johncrobinson
Landlord.
Thats more like it.!!!!!
You might want to stand the demijohn on a tray,(In case of eruption)
You might want to stand the demijohn on a tray,(In case of eruption)
Its 1042 I have the same hydrometer - all the colours are a nuisance. Its the line under the numericals that denotes each 10 units. What is more the reading is usually wrong 'start beer' is between 1030-1040. 95% of the beer kits I do usually start 1046 to 1055
My first batch this year - mostly cookers - started at 1040 so I added a bit of sugar to get to 1048. Within 10 days it was down well below 1000. Apologies for my ignorance but is it the journey - i.e. how much it drops - that determines the ABV rather than the starting point?Just checked on my hydrometer - the reading is actually 1042
With cider yeast you'd end up with an FG of about 1002 which would give you about 5.2% ABV.
But I suspect champagne yeast would go lower, so higher ABV.
Yes, it's OG minus FG x 1.31Apologies for my ignorance but is it the journey - i.e. how much it drops - that determines the ABV rather than the starting point?
Ahhhh that may explain the impact of last year's batchYes, it's OG minus FG x 1.31
Additional information here as well.This book will help, "craft cider making" by Andrew Lea. Mr Lea worked at the now closed Long Ashton cider research center. It really is the only book you need.
Andrew Lea's book really is all you need. Bit technical in places but brilliant.Additional information here as well.
https://groups.google.com/g/cider-workshop
Looks you could do with a blow off tube. Take the air lock out and put some plastic tube in the bung. The other end in a jar with sterliizing solution and stand it in a sinkIt’s going bloody mental now!
Last year I did about 5 gallons.Just made my cider for the year. 30 litres with small equipment is a real pain in the jacksy and every year I promise myself I'll upgrade to at least a decent electric scratter - any advice on that one would be great.
Every year, I make the cider the same way: dunk the apples to get the worst of the crud off, mill them and press them. Start the first 10 litres with a sachet of Young's cider yeast and then continue topping up the fermenter until it's full. It's a most unsanitary process and I'm always amazed that nothing goes wrong. If I tried to make beer that way, I'd be pouring most of it down the sink. Or would I?
When I was in Poole, I used to use a garden shredder to mill the apples, does anyone else use one?
Should I just cut the apples into halves/quarters and then put them in the press, fire into a DJ and then add some yeast?
Almost, but not quite. You will need to turn your cut apples into a pulp before you press them in order to get the juice out of them, using a "scratter". This can be simple as a bucket and a length of 4 by 2 that you then ram up and down into the bucket of chopped apples, or there's a rotating attachment that goes through the lid that is attached to an electric power drill, or you can get into the realms of building a hopper and rotating drum yourself, or buying a ready-made solution. Just pressing the cut apples will only get you a fraction of the juice that you will from having a finely-pulped "pomace".
Personally I use an electric waste-disposal unit.
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