Not pink as i had been led to believe it would be |
But there are only a limited number of things you can do with them. You can't eat them - they are too sour. You can make them into a nice tart jam (it goes really well with roast chicken), i've made muffins with little chunks of apples in. Theses were ok. This year the harvest was amazing. Even after making a huge amount of jam.
This year there was a bumper harvest. I wondered if you could make a crabapple beer - and turns out you can! Even better it is supposed to come out a crazy pink colour! Mine didn't. The fermentation went fine, the secondary was as planned. But the colour wasn't pink.
The taste. Well, it's a bit sour. I used a fruity brett mix so it isn't too lambicky or challenging. It's a bit sour from the crab apples. But essentially it tastes like a mild cider. Crisp, refreshing, dry - but still very cidery!
11L BIAB
Yeast - Yeast Bay Dry Belgian Yeast
OG 1044 - est 3.8 abv before adding brettanomyces, 4% at finish of fermentation.
Yeast - Yeast Bay Dry Belgian Yeast
OG 1044 - est 3.8 abv before adding brettanomyces, 4% at finish of fermentation.
Grain
2.26kg Wheat Malt
2.26kg Wheat Malt
Hops
20 mins - 10g East Kent Goldings
20 mins - 10g East Kent Goldings
Additional
1.4 kg frozen crab apples added to secondary for 2 months (quartered).
Added 1 vial of "amalgamation " Yeast Bay Brett yeast
1.4 kg frozen crab apples added to secondary for 2 months (quartered).
Added 1 vial of "amalgamation " Yeast Bay Brett yeast
No comments:
Post a Comment