The time has come for me to stop
talking about committing cider and put my money where my mouth is, or
some other more appropriate analogy. The holdup was because I ordered a special sweet Mead/Cider
yeast to replace the champagne yeast I bought when I got my first
pile of equipment. I was told that the champagne yeast would
produce a bone dry beverage and I would rather have a cider with some
personality, sweetness, and some body...
Cider, Apple Cider, to be exact. Sorry,
I'm still jonsing to see Skyfall.
Apple Cider 'take 1' was achieved
thusly:
Ask for a recipe.
Instantly decide to modify recipe with
absolutely no cider brewing experience and relying only on the
ridiculously good luck that protects idiots and children. I'm 28.
Make of that what you will. What seemed like such a bright addition
to me beyond brown sugar? It's the holidays, so mulling spices just
seemed like a smashing addition.
Apparently mulling spices in Lawton
requires the skills of James Bond to obtain. Alas! I am Bondless, but
it can't be that hard to get the tasty holiday spice I was going for,
so I decided to abandon the quest for commercial mulling spices and
appeal to google. For the first time in the history of my personal
universe, Google was no help. All the recipes involved exotic stuff like
cinnamon sticks and orange peel. Wal-Mart was out of cinnamon sticks
and I didn't have any oranges.
Time for plan 3. Do it anyway. Dionysus
will protect me.
I already had my five gallons of apple
juice. I read the labels of each brand and the only one that didn't
have either added grape juice or used chemical yeast and bacteria
inhibitors was the dirt cheap, three dollars a gallon off, off, off
brand. Dirt cheap off brand apple juice only had apple juice and
asorbic acid, which is vitamin C, so the yeast I tossed in should do
fine, be happy, and make lots of little yeastlings.
Should. But I'm getting ahead of
myself.
I dragged a clean bucket and lid
upstairs along with an airlock, the giant spoon we bought after the
last debacle, and the StarSan in the spray bottle. I shook it and it
made bubbles, proving it was still good. Bubbles are very important
to the brewing process. <-- Remember that, there will be a test
later.
The yeast came in a bag about the size
of a regular ziplock sandwich bag called a 'Smack Pack'. Cute. The
directions on the back said to hold it in one hand and break the
inner bag by... wait for it... smacking it. In theory the bag would
inflate over the next three hours as the yeast activated. It felt
like breaking a glow stick. I tossed the bag on the counter to come
up to room temperature and promptly forgot about it.
Seven hours later:
I walked back into the kitchen and
remembered what I'd forgotten. By then it was ten at night and I was
just doing my evening cruise through to make sure that there wasn't
anything perishable left out. LIKE THE YEAST. LEFT OUT BY ME.
Disaster averted. The bag didn't look like it inflated that much, but
maybe it had and then the CO2 had bled off. I wasn't supposed to
leave it out for seven hours. My bad.
I sprayed the bucket and spoon really
well with the Star San and let it sit. Then I got the one pound bag
of dark brown sugar, the only part of the original recipe, and added
some water to make it into a syrup. I also dumped in about a 1/3 cup
honey, 1 tbs cinnamon, 1 ts allspice, 1ts nutmeg, and 1 ts cloves.
While that was heating up, I dumped the apple juice into the bucket.
Two minutes later, the spiced sugar mix
was simmering. I let it simmer for a couple of minutes just to make
sure to kill any bacteria or wild yeast that was on the spice, then
poured it into the apple juice. It smelled and tasted divine. I
waited a few minutes and stirred it up really well before I sanitized
my hands and ripped open the yeast package, and that's when I
discovered that I fail at breaking glow sticks.
The inner nutrient packet was still
intact, floating in a sea of inert yeast. Balls.
I suppose the slight inflating was only
the package coming to room temperature.
On the back it said that I could just
pitch it directly if I wanted, so after some sweary words, I did. I
figured it was going into pure sugar, the tiny head start given by
being able to follow the directions and break a simple plastic bubble
probably weren't going to matter that much over the long run.
Unless I'd managed to kill the yeast by
letting it sit out four hours longer that it was supposed to.
I didn't know what to do, so I fell
back on the old standby of charge blindly ahead and let things work
themselves out. As a life philosophy, it's worked for me so far.
A quick spritz of Star San on the lid
and the bucket was sealed. I secured the airlock without mishap and
left it to ferment. Early the next morning I checked the airlock. No
bubbles. The bubbles coming up in the airlock would be a sign that
the yeast was doing its thing and producing alcohol. But it had only
been overnight. Maybe it needed longer?
I checked it that evening.
No.
Bubbles.
Now I started to freak out again. Maybe
it had been too hot when I pitched the yeast. Maybe all the yeast was
dead! I hadn't bothered to use a thermometer. I dug the yeast package
out of the trash and read it again. 24-48 hours before activity would
be obvious. Maybe I just needed to give it a little more time. I
checked it again.
The next morning:
This calls for drastic measures. I
sanitized my hands and gently pried up the lid for a peek inside.
IT WAS DISGUSTING! Which meant it was
fermenting! There was scummy layer on the top and the faintest trace
of alcohol was very evident when I cracked the lid. I hadn't killed
it! I pressed the lid back down and when I did:
I get bubbles in the airlock when I
press the lid down. I suppose there isn't enough pressure in there to
force the bubbles up through the airlock, or maybe it wasn't sealed
all the way and the CO2 was oozing out the side, but it's bubbling
right now.
Now, if it only tastes as good as it
smells...
The .gifs were used with permission from http://justburntsomepopcorn.tumblr.com/ and y'know, Pixar. Pixar not so much with permission.


