Modern Cider: Simple Recipes to Make Your Own Ciders, Perries, Cysers, Shrubs, Fruit Wines, Vinegars, and More
192Modern Cider: Simple Recipes to Make Your Own Ciders, Perries, Cysers, Shrubs, Fruit Wines, Vinegars, and More
192Hardcover
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Overview
Homebrew guru Emma Christensen presents accessible hard cider recipes with modern flavor profiles that make for perfect refreshments across the seasons. This lushly photographed cookbook features recipes for basic ciders, traditional ciders from around the world, cider cousins like perry, and innovative ideas that take ciders to the next level with beer-brewing techniques and alternative fruits. With Christensen's simple, friendly tone and 1-gallon and 5-gallon options, this book's fresh and fizzy recipes prove that cider-brewing is truly the easiest homebrewing projectmuch easier than brewing beerwith delicious, fruit-forward results! So whether you're a home cook trying your hand at a batch of simple Supermarket Cider or homemade Apple Cider Vinegar, a city dweller fresh from a day of apple picking in the countryside, or a homebrewer ready to move on to the next brewing frontier with Bourbon Barrel-Aged Cider and Spiced Apple Shrub, Modern Cider is your guide.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781607749684 |
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Publisher: | Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed |
Publication date: | 08/22/2017 |
Pages: | 192 |
Sales rank: | 699,749 |
Product dimensions: | 8.20(w) x 8.60(h) x 0.90(d) |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
introduction
I made and bottled my inaugural cider almost six years ago while working on my first book, True Brews. Up to that point, my association with ciders had been fairly limited to the cheap variety served to shy freshmen like myself at parties in college, which tasted nearly identical to the stuff served to five-year-olds except it was fizzier and tended to make us giggly. I wasn’t sure what to expect from my homemade version, but I was fairly sure I could at least achieve giggle-status.
But then my first cider absolutely blew me away. It was bright and effervescent, boozy but sophisticated, tart but tempered with the lingering sweetness of late-summer apples. This was definitely a cider for grown-ups, fully deserving of a pint glass and not a sippy cup.
Perhaps even more surprising, this cider was incredibly easy to make. I picked up a gallon of apple juice at the store, added yeast and a few other ingredients from my brew kit, and left it to do its fermentation business in the corner for a few weeks. As a homebrewer, I’m used to reserving whole afternoons to making batches of beer, and as a winemaker, I’m accustomed to months of wait time before wine becomes drinkable. Compared to this, making cider felt like cheating. Delicious cheating.
The wheels in my head started to turn. If I could make cider this good with basic store-bought juice, what could I make with actual heirloom cider apples? What about fresh juice from a local orchard? Or even (if I dared) the mass-market stuff served to five-year-olds?
That was the beginning. This book is a map of where I’ve traveled in the years since.
Table of Contents
contentsintroduction // 1
turning apples into juice // 7
setting up your cider house // 23
turning juice into cider // 37
beginner ciders // 63
Basic Apple Cider // 64
A Touch Sweet Cider // 66
Supermarket Cider // 67
Better Supermarket Cider // 69
Farmers’ Market Cider // 70
Old Granny Fresh-Pressed Cider // 72
Single-Variety Fresh-Pressed Cider // 73
Traditional Fresh-Pressed Cider // 75
the cider family // 77
Perry (Pear Cider) // 78
Cyser (Honey Cider) // 80
Vanilla Perry // 81
Black Currant Perry // 83
Buckwheat Cyser // 84
Perry Cyser // 85
Crisp Sparkling Cyser // 86
modern ciders // 89
Black and Blueberry Cider // 90
Pineapple-Coconut Cider // 92
Smoky BBQ Apple-Pear Cider // 93
Cherry-Pomegranate Cider // 95
Spiced Winter Cider // 96
Ruby Red Grapefruit Cider // 99
Cider de Jamaica (Hibiscus Cider) // 100
Dark and Stormy Cider // 102
ciders for beer lovers // 105
Dry-Hopped West Coast IPC: India Pale Cider // 106
Dry-Hopped English ESC: Extra-Special Cider // 108
Belgian Trappist-Style Cider // 109
Belgian Wit-Perry // 111
Berliner Cider-Weisse // 112
Bourbon Barrel–Aged Cider // 114
Apple Pilsner // 117
soft ciders // 119
Sweet Drinking Cider // 120
Sparkling Apple Juice // 122
Sparkling Cran-Apple Juice // 124
Sparkling Grape-Apple Juice // 125
Real Cider Vinegar // 127
Apple Scrap Cider Vinegar // 128
Spiced Apple Shrub // 131
Dragon’s Breath Fire Cider Vinegar // 132
apple wines // 135
Crisp Apple Table Wine // 136
Golden Delicious Apple Chardonnay // 139
Snozzberry Rosé // 140
Apple Pie Dessert Wine // 141
Pear Champagne // 143
Fig and Honey Dessert Cyser // 146
Elderflower-Pear Dessert Wine // 149
traditional ciders // 151
Traditional Farmhouse Cider // 152
Cheater’s Farmhouse Cider // 154
English-Style Cider // 155
Spanish-Style Sidra // 158
Colonial New England–Style Cider // 160
French-Style Cidre Doux (Sweet Cider) // 163
Cheater’s Cidre Doux (Sweet Cider) // 164