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Homemade hooch is cheap and easy

From: garrison@efn.org (Garrison Hilliard)


Hard Cider

Homemade hooch is cheap and easy

 Michelle Gienow Home hard-cider-making apparatus--yep, that's it.
EMAIL STORY | PRINT STORY | 3 Comments and 8 Reactions

By Michelle Gienow | Posted 1/20/2010
Watch a video demonstrating how to make hard cider.
Once upon a time, apple cider--both sweet and "hard" fermented
(alcoholic) cider--was early America's favorite beverage. Cider was
simple to produce, and in a time before municipal sewage treatment and
indoor plumbing, it was often safer to drink than water. These days
cider's more of an autumnal novelty drink, but I recently became
obsessed with making my own. I was looking for a good supply of local,
organic, and affordable fruit juice to get my family through the
winter, and since oranges don't grow in Maryland, apple cider seemed
the natural answer.

Two things about me: I'm frugal, and also brazen. For the past several
years, I've been tracking apple trees in and around Baltimore City:
you'd be amazed--apples are everywhere once you start looking,
including a dozen-plus well-bearing trees along the median of Perring
Parkway near Morgan State. The brazen part comes in handy for knocking
on the doors of total strangers to ask if I can pick their apples. The
land owners have been really generous with access to the unharvested
fruit from their untended trees (one Pictures of People">lady asked in astonishment, "I
have apples?"), so each fall I have access to basically as many
scabrous, weird-looking apples as I can find time to harvest. Many
stayed behind as too twisted and wormy for eating, but I always sighed
regretfully at the waste--once upon a time these culls, or waste
apples, would have been used for making cider.

My problem was, of course, that lacking a cider press, I had no way to
render them into cider. Fortunately, during a monthly gathering of
other local-food obsessives (Baltimore Food Makers,
foodmake.org--check it out), I happened to mention my unfulfilled
desire to my friend Brian Murphy. Brian, a mechanical engineer, enjoys
Storage Building">building random contraptions; having never seen a cider press before,
he watched a couple of YouTube videos and then basically threw one
together from wood scraps in his basement over the course of a
weekend.

Squeezing your own cider is an insane amount of work. Even if you
don't build the press and pick the apples yourself, as we did, it's
still brute manual labor to grind or chop the fruit into small
pieces--the better to squeeze forth more juice--and then, load them
into the pressing basket, wind down the plate until your arms threaten
to fall off, wind it all the way back up again until they actually do,
dump out the mealy leftover apple bits, clean out the press bag (sort
of like a giant tea bag), and then repeat the process several dozen
more times. You don't have to get far into it before just buying some
freaking cider at the freaking farmer's market starts to seem like a
much better idea.

So why not just buy cider when there's terrific apple cider available
from Maryland orchards? First, I've been unable to find organic local
cider, and apples are a pesticide-intensive crop; since cider
essentially concentrates a third of a bushel of apples (14 pounds of
fruit) into one gallon of squeezins that's way more toxic exposure
than I'm comfortable with, especially for my two juice-guzzling little
boys. Furthermore, food safety laws demand that commercial cider must
be pasteurized, which basically means boiling the cider to kill
pathogens. Even newfangled UV pasteurization, a light-based
cold-temperature process, still degrades the raw product's complex and
fantastically fresh flavor. I've been buying some marvelous local-ish
raw, organic cider from Pennsylvania, but it's pricey; saving nine
bucks a gallon by making my own rendered me a highly motivated grinder
and presser.

I was delighted simply to be making regular old sweet cider, but then
Brian suggested we take things to the next level and ferment some of
our product into hard cider--as in homemade hooch. My first reaction
was, is that even legal?

It turns out that fermenting your own hard cider is in the same
category as home-brewing beer--unlike distillation (the making of
actual moonshine), brewing is legal without a license so long as you
don't sell your product. It's also insanely easy: Basically, I poured
a gallon of home-pressed cider into a ceramic crock, sprinkled some
yeast on top, covered it and set it off to one side of the basement.
Two weeks later, I had hard cider. It seemed like a minor miracle:
Though I don't think it would win any taste tests, my homemade hard
cider was dry and crisp and very drinkable--plus it packed an
undeniable alcoholic wallop. And it won't even make you go blind!

Curious to see if the process would work with commercial cider, Brian
bought some Whole Foods organic pasteurized apple juice. Once again,
it was unbelievably easy: I sprinkled in some yeast, stoppered the jug
with an airlock, and stuck it in a cool corner. A month later--really,
cider's usually done fermenting after 10 days or so, once it stops
emitting bubbles, but hey, I was away for awhile--I took an
exploratory swig. To my consternation, the results were even better
with the WhoFoo apple juice over our laboriously produced homemade
cider: a luscious, effervescent, full-bodied brew I would put up
against any commercial hard cider out there.

You, urban-apartment dweller, can totally do this: Make a gallon of
hard cider for about five bucks (a comparable quantity of Woodchuck:
$14. Satisfaction of brewing your own alcohol: priceless).

Home fermenting your own cider
Rendering plain old apple cider purchased from the farmer's market or
grocery store into extremely drinkable alcoholic hard cider is
amazingly easy, and requires very little in the way of special
supplies.

The one inescapable ingredient, other than sweet cider, is yeast. You
can find special brewing yeast at homebrew stores or on the internet;
a packet costs about $4 and treats five gallons of cider. I used
Saflager S-23, sort of at random--a lager yeast, it was what the brew
store had on hand. There are also yeasts specifically made for cider
fermentation but really any wine or beer brewing yeast will work,
though different strains will produce varying flavors and even alcohol
levels in the final ferment. S-23 works best at around 50 degrees
which happens to be the nearly constant temperature in my
basement/garage so it turned out to be a good accidental choice. Also,
it's what's called a "pitchable yeast" meaning that you just dump it
in, with no proofing or pretreating required. Since I'm lazy this was
another nice side benefit to my uninformed yeast purchase.

You can buy your apple juice/cider in whatever volume you like--half
gallon, gallon, 55 gallon drum. (Apple juice is basically apple cider
that has been strained; thus, apple juice is clear and cider is
cloudy). In my experience the best hard cider is brewed from fresh
stuff from a local orchard, but in a pinch the bottled supermarket
stuff works too. No matter what you buy, the critical thing is that it
must contain no preservatives. Preservatives are wonderful for keeping
food fresh by killing the microbes that cause spoilage, but they will
also kill the yeast so your cider will not ferment. Check the label;
if sodium benzoate or potassium sorbate are listed, don't buy it,
though it's unlikely farmer's market cider will have preservatives.

Cider and yeast in hand, the only other thing you need is either a
latex balloon (nothing special, just your regular happy birthday party
balloon) or an airlock, a little reuseable $2 plastic device available
from wherever you got your yeast. Either of these items function to
let air out of the container as the cider ferments--little bubbles of
carbon dioxide will form, indicating active fermentation is taking
place--while preventing outside air from entering, carrying with it
both extra oxygen that will turn your lovely alcohol to vinegar, and
also wild airborne yeasts which could wildly skew or even ruin your
brew.

Fermentation is our goal, wherein the yeast eats sugar and produces
alcohol the same way that a cow eats grass and produces manure. Since
apple cider has a fairly high natural sugar content the yeast has
plenty to eat, but you can boost the final ferment's alcohol content
by adding sugar, honey or any other natural sweetener so long as it
does not contain preservatives. Straight cider usually ferments to
hard cider containing about 5% alcohol.

The actual brewing process is quite simple:

1.Drain a couple ounces of cider from the container--we will be
brewing in the jug that the juice comes in, and fermentation can make
a full container overflow.
2.Read the yeast packet and /do what it says/. There will be
directions on the package as to whether you need to activate the yeast
(usually, soaking the yeast in warm water for a few minutes before
adding). Some yeasts are "pitchable"-- i.e., you just dump 'em in (in
which case see step 5).
3.Put the cap back on the jug and shake the container vigorously for
about 30 seconds. Yeast needs oxygen, so shaking the container aerates
the cider and gets everything off to a good start.
4.Add the yeast to the juice. If your yeast packet contains enough to
treat 5 gallons, remember to measure out the appropriate amount for
the volume of cider you're fermenting.
5.Insert your airlock of choice. You can buy a plastic airlock from a
brew store; it sits in a rubber cork that fits the neck of your jug.
Or you can just use a balloon stretched across the opening. Be sure to
poke a needle hole near the top of the ballon; a tiny air escape will
keep the balloon from flying off the container as the CO2 bubbles out
and inflates the balloon. With an airlock you put a small amount of
water in it, to prevent outside air from getting in, and you can see
the occasional bubble rise up. The balloon will actually stand up and
even inflate a little bit, indicating that the yeast is doing its
work.
6.Find a resting place. Yeast supposedly likes the dark, so a cool
closet would work. I've also had jugs sit out on my kitchen counter
and turn out just fine, so whatever. The important thing is to be
aware of the preferred temperature of your yeast strain; some like it
very cool, around 50 degrees Fahrenheit, others as high as 70.
Depending on temperature, aeration, and quantity of yeast used,
fermentation will take between five and ten days; when the bubbles
start slowing down, you have probably extracted most of the alcohol
out of the available sugars. Now you can start drinking! If there's
any left, cap it and put it into the refrigerator, which will cause
the yeast to "crash"--i.e., precipitate out of the cider and gather on
the bottom. Don't worry, this is nutritional yeast, it's good for you,
though if you're really picky you can carefully decant the hard cider
into smaller bottles and leave the yeast behind. Fermented cider is
naturally a little bit carbonated, so fizziness is good, but if you're
keeping it for awhile in your fridge you may want to occasionally
twist the cap a little to bleed off any over-carbonation.




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o Homemade hooch is cheap and easy




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