tonyhibbett
Landlord.
This year I have a huge crop of apples of unknown variety but possibly a Cox's variant, Early Windsor. Hard, tart (pH 3.5) and about 8.5% sugar. I once attemted to make wine from them but it turned to jelly because I did not use pectic enzyme and the pectin content was high. THe next time I used the enzyme, but the dry wine was rather too acidic. On third attempt, I combined it with grape juice cocentrate, honey, dried elderflowers and oak chips. More complicated and expensive, but good wine.
This time I've got a whole fruit juicer, which takes 3 apples at a time, extracting 40% cloudy juice, with brown froth and about 20% sediment. I've just read that breaking down pectin adds extra methyl alcohol to fermented fruit juice in quantities to produce a headache when drunk
So my question is: has anyone used a juicer to make apple wine or cider, and was pectic enzyme required?
This time I've got a whole fruit juicer, which takes 3 apples at a time, extracting 40% cloudy juice, with brown froth and about 20% sediment. I've just read that breaking down pectin adds extra methyl alcohol to fermented fruit juice in quantities to produce a headache when drunk
So my question is: has anyone used a juicer to make apple wine or cider, and was pectic enzyme required?