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Sunday, 28 July 2024

A new cider season is under way

According to the Royal Horticultural Society, "biennial bearing is a problem in some apple trees, where they crop heavily in one year and then produce little or nothing the next." Thinning the fruit and pruning the trees can help; I do neither and so my 100% organic apples appear only on even-numbered years.

As in 2022, this year, I will have an embarrassment of apples. The trees are full. Below: the trees nearest the street get the most sunlight, and hence bear the most fruit.


Below: you can see the apples. I, however, see gallons of cider.

Now, the apple you see here is the antonówka, a traditional varietal that's become almost impossible to buy in the shops. Tangy, sharp yet sweet, it is the ideal apple for baking apple charlotte (szarlotka), but it's also the perfect cider apple. However, the antonówka biała, or śmietankowa ('white' or 'creamy') apples that my trees bear don't keep well; a few weeks after picking, the fruit begins to decompose from within. This means that to make cider from them, I have to work fast. In 2022, I managed to make 45 litres. This year, I aim to make more (it has to last two years, after all!).

The limiting factor is my slow juicer, which can only make half a litre of juice at a time. The juice needs to be strained, as the pulp of the antonówka apple is dense. Even running the juice – and later the cider – through a sieve three times still results in a half-centimetre or more (see below) of sediment at the bottom of each half-litre bottle. Still, tastewise, this is an excellent apple from which to make cider. It's sharp and fruity and strong.

Windfall apples need to be rinsed in running water, cut open to check for inhabitants; only clean apple flesh goes into to the juicer. The cider-making process uses a lot of water, for the apples and for keeping all the utensils clean. Rather than cram the cider-making into the last weekends of September, this year I have made an earlier start. Storms and high winds knock apples from the trees prematurely. Today and yesterday, I have been clearing the ground under the trees to make it easier to pick recently fallen apples.

Left: the first five-litre demijohn (removed from its basket). This is a trial batch, in this photo, I'm half-way into the filling process. The finished product will be clear; the sediment settles as the cider ferments. (The juice has already been filtered twice and there will be a third filtration before bottling.) Selection of apples is crucial at this stage; minimum bruising, no wormholes – and the apples must be large – juicing small ones is suboptimal, a waste of time and energy. One innovation this year – I'm cutting the apples to avoid juicing the pips. This both improves flavour and reduces sediment.

The cider remains in the demijohn until the bubbling of carbon dioxide through the water-trap pipe ceases; then it will be filtered once more through a sieve and bottled.

Left: one of my last bottles from 2022. Note the clarity, but also see the amount of sludge at the bottom! It must be said that the amount of sludge depends on the order of bottling, with the last bottles contain the most. However, even the first bottles will have some, however careful I am. 

As with bottle-conditioned beers that have yeast sediment at the bottom, careful storage and pouring results in an optimal drink. Unless you prefer cloudy cider, in which case turn the bottle over a few times before opening.

The bottling process should be complete by mid-December, after which the cider will be kept at a steady +8C in my cellar for bottle-conditioning, and will be ready for drinking in the summer of 2025.

Cider-making every other year means more time to learn from mistakes and hone the process. One way or another, this is a pure product. Unsprayed apples, orchard tended without use of petrol-powered mowers or chainsaws. 100% natural cider.

This time last year:
An eternity in Heaven?

This time two years ago:
Habit or obsession?

This time three years ago:

This time five years ago:

3 comments:

  1. Hi Mike, I know the problem well. I have two very big old apple trees that variously produce huge amounts which I’ve used to make cider, juice, apple snow, cake and countless pies.
    The best way we have found to get the juice is to use proper kit. We borrow it from a local apple group. The principal piece is powerful chopper which is like a large funnel with high speed rotating blade at the bottom. You simply throw a bucket of apples in the top and almost instantly apple pulp gets ejected into the bucket below. The pulp then gets put into a bag ready for pressing in a medium sized screw press, which is very easy to do. It’s about 10x as quick as chopping apples by hand.
    Whilst I admire your frugality in using a juicer, there are times in life when we have to practice what we preach - Investment, Investment, Investment! Then you can sit back and surf the wave of your increased productivity and not let any apples go to waste! Hurrah!

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  2. Hail Riccardo!

    I have been looking into larger cider presses and watching videos. It does seem a chopper (attached to a normal power drill) is the key bit of kit. 'Local apple group' = the difference between rural England (friendly cooperation) and rural Poland (suspicion and competition). Local apple farmers here tend to have long-term contracts with supermarkets and tend their orchards intensively, spraying their trees incessantly, installing hail-proof netting, pruning, lopping etc. The działkowicze (urban folk with a place in the country) are content with a few jars of apple jam a season. Investment in a chopper and cider press, yes; this season – probably not yet (will leave for after retirement :-)

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  3. Would leap frog over the drill version and go for the “5th generation” piece of kit. Show the apples who’s boss!
    https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/375365986278

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