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Luckily, we have a source of raw cider. It keeps well in the fridge

but ferments so quickly at room temp that I can't seem to catch it

before it goes round the bend. I'm wondering if it's supposed to

ferment at a much lower temp (it's been hot here - low-high 70's).

Can't get the in-house brewer interested.

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Thanks - we just tasted this last batch, to which I added come concord grape

skins and a little honey, and it's good, not too hard but tasty. A wee trace of

grape flavor, still a little sweet and the brewer says it's about 3%. It's in

the fridge and I'll pitch a new batch from the noble yeast growth on the top.

I don't have grains but I'm sure sometime soon...

How about culturing cider with scoby?

Luckily, we have a source of raw cider. It keeps well in the fridge

but ferments so quickly at room temp that I can't seem to catch it

before it goes round the bend. I'm wondering if it's supposed to

ferment at a much lower temp (it's been hot here - low-high 70's).

Can't get the in-house brewer interested.

>

>

>

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>>>That is a good point - it has been really warm here too. The second

batch did better, but its not perfect yet. I find it is unlike

commercial alcohol when you get intoxicated off of it and I have

recently developed a distaste for commercial alcohol. I guess there

are too many additives, how else could it taste the same every time?

euch. Anyway, I guess thats what I wasn't prepared for - the

variation in the taste, the timing to catch it where you like it just

perfect...

Lana,

Skilled brewers can create consistent flavors from inconsistent ingredients,

although some of the best beers I've tasted have been one-off. For a craft

brewer, it has more to do with careful selection and procedures than additives.

You're right, and similar swills have all kinds of crap in them, and are

not worth drinking anyway - look for beer made by the Reinheitsgebot purity

laws, which means only water, grain, yeast, hops (German imports, most real

microbrewed beers) and you are assured of no additives.

Know your brewer the way you know your farmers. A lot of them are pretty cute,

by the way, and they're so passionate about what they do, which is cuter.

Better yet, make a little homebrew (full mash, not extract). When it's good,

it's really good. And women were the original brewers, you know...

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