apples, 60, 63, 122
bittersweet apples, 60, 6162, 122

bottling
bottle conditioning, 120
cidre, 124
discoloration and, 106
disgorgement, 121
fermentation and, 19, 21, 22, 123
first batch, 94
Frenchstyle cider, 21
haze and, 107
ice cider, 126, 129
lees, 94, 124
mthode champenoise, 21, 113, 119
riddling, 119120
bungs, 88
Campden tablets. See sulfur dioxide.
carbonation
cidre, 124
Englishstyle cider, 21
equipment for, 114
ingredients for, 114
mthode champenoise, 22, 44
post-bottling fermentation, 22, 44
process, 113114
Spanishstyle cider, 21
still cider, 23
carboys. See also equipment.
airlocks, 76
bungs, 76
cider storage in, 74
cleaning, 73, 79
fermentation and, 7374, 87
lees and, 74
moving, 87, 88
purchasing, 73
racking, 9192
shape of, 73
yeast and, 73, 74
Chisel Jersey apples, 61
cider rooms
commercial cider rooms, 80
equipment, 7374, 7677
ingredients, 79
Poverty Lane Orchards, 71
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sanitation, 79
space for, 72
temperature of, 72
cidre
apples for, 122
bottling, 124
carbonation, 124
equipment for, 124
fermentation, 123
ingredients for, 124
juice for, 122
lees and, 124
racking, 123
specific gravity for, 122, 123
sulfur dioxide and, 122, 124
tannins, 122
temperatures, 122, 123, 124
timeline, 125
yeast and, 122, 123, 124
cleanliness, 79
commercial cider rooms, 80
commercial orchards, 51, 60
community, 133134
cornelius kegs, 113114, 116
Cortland apples, 10
cylinders, 77
cyser, 24
Dabinett apples, 61
dessert apples, 51
discoloration, 106
disgorgement, 120121
early-season apples, 60
Eden Orchards, 12, 126
Eden Vermont Ice Cider Heirloom
Blend, 4445
Ellis Bitter apples, 6162
English Redstreak apples. See
Redstreak apples.
Englishstyle cider, 2021, 22, 23, 25
equipment. See also carboys.
airlocks, 76, 89
bottles, 77
bungs, 88
carbonation equipment, 114
carboy bungs, 76
cidre, 124

cleaning, 79, 87
containers, 7374, 77, 79
cornelius kegs, 113114, 116
cylinders, 77
first-batch shopping list, 74
glass containers, 74, 77, 79
hydrometers, 77, 85, 90
ice cider, 128
litmus paper, 76, 90
mthode champenoise, 118, 119
milk crates, 77
pH meters, 76
plastic containers, 74, 77
plastic tubing, 76, 90
racking equipment, 91
returning sugar, 116
thermometers, 76
tubing, 76
Esopus Spitzenburg apples, 64
Eves Cidery
Bittersweet cider, 44
disgorgement, 121
mthode champenoise, 44, 118,
120, 121, 130
philosophy of, 12
secondary fermentation at, 22
E.Z. Orchards
cidre, 122, 130
philosophy of, 12
post-bottling fermentation at, 22
Willamette Valley Cidre 2011, 44
yeasts at, 130
farmhouse cider, 21
Farnum Hill Ciders
carbonation of, 23
cider rooms, 96
community and, 133
Dabinett apples. 61
Dooryard Still Cider 1312, 43
fermentation experiments, 130
first ciders, 96
history of, 10
philosophy of, 12
pre-bottling fermentation of, 22
style of, 26
tastings at, 34, 35, 37
Yarlington Mill, 62
yeast, 78

fermentation. See also alcohol.


acidity and, 23
additives and, 49, 67
carboys, 7374, 87
cidre, 123
containers, 7374, 87
Englishstyle cider, 22
first batch, 87
Frenchstyle cider, 22
hydrogen sulfide and, 101102
ice cider, 127128
keeving method, 21, 23
length of, 19
malolactic fermentation, 91,
103104
patience and, 13
pitching, 72
post-bottling fermentation, 19, 21,
22, 123
pre-bottling fermentation, 19, 22
promotion of, 19
secondary fermentation, 22
store-bought juice and, 49
sugar and, 19
temperatures, 19, 72, 80, 87, 88,
127
timeframe, 87, 90
yeast, 19, 72, 78
first batch
airlock placement, 89
bottling, 94
bung placement, 88
Farnum Hill Ciders, 96
fermentation timeframe, 87, 90
maturing, 94
moving the carboy, 88
pH measurements, 85, 90
pitching the yeast, 87
racking, 9193
specific gravity, 85, 90
sulfur dioxide, 84
tasting, 94
temperatures, 87
testing, 85, 90
timeline, 84
yeast nutrition, 89
flavored cider, 24
flavor profiles, 107
floret separation, 52

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nitrogen, 78
returning sugar, 116
thiamine, 78

Flynt, Diane, 130


Foggy Ridge, 130
Foxwhelp apples, 63
Frenchstyle cider, 21, 22, 44
full bloom, 52
full pink, 52

juices. See also apples; ingredients.


additives, 49, 67
apple-to-juice ratio, 66
blending, 60, 112
cidre and, 122
creation process, 66
sources of, 67
store-bought juice, 49
tannins and, 67

geographic styles, 2021, 133


glass jugs, 77
Golden Russet apples, 64
Granny Smith apples, 10
green tip, 52
half-inch green, 52
Harry Masters Jersey apples, 62
harsher tannins, 61
harvest, 56
haze, 106
history, 16
H. P. Bulmer company, 63
hydrogen sulfide, 100, 101102
hydrometers, 77, 85, 90

keeving method, 21, 23


king blossom, 52
king pink, 52
Kingston Black apples, 63

ice cider
acidity, 126127, 130
alcohol content, 127
apples for, 126127
bottling, 126, 129
carboys for, 127
concentrate separation, 127
concentrating, 127
Eden Vermont Ice Cider
Heirloom Blend, 4445
equipment, 128
fermentation, 127128
filtration, 129
halting fermentation of, 128129
ingredients, 128
racking, 129
specific gravity, 126, 127, 128
temperatures, 126, 127, 128
timeline, 129
yeast and, 127128, 128129
ingredients. See also juices; sugar;
sulfur dioxide; yeast.
carbonation, 114
cidre, 124
ice cider, 128
mthode champenoise, 118

late-season apples, 60
lees
bottling and, 94, 124
carboys and, 74
cidre, 124
E.Z. Orchards Willamette Valley
Cidre 2011, 44
hydrogen sulfide and, 101, 102
malolactic fermentation and, 100,
103, 104
mthode champenoise, 120
racking and, 91
settling of, 90, 92
siphoning and, 92
stink and, 108
tasting and, 30
Leger, Albert, 126, 130
Leger, Eleanor, 126, 129, 130
Leibon, Nicole LeGrand, 12
litmus paper, 76, 85, 90
Major apples, 62
malolactic fermentation
acid levels and, 22, 23
blending, 108, 112
causes of, 100, 118
cidre and, 124
correcting, 100, 103104
diagnosing, 100, 103
lees, 100, 103, 104

preventing, 100, 104


racking and, 91
sulfur dioxide and, 78, 91, 118
temperatures and, 100, 103
wines and, 103
mass-market ciders, 25
maturing, 94
McIntosh apples, 10
Medaille dOr apples, 62
mthode champenoise
bottling, 119
carbonation, 22, 44
disgorgement, 120121
equipment for, 118, 119
Eves Cidery Bittersweet, 44
lees and, 120
malolactic fermentation and, 118
racking, 118
riddling, 119120
safety, 121
secondary fermentation and, 22
sulfur dioxide and, 118
temperatures, 118, 119
timeline, 120
milk crates, 77
mousiness, 106
New England cider, 24
nitrogen, 78
notes from the cidery
apples, 130
cider rooms, 80
first ciders, 96
stink, 108
style, 26
tasting, 46
trees, 68
odor, 108
orchards
commercial orchards, 51
fall in, 56
spring in, 52
summer in, 55
tree placement in, 51
winter in, 57
perry, 17
pests, 51, 52, 55
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petal fall, 52
pH measurements, 76, 85, 90, 103, 122
pitching, 72, 84, 87
plastic jugs, 77
pollination, 52
pomace, 19, 66
pommeau, 24
post-bottling fermentation, 22
Poverty Lane Orchards
cider room, 71, 133
community and, 12, 133
harvest in, 56
history of, 10
presses at, 66
returning sugars at, 116
style, 26
tastings at, 34, 40
trees, 51, 68
pre-bottling fermentation, 22
presses, 66
quarter-inch green, 52
Quebecstyle cider, 21
racking
acetic fermentation and, 105
cidre, 123
equipment for, 91
haze and, 106
hydrogen sulfide and, 101, 102
ice cider, 129
lees and, 91
malolactic fermentation and, 103,
104
mthode champenoise, 118
process of, 9193
returning sugar, 116
sulfur dioxide and, 91, 92, 102
Red Delicious apples, 10
Redstreak apples, 63
residual sugars, 23, 126
returned sugars, 23, 116
riddling, 119120
ripeness, 51
russeted apples, 58
sanitation, 79
secondary fermentation, 22
sharp apples, 60, 64

Sherman, Ezra, 118, 121, 130


silver tip, 52
Slyboro, 130
small-batch ciders, 25
soft tannins, 61
Somerset Redstreak apples, 62
Spanishstyle cider, 21
specific gravity
cidre, 122, 123
first batch and, 85, 90
hydrometers for, 77
ice cider, 126, 127, 128
sugar and, 85
Spencer, Louisa, 68
splashy racking, 102
still cider, 23, 43
Stoke Red apples, 63
store-bought juice, 49
Stoscheck, Autumn, 118, 130
sugar. See also ingredients.
function of, 19, 22, 78
hydrogen sulfide and, 101
mthode champenoise, 119
pressure and, 119
residual, 23, 126
returned, 23, 116
specific gravity and, 85
sulfur dioxide. See also ingredients.
acetic fermentation and, 105
adding, 84
cidre and, 122, 124
function of, 78
hydrogen sulfide and, 101, 102
ice cider and, 128
malolactic fermentation and, 100,
103, 104
mthode champenoise and, 118
pH levels and, 85
racking and, 91, 92, 102
splashy racking and, 102
yeast and, 78, 87
sweet apples, 60, 64
tannins
apple skin and, 58
balance and, 19
bittersharp apples, 60, 63
bittersweet apples, 60, 61, 62
cidre and, 122

Eden Vermont Ice Cider


Heirloom Blend, 44
Englishstyle cider and, 20, 21
Eves Cidery Bittersweet, 44
Farnum Hill Dooryard Still Cider
1312, 43
Frenchstyle cider and, 21
harsher tannins, 61
haze and, 106
juice and, 67
maturation and, 94
mouthfeel and, 38
perry, 17
soft tannins, 61
structure, 23
tasting
acidity, 37, 38
aeration, 37
alcohol and, 38
appearance, 33
astringency, 38
bitterness, 37
BSA (bittersweet apples), 34
cidermaking and, 41
cider preparation for, 32
clean finishes, 38
conversation and, 34
descriptive words, 34, 37, 39, 40
equipment for, 31
Farnum Hill Dooryard Still Cider,
43, 133
finish, 38
first batch, 94
glasses for, 31, 33
introduction to, 2930
lees and, 30
locations for, 31
mouthfeel, 38
nose, 34, 35
notes, 34, 37
OPC (other peoples cider), 4345
Poverty Lane Orchards, 34, 40, 43
resetting sense of smell for, 35
rinsing step, 33
spitting, 38
tasting process, 37
temperature and, 32
training your nose, 39
variety and, 30

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temperatures
acetic fermentation, 105
cider rooms and, 80
cidre, 122, 123, 124
fall season and, 56
fermentation and, 19, 72, 80, 87,
88, 127
ice cider, 126, 127, 128
malolactic fermentation and,
100, 103
mthode champenoise, 118, 119
returning sugar and, 116
tasting and, 32
testing, 85
thermometers for, 76
yeast and, 72, 78, 80, 87, 128
thermometers, 76
thiamine, 78
third batch
blending, 112
carbonation, 113114
cidre, 122125
ice cider, 126129
mthode champenoise, 118121
returning sugar, 116
thunderstorms, 55
timelines
cidre, 125
first batch, 84
ice cider, 129
mthode champenoise, 120
tips
carbonation equipment, 114
carbonation ingredients, 114
cidre equipment, 124
cidre ingredients, 124
cidre timeline, 125
first-batch shopping list, 74
first-batch timeline, 84
for home brewers, 13
ice cider equipment, 128
ice cider ingredients, 128
ice cider timeline, 129
mthode champenoise
equipment, 118
mthode champenoise
ingredients, 118
mthode champenoise timeline,
120

patience, 13
perry, 17
potential alcohol, 85
racking equipment, 91
returning sugar equipment, 116
returning sugar ingredients, 116
sense of smell, 35
specific gravity, 85
tasting equipment, 31
tasting process, 38
tasting vocabulary, 40
troubleshooting, 100
trees. See also apples.
errors with, 68
fertilization, 55
floret separation, 52
full bloom, 52
full pink, 52
green tip, 52
half-inch green, 52
harvest, 56
heat damage, 55
hibernation, 57
king blossom, 52
king pink, 52
pests and, 51, 52, 55
petal fall, 52
planting locations, 51, 60
pollination, 52
Poverty Lane Orchard, 68
pruning, 52, 55, 57, 68
quarter-inch green, 52
silver tip, 52
strategic damage of, 55
thunderstorms and, 55
troubleshooting
acetic fermentation, 100, 105
discoloration, 106
excess hydrogen sulfide, 100,
101102
flavor profiles, 107
haze, 106
malolactic fermentation, 100,
103104
mousiness, 106
odor, 108
tubing, 76

Uncle Johns, 130


unpasteurized cider, 67
Wickson apples, 64
Wilson, Dan, 130
Wood, Steve, 10, 12, 26, 46, 68, 80, 108
Yarlington Mill apples, 62
yeast. See also ingredients.
carbon dioxide and, 76
carboys and, 73, 74
cidre, 122, 123, 124
disgorgement, 119120
Frenchstyle cider, 21
function of, 19, 78
hydrogen sulfide and, 100,
101, 102
ice cider, 127128, 128129
lees and, 90
mthode champenoise, 22, 119
nutrients, 78, 89, 102, 119, 120
pitching, 84, 87
post-bottling fermentation, 22
riddling, 119
secondary fermentation, 22
semi-sweet ciders and, 23
Spanishstyle cider, 21
stink and, 108
sugar and, 19, 116
sulfur dioxide and, 78, 84, 87
temperatures and, 72, 78, 80, 87,
128
Zielinski, Kevin, 122, 130

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further reading from quarto publishing group

A Curious Harvest
978-1-59253-928-4

Apothecary Cocktails
978-1-59233-584-8

Homegrown Herb Garden


978-1-59253-982-6

Artisan Drinks
978-1-59253-994-9

A First Course in Wine:


Grape to Glass
978-1-93799-413-6

The Complete Guide


to Making Mead
978-076034-564-1

The Vintners Apprentice


978-1-59253-657-3

Kitchen Garden Experts


978-071123-496-3

visit qbookshop.com

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