Quality Factors in Cider Making. from

Similar documents
Part 1. Traditional Methods Part 2 Homebrew Techniques

MAKING WINE WITH HIGH AND LOW PH JUICE. Ethan Brown New Mexico State University 11/11/2017

Debris on equipment can harbor micro-organisms that could spoil your homemade ginger beer, even with proper sanitation.

Joseph A. Fiola, Ph.D. Specialist in Viticulture and Small Fruit Western MD Research & Education Center Keedysville Road Keedysville, MD

Practical management of malolactic fermentation for Mediterranean red wines

TESTING WINE STABILITY fining, analysis and interpretation

United States Association of Cider Makers: Cider Style Guide

Co-inoculation and wine

Daniel Pambianchi 10 WINEMAKING TECHNIQUES YOU NEED TO KNOW MAY 20-21, 2011 SANTA BARBARA, CA

Christian Butzke Enology Professor.

STUDY GUIDE CCP Level 2: Certified Pommelier

Cider Making Made Easy.

USACM Cider Style Guidelines Version Fall 2018

Aging with different types of oaks: adaptations according to berry profiles and winemaking.

MIC305 Stuck / Sluggish Wine Treatment Summary

File Name: Melomel-Blackberry Mead (Blackberry Melomel) Real Date Day Protocol Date

Necessary equipment. - Food grade fermenter or bucket with airtight lid - Airlock - Syphon tube - Bottles or a pressure barrel (keg) with S30 valve

Sour Beer A New World approach to an Old World style. Brian Perkey Lallemand Brewing

Heirloom and Hard Cider Apples for Commercial Growers. Ian A. Merwin

O P T IM IZ IN G H O P QUA LITY. Zac German Technical Manager z

Natural cork - an extraordinary product

How to make your own wine at home...and have lots of fun..

INSTRUCTIONS FOR CO-INOCULATION

AN ENOLOGY EXTENSION SERVICE QUARTERLY PUBLICATION

THE HOME BREWER'S RECIPE DATABASE BY LES HOWARTH

Notes on acid adjustments:

membrane technology forum Frederick Liberatore & Jamie Vinsant Minneapolis, Minnesota 3-5 June, 2015

Annual Report Evaluation of Apple Cultivars for Hard Cider Production. Summary

Beer Clarity. Brad Smith, PhD

Making Hard Cider. A Guide for Small-Scale Producers. Lee Elliot Williams. Bellevue College. Technical Writing Certificate Program

Interactions of forage quality and quantity, their implications in grazing and hay management

Forest Fermentables: Basic wine making steps

MLF tool to reduce acidity and improve aroma under cool climate conditions

PRACTICAL HIGH-ACIDITY WINEMAKING STRATEGIES FOR THE MIDWEST

PickYourOwn.org. Where you can find a pick-your-own farm near you! How to Can your Own Mixed Fruit Cocktail

Consumers and Fruit Quality

Traditional Method Sparkling Winemaking

Stuck / Sluggish Wine Treatment Summary

MSU Fruit Team Apple Maturity Report Northwest Region Reports

TECHNICAL INFORMATION SHEET: CALCIUM CHLORIDE FLAKE - LIQUOR TREATMENT

For Beer with Character

Beer Clarity. Brad Smith, PhD

1 a) State three leadership styles used by a food and beverage supervisor. (3 marks)

Promise for the Future -- Impressions of some of the later Swenson cultivars --

Team Harvard Ecureuils Harvard University

During this November trip 9 wineries have been visited 5 wineries had been audited in March and 4 were new to join the program.

Peaches and nectarines

Phenolics of WA State Wines*

Brewing Water Derek Colby

Petite Pearl Culture and Winetasting. Tom Plocher, Plocher Vines Hugo, Minnesota

MSU Fruit Team Apple Maturity Report Northwest Region Reports

ì<(sk$m)=beibch< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

Learn to Home Brew: A Series of Tutorials Using Mead

PRACTICAL HIGH- ACIDITY WINEMAKING STRATEGIES FOR THE MIDWEST

MSU Fruit Team Apple Maturity Report Northwest Region Reports

FRUIT TREES/SHRUBS 2014

GARDENING WEEK 9 EXTENDING THE LIFE OF YOUR GARDEN: FOOD PRESERVATION AND SEED SAVING

HARVEST & POST-HARVEST PRACTICES. Harvest Fermentation Drying Micro-fermentation HARVESTING FERMENTATION

r u r a l l i v i n g y o u r w a y Farm C r e d i t o f t h e v i r g i n i a s a u t u m n

EXAMPLES OF WHAT PLATES CAN LOOK LIKE

Viniflora Oenos. Product Information. Description. Packaging. Physical Properties. Application. Storage and handling. Version: 7 PI-EU-EN

Introduction to the Practical Exam Stage 1

AWRI Refrigeration Demand Calculator

Canning and Preserving the Harvest FALL 2018

Sticking and mold control. TIA Tech 2017 Los Angeles, California Steve Bright

The malting process Kilned vs. roasted Specialty grains and steeping Malt extract production

Acid Management in the Vineyard

PickYourOwn.org. Where you can find a pick-your-own farm near you! How to Make Homemade Canned Pears!

KENWOOD. October 2015

on organic wine making

Promising new apple cultivars for direct market and Pick Your Own. Jon Clements and Duane Greene University of Massachusetts Amherst

Botella. Tasting Notes

FHRS FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Fruit Preparation Chapter 13. Completion

Christian Butzke Enology Professor.

Enhanced Maturity Trial Wine Evaluation Isosceles Vineyard, Te Mata Estates Maraekakaho Rd, SH50, Hastings

IT S TIME TO BRING MERLOT BACK

Applying Brewing Better Beer

ONTARIO OVERVIEW. J o h n K e l l y, P h D E x e c u t i v e V i c e P r e s i d e n t

Viniflora CH11 Product Information

Please do not write on or remove from the classroom.

ABCs OF WINE SALES AND SERVICE

Viniflora CH11. Product Information. Description. Packaging. Physical Properties. Application. Storage and handling. Version: 6 PI-EU-EN

THE WINE ADVOCATE #229 STEPHAN REINHARDT, 28th Feb 2017

Novozymes & Gusmer Enterprises WINE ENZYMES SOLUTIONS

Youth Explore Trades Skills

DR. RENEE THRELFALL RESEARCH SCIENTIST INSTITUTE OF FOOD SCIENCE & ENGINEERING UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS

Specific mediterranean characteristics. Mediterranean climate

MAY WINE CLUB NEWSLETTER

AN OVERVIEW OF THE BREWING PROCESS. Jared Long Head Brewer Altitude Chophouse and Brewery

Introduction to the Practical Exam Stage 1. Presented by Amy Christine MW, DC Flynt MW, Adam Lapierre MW, Peter Marks MW

INTERPRETATION GUIDE AN INTRODUCTION TO USE AND INTERPRETING RESULTS FOR PEEL PLATE YM TESTS. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT CHARM SCIENCES.

The delicate art of wine making. Alfa Laval Foodec decanter centrifuges in the wine industry

Maple sugaring and the science of sap flow

HARVEST SERIES Dealing with challenging grapes. Eglantine Chauffour, Enartis USA

LEHUI MICRO BREWERY EQUIPMENT 2009/ 8

Peach and Nectarine Cork Spot: A Review of the 1998 Season

Strawberry Planter Update

is pleased to introduce the 2017 Scholarship Recipients

CONCENTRATED MILK. Dairy Processing Technology 2012/2013

Transcription:

Quality Factors in Cider Making from

INTRODUCTION Why this search for quality in cider? The main themes of this talk: 1- The quality of the fruit The varieties of apples The way of growing them 2- Blending for a well balanced cider 3- Controlling the fermentation process

Why bother making high quality ciders? The image problem of cider (compared to wine). Time, $ and energy investment. Pleasure, pride and satisfaction. If you are to make cider, then please make it good!

1 GOOD CIDER NEEDS GREAT APPLES Whoever thinks that any apple is good enough for cider had better not engage in the business. J.M. Trowbridge The Cider Maker s Handbook, 1917

Great apples for an excellent cider Even the best cider maker in the world can t make a great cider if he just has any apples We could say that an apple tree is an apples tree, and it produces apples, whether for eating or for cider. BUT...

Growing apples for cider Not the same varieties. is different Need for special varieties in cider to obtain balanced blends. Visual appearance: the cider drinker will not see the fruit! Blemishes / insect damage / scab are OK. Flavor optimization. Harvest, handling and storage. Apples harvested at full maturity? Quality of the cider starts in the orchard

What s the problem with our apples? (mainly commercial) McIntosh, Spartan, Empire We need to introduce special cider varieties in our orchards to improve our blends. Grown primarily for market. Cultural practices and orchard management optimized for appearance, size, handling: not always most appropriate for high quality cider. Imagine a wine maker who would make his wine with Flame Seedless grapes grown for table grape market

What is a great apple for cider? High in sugar. High in flavor. Perfectly ripe. Appropriate variety mix: late varieties (or some mid-season), same number of low vs high acidity, some with high tannin content.

Varieties: cider-apple classification The cider-apple classification in England doesn t take into account the sugar content; only acids and tannins are considered. High acid / low tannin High acid / high tannin Low acid / high tannin Low acid / low tannin

The varietal selection The ideal cider orchard in terms of apple varieties in North-East America would be a mixed orchard: Half of trees of traditional varieties, with some russets and crabs: Golden Russet, Rubinette, Honeygold, Northern Spy, Liberty, Cortland, Virginia crab, Wickson, and even some Mac Half of trees as low acidity cider apples with tannins (bittersweet): Yarlington Mill, Dabinett, Muscadet de Dieppe, Major, Chisel Jersey, Douce de Charlevoix...

Wild seedlings Best cider-appropriate apples for our climate and soil still undiscovered. Huge number of seedling trees in the wild. Assume 1 out of 10 is good for cider, 1 out of 100 is great this leaves an incredible number of cider-appropriate apples out there waiting to be discovered by adventurous cider makers. Build a genuine North American cider-apple pomona and tradition.

Cultural practices Cortland apples, commercial vs unmaintained

Cider-bush orchard Steve Wood s Poverty Lane in NH Cider apples of best quality obtained from relatively larger trees in medium or low density orchards. 3-piece airlock S-shaped airlock

2 BLENDING A well-done cider is a subtle blend of different varieties, adapted to their terroir, each bringing a touch of acidity or bitterness, its richness in sugar and its perfume. François Moinet Le Cidre ; Produire et vendre, 2009

Moment for blending Apples before pressing, or juices before fermentation. Important to insure safe ph (< 3,8) As it goes. When making one large batch with apples of different ripening season. After fermentation. Fermentation of varieties separately. Fine adjustments of batch to insure consistency

The ideal blend Sugar - as high as possible (natural sugar). Min SG 1.045 (11 Brix). May be as high as SG 1.065 (16 Brix). Acidity - normal range of TA between 4.5 and 7.5 g/l as malic acid. Tannins - according to style of cider. Many (most?) North-american cider blends are too low in tannins and would profit from use of more tannin-rich apples in blend.

Sugar-acidity balance graph Ideal blend Most of our apples

3 FERMENTATION PROCESS There are 2 fundamentally different strategies for the control of the fermentation. We ll have an overview of their influence on the quality of the cider.

Two schools of thought The «Keep the yeast happy» approach: Modern, scientific way to control fermentation, Consistent, nice clean flavor, less complexity, Standard for «New World» type cider. The «Make the yeast struggle» approach: Traditional methods to slow down fermentation, Less reliable, but more complex, richer flavors, Used in most European small craft cideries. Easier for hobbyist than for commercial.

Yeast/nutrients strategies Happy yeast: Cultured yeast inoculation in sterilized must, Nutrient additions for strong complete fermentation, Sweetening of cider often required. Struggling yeast: Wild or cultured yeast, must generally not sterilized, Keeving and/or racking for reduction of nutrients, Fermentation may be incomplete, leaving natural residual sugars.

Sulfite Sulfite use has been a very important factor in the improvement of cider quality: Sulfite for must sterilization is to insure the selected cultured yeast will develop without competition, keeps unwanted microorganisms away. Sulfite for cider protection is for insuring keeping quality between moment of bottling until in the drinker s glass. Some cider makers (organic/hobbyists) choose not to add sulfite to the must or cider. If taking that route, be aware there are more risks of a spoiled batch.

Sulfite - quality problem Excessive dosage of sulfite at bottling is an important quality issue. Always measure free SO 2. Free sulfite remaining at moment of drinking can be tasted by many people, and this is extremely unpleasant. «A little extra sulfite won t do any harm» is plainly wrong, because taste of sulfite in the cider is a much worse problem than slight «funkiness».

What s the problem with our ciders? Inappropriate fruit Unbalanced and/or Deficient blends Correction of ciders Flavoring, Hops, Sweetening Stabilization Chemicals

How can we improve the quality of our ciders? By: Going out and tasting ciders in France, England, Spain, also CiderDays in Mass, Planting trees of true cider apple varieties, Managing cider apple orchards for flavor optimization, Experimenting with different fermentation control strategies, Avoiding overdosing of sulfite, Keeping a critical look at our cider.

CREDITS Title slide and book cover photos by Bill Bradshaw. All other photos and art work by Claude Jolicoeur unless otherwise mentioned. Design help by Melissa Jacobson. The New Cider Maker s Handbook is published by Chelsea Green Publishing, White River Junction, VT. www.chelseagreen.com See the author s website: cjoliprsf.ca to download this presentation, and for more on fruit and cider. Meet the author on an Internet discussion forum: Cider Digest Cider Workshop GOA Network