Thanks for the link - very helpfulIf you haven't seen it already, I really recommend this brilliant website which helped me to use microscales, precipitated chalk and malic acid to make a turbo cider with Aldi apple juice that you could mistake for being off the shelf, crystal clear amber colour and medium dry with good carbonation, not prosecco level like is often the case with homebrew cider (due to high attenuation of fruit sugars) but sparkling.
http://www.cider.org.uk/frameset.htm
On the left, under The Science of Cidermaking, check out juice and fermentation.
If you feel it is too highly carbonated and/or dry, I recommend measuring the gravity over the course of a few days, twice a day (say, Friday evening, Saturday morning, Saturday evening, Sunday morning and Sunday evening) evenly spaced apart to get a good idea of the rate of fermentation. Decide what final gravity you want for the style you like, bottle it and then based on the time that elapses for your brew to achieve the gravity points needed, then pasteurise the bottles to end further fermentation. It worked a charm for me but you may want to keep the bottles in a shed or garage to be on the safe side.
Sorry if this is stuff you already knew well, just thought better shared than not. Who are you getting your yeast from? I assume it's proper cider yeast.
…That’s not to say I am not open to experimenting. Each batch has been a progression where I have tweaked something then decided if I like or not.Ah fair enough, if that's what you like then that's fair! Very lucky to have access to all those. Do you think you'll ever try propagating to plant more?
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