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Friday, November 9, 2012

Super Easy Hard Cider Recipe (Apple, Cranberry, and Raspberry)

Last year, I made some hard cider that was delicious and gave you a kick in the pants with its 8.5% alcohol by volume. It was also very, very expensive to brew. Getting freshly pressed, organic, unpasteurized cider can be quite costly (unless you have a fruit press). Due to the cost of graduate school, I don't quite have the funds to make fancy hard cider this year, so I decided to brew some with store-bought juice.

I went to Costco and bought 4 gallons of 100% fresh pressed, albeit pasteurized, apple juice. I also bought 1.5 gallons of cranberry raspberry juice blend (again, 100% juice). It is important to note that neither of these juices had any sodium-based preservatives in them, and if you're planning on making your own cider, make sure you also get juice without preservatives. Your yeast may not propagate if the juice has preservatives in it.
 Although I could have used only apple juice, I thought that the tart and sweet flavor of the cranberry raspberry juice would give the cider a nice flavor profile. Feel free to experiment, however! Think of the apple juice as the canvas and the other juice(s) as the paints.

In the secondary fermenter
For this recipe, you will need the following:
  • 6-6.5 gallon sanitized fermenting bucket or carboy for primary fermentation
  • 5 gallon sanitized carboy for secondary fermentation
  • 5-5.5 gallons of juice
  • 3-5 lbs. of white table sugar (your resulting beverage will be 7-12 % alcohol, depending on how much sugar you use). If you'd like a very low alcohol cider, you can just not add any sugar at all; your resulting beverage should be around 3-4% alcohol.
  • Wyeast 4766, Cider Yeast
  • Sanitized racking equipment
  • Yeast nutrient, if adding more than 3 lbs. of sugar (add 1 tsp per gallon of juice).
 Here is the process:
  • Heat one gallon of juice until it is warm enough to dissolve the sugar in it. Do not boil the juice.
  • Stir in your desired amount of sugar until it is completely dissolved.
  • Mix the sugar/juice mixture and yeast nutrient (if needed) into your sanitized primary fermenter with the rest of the juice.
  • Allow the mixture to reach room temperature and then pitch your yeast.
  • Place the cider out of direct sunlight in an area that is between 60*F and 70*F. Allow to ferment for 2 weeks.
  • Siphon the cider into the secondary fermenter (do not use your mouth to siphon, as you will probably contaminate the cider with bacteria). Allow to ferment in the same area for another 2 weeks.
  • Bottle or keg the cider. Drink and be merry!

4 comments:

  1. Do not use your mouth to siphon? Oh my God!, was that really needed?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wow super easy right on time for the holidays

    ReplyDelete
  3. Can you add carbonation tablets to the bottles ?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Just racked my cider for week 2 of fermentation. Seriously can't wait to see how this turns out. Been homebrewing for a few years, who knew cider was so simple!

    ReplyDelete

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