ictas presentation 2

22
HARD CIDER AND CIDER PRODUCTION

Transcript of ictas presentation 2

Page 1: ictas presentation 2

HARD CIDER AND CIDER PRODUCTION

Page 2: ictas presentation 2

HARD CIDER 101• An alcoholic beverage made from fermented apple juice or juice

concentrate

• Sweet, semi-sweet, or dry

• Still or sparkling

• Typically made from blends of various apple juices

• ABV is typically 5-8%

• Cider apples are referred to as ‘spitters’ in the industry

• Cider apple types: sweet, bittersweet, sharp and bitter sharp,

Page 3: ictas presentation 2

CIDER PRODUCTION IN THE US• In colonial America, hard cider was the most popular alcoholic beverage.

• The vast planting of apple trees made access to apples easy and affordable.

• Prohibition marked the end of an era for hard cider

• Resurgence of hard cider due to the spike in number of microbreweries

• Cider sales increased exponentially (73 percent over the last 5 years)

Page 4: ictas presentation 2
Page 5: ictas presentation 2

CIDER PRODUCTION IN VIRGINIA

• First cidery opened in VA: Foggy Ridge Hard Cider in 2006

• More than 10 cideries in operation in VA today

• The soils, plentiful rainfall and temperature during the summer make VA ideal for apple production

• VA apple sales contribute around $235 million to our economy (6th largest producer in U.S.)

• First state to have a governor proclaimed ‘Cider Week’ (Nov 14-24)

Page 6: ictas presentation 2

MAKING CRAFT CIDER: WHAT KIND OF CIDER ARE YOU LOOKING FOR?• Cider apples impart tannin, acidity and table apples give sweetness

• From there you find which apples give you the perfect balance

• Yeast strains can also greatly influence the flavors in a cider

• Aging, chaptalization (sugar addition), flavorings, carbonation?

Page 7: ictas presentation 2

PROCESSING THE APPLES• Washing the fruit is extremely important, despite ‘traditions’

• Typically a hammer mill is used to pulverize apple into must

• Various types of presses can be used

• Surface area between sheets in press increases the juice yield

• Enzymes

• The juice is pumped into refrigerated steel fermentation tanks

• Leftover pomace often fed to livestock

Page 8: ictas presentation 2
Page 9: ictas presentation 2

FERMENTATION• Unlike barley used for beer making, apple juice is already full of sugar for the

yeast to consume

• The amount of sugar in the juice has a direct correlation with the final alcohol content

• Different yeast strains, temperature of fermentation, and nutrients present affect how long fermentation lasts but is typically 3-4 weeks.

• Fermentation yields alcohol as well as large amounts of CO2

• Proper sanitation during all aspects of the cider making process is KEY!

Page 10: ictas presentation 2

SMALL BATCH

Page 11: ictas presentation 2

NOT SO SMALL BATCH….

Page 12: ictas presentation 2

CIDER RESEARCH AT VIRGINIA TECH

• Effect of crop load on polyphenols in apples

• Levels of varying phenolic compounds in different VA apple cultivars

• Effect of crop load on Yeast Assimilable Nitrogen

Page 13: ictas presentation 2

EFFECT ON TOTAL PHENOLICS BASED ON VARYING CROP LOAD

• Phenolics come in several classes but in cider these compounds add tannin and astringency

• Apple trees are biennial and require thinning of apples each year to deter a year of non-fruit bearing

• Phenolic compounds of various types are in different parts of the apple (skin, flesh, seeds)

• Countless research available on grape cluster thinning and its effect on phenolics

Page 14: ictas presentation 2
Page 15: ictas presentation 2

EFFECT OF CROP LOAD ON TOTAL PHENOLICS

• Crop loads on 14 year old Ramey York apple trees were altered to low, medium and high based on the size of the tree

• Apples were harvested and processed into juice and cider

• Absorbance readings taken by Folin-Ciocalteu Assay Method and compared statistically to find differences in total phenolics between treatments

• The results have been quite encouraging

Page 16: ictas presentation 2
Page 17: ictas presentation 2

RESULTS

Treatment (Juice) GAE mg/L

Low 38.8♠

Medium 81.8♠

High 153.6♦

Treatment (Cider) GAE mg/L

Low 336♠

Medium 291♣

High 211.5♦

Page 18: ictas presentation 2

SO… WHAT AM I HOPING TO DO WITH ALL THIS? • Put VA Ciders at the forefront of the cider movement in the U.S.

• Help farmers in VA maximize labor, crop efficiency and apple cider quality; which in turn leads to great quality ciders

• Change standard cider making practices from simply ‘efforts of tradition’ to practices that are based on scientific research

• Have fun while doing all of this

Page 19: ictas presentation 2

A FINAL NOTE ON TASTING

• It is a personal goal of mine to abolish ‘wine snobbery’ all together

• Do not be intimidated by long, drawn out tasting notes or opinions of others

• You like what you like and you taste/smell what you smell in your wine/cider

• Despite interesting descriptors of wines or ciders used by ‘experts’ (starfruit, toasted banana leaves, tobacco, anise, whatever)

• We all have different tastes and we are all learning!

Page 20: ictas presentation 2

AT THE END OF THE DAY, ALL THAT MATTERS IS THAT PEOPLE ENJOY CIDER!

Page 21: ictas presentation 2

QUESTIONS? COMMENTS? CONCERNS?

Page 22: ictas presentation 2

WHAT’S NEXT FOR US?

Sensory Analysis!!!!

(Lets drink

It!!!)