Right so, this would appear to be something of a can of worms. :^)
I have been doing a bit of research and had a discussion with the wife as although she complains of mess and the utility room being full of DJs, she is an appreciative joint consumer of the end product. We agree that palatability trumps fizzicality - i.e something tasting nice is more important than it being fizzy - but having both would be nice.
I am not going to mess with my current batches, but as I am going to be pressing apples again next week I can feel a case of empirical experimentation coming on! So I'm thinking of a trial of 5 different approaches using 5 DJs set up as follows so that the end results can be compared side by side - please check my figures and critique the approaches!:
1 - control sample
Ferment to dry: O.G 1080 (500g sugar) = 11%
Condition for 1 month
Bottling 1 teaspoon priming sugar per 1l
2- sweetener + prime
Ferment to dry O.G 1080 (500g sugar) = 11%
Condition for 1 month
Add wine sweetener to taste (
yah, boo!)
Bottling 1 teaspoon priming sugar per 1l
3- lactose + prime
Ferment to dry O.G 1080 (500g sugar) = 11%
Condition for 1 month
Add 100g lactose (maybe 150-200g?) (
@An Ankoù thanks for the pointer on this one)
Bottling 1 teaspoon priming sugar per 1l
4- over prime + pasteurize
Ferment to dry O.G 1080 (500g sugar) = 11%
Condition for 1 month
Bottling 3 teaspoon priming sugar per 1l
Test PET bottle - when firm:
Pasteurise bottles in boiling water to stop fermentation
5- "maxed" yeast - no prime
Ferment until stop (1.010?) from O.G 1110 (875g sugar) = 13.5% (
@Hagrid thanks for suggesting)
Condition for 1 month
Bottling no priming sugar