Hi all,
Recently joined the forum as I am need of some sound advice regarding my homebrew cider and feel a little out of my depth.
To put you in the picture, during September 2018 I made 4 gallons of cider from picked apples, using the guidance of Whittenham Hill cider pages.
First fermentaion was 9 days before transferring off the lees to 4 indiviudual gallon demijohns.
The juice had a starting SG of 1.045 and finished at 1.004 a couple of weeks later (5.5% by estimate). I left the cider in the demijohns for 6 months to condition and bottled 3 gallons a couple of days ago(10/03/19).
From trawling online info' and using priming calculators I made a syrup of 17g table sugar and pitched this into each of the demijohns prior to racking into individual bottles, hoping to make caronated cider.
As a test, I have demijohn at room temperature to observe any changes.....As of yet, I have seen no indication of fermentation. I fear that the yeast contained within may be long dead and that I have wasted my time in bottling some of it.
My questions....
1) Having left the cider for 6 months with all fermentation long ceased - Is this too long to add sugar and then bottle to create sparkling cider? Should I have done this much sooner before fermentaton ended or is this irrelevant?
2) Is 17g of table sugar to 1 gallon of cider really enough to promote noticable carbonation? - It seems very little. I'd envisaged adding 1 tsp per bottle like with beers etc.
3) My cider is stored under the stairs which allows a stable temperature of 13 to 15'C. Is this warm enough to allow for fermentation with the priming sugar I have added?
4) I had hoped to monitor the carbonation by opening bottles over the coming weeks and then pasteurising when at a suitable level. If no carbonation occurs am I correct in saying all I've done is sweeten my still cider slightly?
If there is no indication of change from the gallon I have, what should I do? I was under the impression that I could theoretically keep adding sugar to the cider which would keep making it stronger until the alcohol was so high it killed the yeast? HELP!
Recently joined the forum as I am need of some sound advice regarding my homebrew cider and feel a little out of my depth.
To put you in the picture, during September 2018 I made 4 gallons of cider from picked apples, using the guidance of Whittenham Hill cider pages.
First fermentaion was 9 days before transferring off the lees to 4 indiviudual gallon demijohns.
The juice had a starting SG of 1.045 and finished at 1.004 a couple of weeks later (5.5% by estimate). I left the cider in the demijohns for 6 months to condition and bottled 3 gallons a couple of days ago(10/03/19).
From trawling online info' and using priming calculators I made a syrup of 17g table sugar and pitched this into each of the demijohns prior to racking into individual bottles, hoping to make caronated cider.
As a test, I have demijohn at room temperature to observe any changes.....As of yet, I have seen no indication of fermentation. I fear that the yeast contained within may be long dead and that I have wasted my time in bottling some of it.
My questions....
1) Having left the cider for 6 months with all fermentation long ceased - Is this too long to add sugar and then bottle to create sparkling cider? Should I have done this much sooner before fermentaton ended or is this irrelevant?
2) Is 17g of table sugar to 1 gallon of cider really enough to promote noticable carbonation? - It seems very little. I'd envisaged adding 1 tsp per bottle like with beers etc.
3) My cider is stored under the stairs which allows a stable temperature of 13 to 15'C. Is this warm enough to allow for fermentation with the priming sugar I have added?
4) I had hoped to monitor the carbonation by opening bottles over the coming weeks and then pasteurising when at a suitable level. If no carbonation occurs am I correct in saying all I've done is sweeten my still cider slightly?
If there is no indication of change from the gallon I have, what should I do? I was under the impression that I could theoretically keep adding sugar to the cider which would keep making it stronger until the alcohol was so high it killed the yeast? HELP!