It’s been a full week of harvesting, storing food for the months ahead, and continued storm cleanup at Coppertop.

Since Hubby has had it in his mind to make hard (alcoholic) cider this year from our bushels of apples, the first step in making hard cider is of course to juice the apples to make fresh cider. Fresh cider is raw apple juice that hasn’t gone through a filtration process to remove particles of pulp or sediment. It takes about one third of a bushel to make a gallon of fresh cider.

Today we rented an awesome Correll cider press from a local farm store. Correll presses are handmade in Veneta, Oregon, by Correll brothers Bob and Dan.  The apple shredder on the unit we rented is electric, which eases the whole process considerably. To start things off on our driveway which became Cider Central today, Hubby began shredding at least four huge blue buckets of our three varieties of apples.

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The next stop along the cider press is a basket for pressing the milled apple pieces, also known as the pomace. We discovered that old pillowcases work well as nets or filter bags for each basket and allow for easy lifting of the apple bits. The second basket has a pressing lid and a pressing screw.

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The beautiful, fragrant cider then flows from the bottom of the second basket into a vessel  or bowl you place below the press.

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As of right now, Hubby has already pressed 10 gallons of cider. That means he’s pressed over three huge blue buckets of apples. Since we have to return the press in the morning, he continues to make trips down to the orchard, attempting to pick all the ready and waiting apples.

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Both of us keep coming up with more ideas for using this liquid gold, from serving it as mulled cider at holiday parties to allowing some to turn into apple cider vinegar. (If the hard cider doesn’t turn out as planned, we may actually have gallons of cider vinegar!)

The process for turning all this fresh cider into fermented, hard cider is relatively simple and involves some sulphates, some yeast, and lots of foam. More on that another day.

My dear mom helped in today’s ciderworks!

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6 responses to “Saturday Ciderday”

  1. Home-made booze is a lot of fun (both making and drinking!)

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    1. 😉

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  2. Congratulations. I’ve often wanted to do this, but you actually have!

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    1. We’re hoping for a great result. It’s invigorating to try new things, isn’t it?

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  3. […] new to us, and we expect to make mistakes. The apple pressing was great fun, which I wrote about here. Thanks to a bountiful apple harvest at Coppertop, 10 gallons of fresh cider stored in two huge […]

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  4. […] I find that I can’t write or really do anything without thinking about my mom. I’ve mentioned her so frequently here from the start, most recently in my last post. Mom left us and went to her glorious, eternal home on December 6 at age 90 after a mercifully rapid decline. What an amazing woman and mother she was, raising six children mainly solo as my dad passed young. There are no adequate words here. The reality of her passing slowly sinks in more each day, yet the sadness is fresh each morning. She was this garden blog’s biggest fan, as my photos and writing gave her glimpses into our life north of her California home. Mom got quite a few chuckles from my writing, too. Although gardening and writing seem inconsequential I’ll make an effort to continue posting because I believe she would want me to. Mom’s legacy is LOVE, the unconditional, life-changing variety. My overall emotion is thankfulness for having almost 58 years in her loving presence. A few times in the past five years when I wrote about her are:  Divine, End Of August 2015,  and  Saturday Ciderday. […]

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