cider alco %
Well, cider does take longer than beer. I'm not an expert, but I'd like to know if your hydrometer readings have stabilised. If they have, bottling should be OK, but be careful... the last thing you want is bottle bombs.
Sometimes residual activity in the airlock can just be CO2 coming out of solution rather than yeast activity, but with the slower fermentation of the sparkling wine yeast it's possible it's still going. It shouldn't be able to go too much further down than that.
Sometimes residual activity in the airlock can just be CO2 coming out of solution rather than yeast activity, but with the slower fermentation of the sparkling wine yeast it's possible it's still going. It shouldn't be able to go too much further down than that.
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its now been in the bottle for a week and is still flat as a tack. there is very little sediment on the bottom of the bottles and was very clear when i bottled it. i put 1/2 a teaspoon of sugar ineach bottle and they have been stared at about 18 degrees. do they need longer or has the kit yeast died because the alcohol got up to 7.5%.
My cider has just about finished fermenting today. Here's the recipe:
Black Rock Apple Cider
1kg Dextrose
4L Apples Juice
4 Granny Smith Apples
20L
O.G: 1055 F.G: 1000
The alcohol percentage has sky rocketed to 7.9%. Unbelievable. The 4L of apple juice contained 440g of sugar and I'm not sure how much sugar is in 4 granny smith apples. Hard to believe the gravity dropped to 1000 really.
Black Rock Apple Cider
1kg Dextrose
4L Apples Juice
4 Granny Smith Apples
20L
O.G: 1055 F.G: 1000
The alcohol percentage has sky rocketed to 7.9%. Unbelievable. The 4L of apple juice contained 440g of sugar and I'm not sure how much sugar is in 4 granny smith apples. Hard to believe the gravity dropped to 1000 really.
Re: cider alco %
I did the exact same recipe minus the granny smith apples and substitued the suguar with dextrose. Perfect cider and turned out to be about 6%melbourne man wrote:BR cider can
0.5 kg lactose
4L apple juice no preservatives
12 granny smith apples, cored, peeles chopped ina stocking
1.5kg of sugar
22L
what do you reckon the alco% will be, do you think that 0.5kg of lactose will make it sweet enough and will it be very apply at this volume?
also is better to use sugar rather than dextrose?
I've just put down a cider. Been in the carboy for a couple of days now. I've peeled cored and quartered 4 apples and wacked them in a strelised stocking and thrown them in. They are floating on the top of my wort, is this normal? I assumed they'd sink after a little while but it's been a few days now and they're still floating?
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I am planning to make a cider next and I have been looking for some 100% apple juice with no preservatives to add to the kit. Most of the brands I have seen in the shops say "no preservatives" but looking at the ingredients they have 99.9% apple juice, food acid, flavour, colour, etc.
Would that be ok to make a cider or will these things affect the yeast? Does anyone know of a brand that is definately 100% apple juice?
Would that be ok to make a cider or will these things affect the yeast? Does anyone know of a brand that is definately 100% apple juice?
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Lactose is milk sugar. Yeast can't metabolise it so it stays in the cider, leaving a residual sweetness. It's available from your home brew shop.Timmsy wrote:oh and also lactose is that just plain suger??
For heaven's sake, don't spray them with the sterilising liquid. Heat is the usual method. I've never made a cider, but you could sterilise them by adding them to the fermenter and then pouring your hot must over them from the boil, and leaving for 10 mins. Or you could boil water seperately, add the apples, and then add this to your fermenter. Maybe someone with more experience can help here.and when putting the apples in the stocking how to you sterlise them?? Can i just just clean them in hot water and spray them with the sterlising liquid i have? or can i just clean the apples quarter them and chuck them straight into the fermenter?
I personally don't see much point in having apples floating in your fermenter. Can anyone let me know exactly what this adds to the final product?
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