|
|
|
|
|
by biotinker
1722 days ago
|
|
Cider-making does have inherently less hygiene standards than beer-making. The apples have been outdoors for their entire lives, and spraying them with water only does so much. The cider itself is acidic enough that it's not a terribly hospitable environment for many microorganisms that would flourish in, for example, beer. Freshly pressed cider has plenty of other microbes swimming around in it, and while Campden tablets eliminate some, much of the success of the fermentation relies on your desired yeast simply out-competing and denying oxygen to the others. Beer, by contrast, is boiled for an extended period of time prior to fermentation. This gives a sterile starting point, but doing something similar to cider will radically change the flavor. |
|
Especially with scrumpy; it often (usually?) tastes pretty vinegary - not like commercial cider at all. I think it's much more refreshing and thirst-quenching than sweet commercial cider.
I like to cook with cider vinegar. It's refreshing, and relatively sweet. I'd say the difference between cider vinegar and scrumpy really comes down to a matter of degree.
It's surprising that vinegar is refreshing; but roman soldiers used to carry sour wine (vinegar) with their equipment.
And when a roman soldier (supposedly) passed a cloth soaked in vinegar to Jesus on the cross, he was passing him the most-refreshing thing he had - it wasn't some kind of sarcastic taunt.