Rekorderlig Cider
Rekorderlig Cider
Although not technically beer, thought I’d make a mention of my newest favourite cider.
All four of the ciders brought out by this Swedish mob are fantastic! They'd have to be given that they’re exported all the way from Sweden. The selection is:
Apple Cider
Pear Cider
Strawberry and Lime Cider
Wild Berries Cider
If you consider yourself a cider drinker, you must try this Swedish treasure! The Pear Cider has got to be the best, but all are worth trying. Get to Dan’s or First Choice to pick some up.
(The only bad part is the cost, at $7-$8 for each 500ml bottle!)
All four of the ciders brought out by this Swedish mob are fantastic! They'd have to be given that they’re exported all the way from Sweden. The selection is:
Apple Cider
Pear Cider
Strawberry and Lime Cider
Wild Berries Cider
If you consider yourself a cider drinker, you must try this Swedish treasure! The Pear Cider has got to be the best, but all are worth trying. Get to Dan’s or First Choice to pick some up.
(The only bad part is the cost, at $7-$8 for each 500ml bottle!)
Got Malt?
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
I second that notion....
The pear one is very tasty
The pear one is very tasty
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Re: Rekorderlig Cider
Just tried the strawberry & lime - very nice indeed.
Goomba
Goomba
Homebrew for me:
10 years ago - financially necessary
now - for the sheer fun of it
difference - I can afford to stuff things up
10 years ago - financially necessary
now - for the sheer fun of it
difference - I can afford to stuff things up
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
They are bringing out a Winter Cider soon.
Apple, Vanilla and Cinnamon.
Apparently it can be served cold or warm.
Apple, Vanilla and Cinnamon.
Apparently it can be served cold or warm.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
I make a cider with vanilla and cinnamon. Goes down very well! Don't know why it'd be specifically for winter, though; mine gets brewed year round.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
Are you willing to share your recipe?
I think its only marketed as a 'winter cider' because cider sales drop drastically in the colder months. The name will make it more likely for people to keep purchasing if it says 'Winter' on the bottle.
I think its only marketed as a 'winter cider' because cider sales drop drastically in the colder months. The name will make it more likely for people to keep purchasing if it says 'Winter' on the bottle.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
I find it a tad sweet, however my girlfriend adores it. I am, however, quite keen on reusing the bottles for homebrew...
+1 On bullfrog sharing that recipe.
+1 On bullfrog sharing that recipe.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
My father goes through the entire range of these ciders weekly, for some reason i never considered asking him to save me the bottles... do they go alright Lachy?
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
Oh, sorry guys, just saw this.Lachy wrote: +1 On bullfrog sharing that recipe.
It really is as basic as basic gets. Steep one or two vanilla beans (split down the middle) and one or two cinnamon sticks in hot water straight from the kettle (just enough to cover them) for ten to twenty minutes. Toss all that in the fermenter with some yeast nutrient, top up with 22L of Aldi apple juice (good because not only is it cheap but it also has no preservatives) then pitch a pack of US05.
I've recently been playing around with adding tannic acid, too, to get that Normandy style of cider. I've found that around 10-15g works well. Just add that to the steep.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
The bottles are good, Rum.
btw - If you're on 4square (look it up), First Choice are doing a 30% off any 6 bottles of cider special this month with every check-in. Although I am biased because I work at Coles....
btw - If you're on 4square (look it up), First Choice are doing a 30% off any 6 bottles of cider special this month with every check-in. Although I am biased because I work at Coles....
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
Looks good bullfrog. We tried some of the Rekorderlig winter cider on the weekend so my wife is keen for me to try this. Is boiled up coopers yeast ok as nutrient in this one or would proper yeast nutrient be better?bullfrog wrote:Oh, sorry guys, just saw this.Lachy wrote: +1 On bullfrog sharing that recipe.
It really is as basic as basic gets. Steep one or two vanilla beans (split down the middle) and one or two cinnamon sticks in hot water straight from the kettle (just enough to cover them) for ten to twenty minutes. Toss all that in the fermenter with some yeast nutrient, top up with 22L of Aldi apple juice (good because not only is it cheap but it also has no preservatives) then pitch a pack of US05.
I've recently been playing around with adding tannic acid, too, to get that Normandy style of cider. I've found that around 10-15g works well. Just add that to the steep.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
Yeah, mate, any old nutrient will do the job. I'd keep the tannic acid out if your missus is going to be drinking it, too. I've found that the finer gender don't care for it that much.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
Excellent, definitely going to put a batch on soon. As suggested will skip the tannic acid for now. Cheers
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
Two cinnamon sticks gives a pretty noticeable flavour. I find that cinnamon can be quite an overpowering flavour but two sticks is enough for it to be noticeable but not overpowering.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
Got one of these brewing at the moment. Just juice was on special for less than $1 per litre so I got a mix of apple and apple/pear. Boiled two cinnamon sticks, two packs of morgans yeast for nutrient in a litre of water. Added some vanilla extract at flame out. Tipped the whole lot in the fermenter, added the juice and a pack of US05. Sitting int he fridge at 18C. As I watched the cinnamon sticks floating in the top of the fermenter (through the glad wrap) I wondered whether I should have strained them out but it was too late by then, I'm fairly confident that they were boiled enough to kill any nasties. Its quite interesting watching a cider ferment through the glad wrap as there is no krausen, so instead of seeing the slow blup blup of gas through krausen you just see the constant production of tiny bubbles fizzing to the top.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
No need to have strained the cinnamon out. I don't even boil them, just steep, and haven't had a problem yet.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
+1 for not worrying about boiling the cinnamon, although I don't think it would do any harm either.
I remember reading about it when I was growing chillies and it's meant to have anti-fungal and anti-bacterial properties. The book was called "The Pepper Garden" by Dave De Witt (I wonder if he's Belgian) and Paul W. Bosland. I gave the book away when I got gastritis from eating too many chillies so can't tell you the page number. I used to make up a cinnamon and chammomile tea spray for my seedlings. I never lost one to damping off or wilt, which are fungal diseases.
Cheers
Paul
I remember reading about it when I was growing chillies and it's meant to have anti-fungal and anti-bacterial properties. The book was called "The Pepper Garden" by Dave De Witt (I wonder if he's Belgian) and Paul W. Bosland. I gave the book away when I got gastritis from eating too many chillies so can't tell you the page number. I used to make up a cinnamon and chammomile tea spray for my seedlings. I never lost one to damping off or wilt, which are fungal diseases.
Cheers
Paul
2000 light beers from home.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
Forgive me for being a pedant, but if it didn't have actual tea in it then it's an infusion, not a tea. It's a pet peeve of mine at the moment; every company under the sun marketing their herbal products as 'teas' when they're nothing of the sort.emnpaul wrote:I used to make up a cinnamon and chammomile tea...
That being said, interesting to know about cinnamon's properties. I'll still be steeping it but interesting nonetheless.
EDIT: Fixed quote html.
Last edited by bullfrog on Friday Aug 26, 2011 5:42 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Rekorderlig Cider
Pedant.
I did say "meant to" have anti-fungal and bacterial properties. My "research" is anecdotal only. Since I didn't purposeley innoculate my seedlings with verticillum and have a control batch that I didn't spray, I can't be 100% that it works. But it did seem to work.
Come to think of it yeast is a fungus and it's still fermenting your cider...

I did say "meant to" have anti-fungal and bacterial properties. My "research" is anecdotal only. Since I didn't purposeley innoculate my seedlings with verticillum and have a control batch that I didn't spray, I can't be 100% that it works. But it did seem to work.
Come to think of it yeast is a fungus and it's still fermenting your cider...

2000 light beers from home.