My Page
My Cookbooks
  • Main Cookbook
    Premium Members can have more than one cookbook in this list. They can keep private cookbooks just for organizing their recipes, or share them publicly with friends or the world. Learn more
My Account
Bookmark and Share

Add this recipe to your:

Send this recipe:

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 (483g)

Recipe makes 10 servings

The following items or measurements are not included below:

1/2 teaspoon pectic enzyme powder

acid blend

grape tannin

yeast energizer

campden tablets

Calories 306
Calories from Fat 4 (1%)
Amount Per Serving %DV
Total Fat 0.5g 0%
Saturated Fat 0.1g 0%
Monounsaturated Fat 0.0g
Polyunsaturated Fat 0.2g
Trans Fat 0.0g
Cholesterol 0mg 0%
Sodium 14mg 0%
Potassium 562mg 16%
Total Carbohydrate 76.7g 25%
Dietary Fiber 0.6g 2%
Sugars 72.8g
Protein 0.5g 1%

detailed view...

how is this calculated?

Hard Apple Cider

Recipe #2714 | 116 days | add private note

By: Dave
Aug 16, 1999

SERVES 10 -16 , 1 gallon (change servings and units)

Ingredients

Directions

  1. 1
    crush and dissolve campden tablets in a cup of warm water and mix well with the FRESH apple juice in your primary fermenter.
  2. 2
    Let stand over-night. Mix in all other ingredients except yeast making sure everything is dissolved, then sprinkle yeast over top of juice and cover with plastic sheet and ferment 3 to 5 days.
  3. 3
    Rack (siphon) into secondary fermenter and attach air lock.
  4. 4
    Rack again in 3 weeks.
  5. 5
    When all fermentation is finished, rack into a clean vessel and add 2 oz of white sugar and gently stir well.
  6. 6
    (I usually put the sugar into a bit of water and dissolve it first by boiling it in the microwave) When sugar is well mixed, bottle and age 3 months.
  7. 7
    This will give you a crisp, carbonated hard cider.
  8. 8
    * the more sugar you add, the more alcohol you will get, but the longer it will take to ferment. I would recommend from 1/2 to 1 pound per gal/4.5 l and not more than 2 lbs.

Questions about this recipe?

Spot an error in this recipe?

Browse similar recipes by category

Featured Reviews for This Recipe

From: The Real Jefe

On Jun 30, 2009

0 people found this review helpful

  • Was this review helpful to you? YES | NO
  • From: kgm

    On Feb 22, 2003

    we are using fresh pressed apple cider made from at least 5 different types of apples all pressed with the skins on for their processing..do we still need to add the tannin and pectin?

    0 people found this review helpful

  • Was this review helpful to you? YES | NO
  • From: mead monster

    On Jan 23, 2006

    Great classic recipe. To answer a simple question here, pasteurized juice is fine, you just can not have "sorbates" in the ingredients, it's what cheap companies put in juices to prevent further fermentation, which makes making further fermentation nearly impossible. It probably also causes cancer, but who knows....

    3 people found this review helpful

  • Was this review helpful to you? YES | NO
  • From: cvickers

    On Feb 8, 2006

    You should add the pectic enzyme in any event. Apple juice from any source, store-bought or fresh-squeezed, will be very high in pectin. The pectic enzyme breaks down the pectin naturally and prevents it from clouding the cider.

    1 person found this review helpful

  • Was this review helpful to you? YES | NO
  • Read all 5 reviews

    Sister Sites: Food Network | HGTV | HGTVPro | DIY | Fine Living | Great American Country | FrontDoor.com Real Estate | Ecologue

    Comparison Shop for Kitchen Appliances & Utensils at Shopzilla & BizRate

    © 2009 Scripps Networks, Inc. All rights reserved