Brigalow Apple Cider
Brigalow Apple Cider
Hi,
I have a keg of brigalow apple cider ready to bottle, although when trying it from the hydrometer tube it has a weird after taste sorta burnt plastic taste that make it quite undrinkable.
If I bottle will this after taste disappear? after it rests for a while.
Dan
I have a keg of brigalow apple cider ready to bottle, although when trying it from the hydrometer tube it has a weird after taste sorta burnt plastic taste that make it quite undrinkable.
If I bottle will this after taste disappear? after it rests for a while.
Dan
I made the Brigalow cider as one of my first HBs, and I was quite underwhelmed. Not at all what I was expecting. Lacked body and flavor and seemed very artificial.
I did experience that funny plastic taste before bottling and it did fade in time - lots of time. I just wrote it off as absorbing some of the new kit smell.
But I have promised myself to never again make that kit. I'm still afraid to open one of the few remaining bottles I have left.
Best of luck....
I did experience that funny plastic taste before bottling and it did fade in time - lots of time. I just wrote it off as absorbing some of the new kit smell.
But I have promised myself to never again make that kit. I'm still afraid to open one of the few remaining bottles I have left.
Best of luck....

Just put one of these down before i read that i should have done Black Rock. It is fermenting (can see thru the top) but the airlock has no movement whatsoever! Just stuck to the receipe, nothing special and there were bugger all instructions on the can so i'm gathering leave it ten days then bottle? See how it goes. 

Chris' all-juice cider
18L fresh pressed apple juice 1.5kg dextrose 500g LME 125g lactose 3 large, cored and peeled granny smiths, cut up and put in a stocking. 2 cinnamon sticks a few pieces of ginger juice of half a lemon For a lighter body in the cider, leave out the malt. It is beautiful with it though.
Apple Cider
From this ABC article.
Tasmania was once known around the world as the Apple Isle. It used to be a weekend tradition for families to pick up a case or two directly from an apple shed. Even if you have to buy your fruit from a supermarket, give this apple cider recipe a go.
You need:
Apples, campden tablets, pectin, yeast nutrient (lactose), wine yeast and a brewing vessel.
Method:
Crush the apples and extract the juice, or purchase the juice direct from the factory.
To each 5 litres of juice, add two crushed campden tablets and let stand for 12 hours to kill the wild yeasts. Then add 1 teaspoonful each of pectic enzyme and yeast nutrient per 5 litres, plus some wine yeast. (For a medium-sweet style, add 50g of lactose per 5 litres, or a sweet style, add 100g lactose per 5 litres.)
Fit an air lock and allow to ferment right out. At this point bubbling will cease through the air lock and the hydrometer will show a reading of 1000. Leave to stand for a further two days to clear, then bottle, adding one teaspoonful of sugar to each bottle.
The cider will be ready to drink in 3 to 4 weeks, but will be much better if left for 3 to 6 months.
18L fresh pressed apple juice 1.5kg dextrose 500g LME 125g lactose 3 large, cored and peeled granny smiths, cut up and put in a stocking. 2 cinnamon sticks a few pieces of ginger juice of half a lemon For a lighter body in the cider, leave out the malt. It is beautiful with it though.
Apple Cider
From this ABC article.
Tasmania was once known around the world as the Apple Isle. It used to be a weekend tradition for families to pick up a case or two directly from an apple shed. Even if you have to buy your fruit from a supermarket, give this apple cider recipe a go.
You need:
Apples, campden tablets, pectin, yeast nutrient (lactose), wine yeast and a brewing vessel.
Method:
Crush the apples and extract the juice, or purchase the juice direct from the factory.
To each 5 litres of juice, add two crushed campden tablets and let stand for 12 hours to kill the wild yeasts. Then add 1 teaspoonful each of pectic enzyme and yeast nutrient per 5 litres, plus some wine yeast. (For a medium-sweet style, add 50g of lactose per 5 litres, or a sweet style, add 100g lactose per 5 litres.)
Fit an air lock and allow to ferment right out. At this point bubbling will cease through the air lock and the hydrometer will show a reading of 1000. Leave to stand for a further two days to clear, then bottle, adding one teaspoonful of sugar to each bottle.
The cider will be ready to drink in 3 to 4 weeks, but will be much better if left for 3 to 6 months.
w00t!
Yep. Sparkling wine yeast. EC-1118. I think it's from Lavlin. Most HBSes stock it, as it's one of the hardier strains.
Edit: Not Fermentis. Lavlin.
Edit: Not Fermentis. Lavlin.
Last edited by rwh on Tuesday Mar 06, 2007 9:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
w00t!
Thats a champagne yeast! I use the same one for my GB - comes out super dry!rwh wrote:Yep. Sparkling wine yeast. EC-1118. I think it's from Fermentis. Most HBSes stock it, as it's one of the hardier strains.
How sweet was it with that much lactose? gravity? alc?
Sorry for so many questions but i reckon that when my fermenters come out of storage the first brew in will be a cider, made from fresh apples.
The biggest trouble i had with my cider experiments is that the juicer produces a lot of 'froth' as well as juice which is very difficult to separate form the juice. It tends to float on top and wont settle so i tried filtering thru pantyhose (tres scientifique.....). Not to mention the time it will take to get 18L of juice! Think its time to test out various filter papers in the lab.