Yeast problem

This past Saturday I stirred up a cider. Just the normal store bought juice that I use all the time, and a bit of the raspberry wine base. Pretty standard stuff.

Usually I use Nottingham yeast for my ciders. Finishes a bit sweeter and has the apple-ish esters that go great in a cider. But this time I used new yeast.

The Brewer’s Best Cider House Select. This is the yeast that comes with those fantastic cider kits. And while I couldn’t find much info on the yeast it’s self, I have had the ciders made with those kits many times and it was great.

There isn’t much to do in cider when starting with bottled juice, except to add some nutrient, stir and put in the 67F chamber.

I do a staggard nutrient, meaning add some at pitch, some on the third day with a good stir to release some Co2. This helps the yeast out, and really keeps the fusels down.

Day 2. No signs of life from this yeast. If this would have been my normal Notty yeast I would have been worried. But this stuff is new to me so maybe it’s a slow starter.

Day 3. Still nothing. Now I’m worried. But it’s also nutrient day, so I’ll be opening it up to see whats going on. Maybe my lid just wasn’t on right.

Nope. Nothing going on in there at all. Even stirring got no push of bubbles from Co2 escaping like it normally would if there was activity. Some yeasts are slow starters, but after 3 days…time to do something.

Well I gave it another dose, and threw in the Nottingham. Next day, blam! We got the normal Notty heavy action.

I don’t know what was up with that cider yeast. Dont know if it has a super lag. But 3 days is a looong time with nothing. But from the stir it didn’t look like anything bad took over. So we should be good.. I hope

Raspberry

About a month I picked up this raspberry wine base. Gonna use it twice today.

1/2 of it is going into a cider. So nothing fancy. Just store bought apple juice, and some cider yeast.

Gravity on the cider going in was 1.084. With no added sugar, that was a bit surprising.

Next up I threw all my left over grains together and came out somewhere in between a dunkle and a bock. OG of the beer was 1.058. with the rest of the Raspberry base it hit 1.080

Kinda worried though about the amount of raspberry in the beer. That’s only about 2 qts in the carboy. Buy when I used some hot wort to rinse the jug out and poured it back into the kettle,, I could already taste raspberry just from the rinsed out bit in the full batch.

Well we will see.

Beers, ciders, meads

Been busy brewing and stuff the last few weeks. Brewed twice at the local Homebrew shop for club demos and to replenish the sample stocks there. I even took the Mash and boil on a road trip brew.

Oh road trip brewing with this Mash and boil is soooo much less hassle. This is gonna make for some summer traveling. I will have to make a little checklist post for this. 

Also I have really been exploring the cider and mead side of things. I just kegged up a lower gravity (7%) Saison mead. And bottled a higher gravity (9%) Blueberry cider! Oh,, almost forgot the Farmers Market cider. Each week at the local market I bought “something” and froze them for the end of season cider. This year it was apple/red currant/strawberry/sour cherry/raspberry/beet ciderIMG_20181114_143905_687.jpg

As good as these new forays turned out, I may have to split time being a brewery and a cider mill. I think its fun for a lot of reasons. First being,, there is more involvement it feels like. With beer you do your 4 hour thing and you dont look at it for a month.  With these quick ciders, I can piddle around with the whole fruit/veg prepping, staggered nutrients, degassing, bottling… things like that. Might be a turn off for some,, but its puts me back in touch with my products, like the old days!

Take a look at this Blueberry cider!

  • 3 gallons apple juice, fresh pressed or cheap stuff. They both work 
  • 2- containers frozen concentrate blueberry/pomegranate mix
  • 2 lbs sugar
  • 3 tsp nutrient (split)
  • US-04 or any English strain yeast
  • Mix everything and 2 tsp of the nutrient. shake it up hard to oxygenate. A day after fermenting add the other 1 tsp of nutrient.
  • After 3 weeks bottle or keg @ 3 volumes