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Winemaking (rec.crafts.winemaking) Discussion of the process, recipes, tips, techniques and general exchange of lore on the process, methods and history of wine making. Includes traditional grape wines, sparkling wines & champagnes. |
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Hi folks,
I've got a huge pile of crab apples, mmmm... Tomorrow I'm all set to follow Jack K's recipe at http://winemaking.jackkeller.net/reques40.asp soaking the apples, then crushing them and fermenting on the pulp. I planned to use 6lb of apples to the gallon, plus a couple of pounds of eating apples for a bit more sweetness. But a thought crosses my mind; it may be a daft thought, but it's there now: boiling the apples, quite thoroughly, and straining off the juice - as I've been doing already this evening to make crab apple jelly. Would I be missing out on tannin from the skins and pips by doing it this way round, or will the boiling see to that? And presumably it'll need some fairly heavy pectic enzyme treatment, too? TIA cheers, robin -- www.newforestartgallery.co.uk www.badminston.demon.co.uk www.robinsomes.co.uk www.amazonian-fish.co.uk www.pisces-conservation.com www.irchouse.demon.co.uk www.blackwell-science.com/southwood Trust me, I'm a webmaster... |
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"Robin Somes" > wrote:
> But a thought crosses my mind; it may be a daft thought, but it's there > now: boiling the apples, quite thoroughly, and straining off the juice - > as I've been doing already this evening to make crab apple jelly. Would > I be missing out on tannin from the skins and pips by doing it this way > round, or will the boiling see to that? And presumably it'll need some > fairly heavy pectic enzyme treatment, too? Boiling will extract a lot of flavour. It will also destroy a lot of important "stuff" and guarantee a pectin haze. Ferment your apples on the skins, and press when the ferment ends --- about 20 days if you go at room temperature, 10 days if you heat it to 70F. |
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In message >, Negodki
> writes > <boiling apples> >Boiling will extract a lot of flavour. It will also destroy a lot of >important "stuff" and guarantee a pectin haze. Ferment your apples on >the skins, and press when the ferment ends --- about 20 days if you >go at room temperature, 10 days if you heat it to 70F. "and guarantee a pectin haze." Chilling words... Many thanks for pointing that out. I've crushed them all with the recommended length of 4x4 timber, and they sit waiting for the yeast tomorrow. cheers, robin -- www.newforestartgallery.co.uk www.badminston.demon.co.uk www.robinsomes.co.uk www.amazonian-fish.co.uk www.pisces-conservation.com www.irchouse.demon.co.uk www.blackwell-science.com/southwood Trust me, I'm a webmaster... |
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I started a gallon of Crabapple about a month ago. I boiled the apples
per the recipe. I have not tasted it and it is still sitting on the lees at this point but it is very cloudy. Tom and Shelley "Negodki" > wrote in message ... > "Robin Somes" > wrote: > > > But a thought crosses my mind; it may be a daft thought, but it's there > > now: boiling the apples, quite thoroughly, and straining off the juice - > > as I've been doing already this evening to make crab apple jelly. Would > > I be missing out on tannin from the skins and pips by doing it this way > > round, or will the boiling see to that? And presumably it'll need some > > fairly heavy pectic enzyme treatment, too? > > Boiling will extract a lot of flavour. It will also destroy a lot of > important "stuff" and guarantee a pectin haze. Ferment your apples on the > skins, and press when the ferment ends --- about 20 days if you go at room > temperature, 10 days if you heat it to 70F. > > |
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