My First T/C (Toffee)

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DamianH

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Started my first turbo cider on Monday, using this recipe....

500g Honey

1 pack yeast of your choice. Popular choices are Montrachet, Champagne, Safale S-04 and Nottingham.

1 14oz tin Pear Halves

1tsp Yeast Nutrient

1 Vanilla Pod or Vanilla Extract
First, collect empty bottles, preferably green pints - enough for the entire batch.
Heat the honey in a relatively large saucepan, just on the edge of boiling (but not boiling) until it's dark in colour, and the smell resembles candy floss/marshmallows - around 20 mins.
Don't be afraid here - it won't burn the pan and stays very liquid, but it will froth up quite a lot.
Blend the pears using a food processer. If the pears come in flavored water or syrup, just chuck it all in, providing there's no preservatives. If they come in plain water, drain them first.
When Honey is successfully "burnt," take off the heat and allow to cool. Add 1 carton of Apple Juice and the pears, and stir thoroughly until all honey is dissolved and mixture is consistent. Blending in the Apple Juice and Pears while the honey is still hot will result in a cloudy "Scrumpy" type cider that will never settle. The choice is yours!
Add this mixture to a sterilized demi-john, top up with water or apple juice if need be, check gravity, and when cool enough add yeast and nutrient, and seal with airlock.
Add corn sugar/glucose or honey if you want it stronger. Allow to ferment completely.
When fermentation is complete, check FG. The honey is likely to have created some non-fermentables so it might be slightly sweeter than your usual fully fermented cider.
Rack into an identical secondary vessel passing through a muslin bag. The ingredients create a lot of gunk, so doing this increases your yield.
Wrap Vanilla in a small muslin bag, and suspend in the cider using fishing line. Check taste every few days until you're happy - the cider should be close to settled by the time it has taken the taste. Alternatively, skip this stage and add vanilla extract when priming.
When taste is to your liking and cider has settled, bottle into pint bottles, adding 1/2tsp priming sugar per bottle.
Bottle condition for 3 weeks before drinking. Store in the fridge and drink cool without ice - prepare second trip to the supermarket to make more. Just don't drive, whatever you do.

Using a 5gal fv so upped the ingredients to; 20 litres aj, 2kg natural clear honey, 4 tins of pear halves, and added more nutrient.

The house still smells sickly sweet after "burning" the honey.

OG 1066

Will let you know how it turns out...
 
Just being picky, but...
All that messing about with Real Fruit? Not really the "turbo" spirit!
And, isn't this a perry rather than a cider?

Sounds like it should turn out a good drink though
 
Pick all you like oldbloke!

I'm very new to this so not 100% on the definition of turbo cider, thought the use of supermarket aj made it T/C?

The recipe described it as toffee apple cider so I went with that.

I'm thinking of priming this with more "burnt" honey to add to the flavour, but not sure how much to use. The jar states 81gs of sugar per 100gs, so I'm assuming I use 20% more honey than I would sugar?
 
Well, ever since Babycham, the word "perry" has been devalued, so ittends to get called pear cider nowadays.
Yeh, supermarket juice is turbo, but fiddling about with real pears - too much hassle, even tinned! Borderline.
Let me know how it comes out, I've tried a couple of perries from pear juice and not been entirely happy with them.
 
Just taken a sample. Gravity down to 1000 (8.7 abv according to the calculator). Tastes a bit "rough" at the moment, with only a tiny hint of pear. Stirred in a little sweeter which improved it a lot.

I'm going to leave it in the primary fv for as long as possible, could somebody tell me how long it's ok to leave it in there for (want to get as much flavour from the pears as possible, without ruining it).

Thanks, Damian
 

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