RobertN
Super Member
The CO2 depends on how much bottling sugar you add. About 1/3 cup would give it a little bit of carbonation, but not too much. 3/4 cup, like a beer recipe, would tend to make it pretty bubbly.
I would bottle the cider in 12oz brown beer bottles. That's a nice amount for cider. You could also try 22oz bottles. If I bottle beer, I like to use champgne bottles. Part of the sparkling wine process is to cap it in the bottle and age it a bit. Then they chill it, pop the cap, and stuff it with a cork.
For a shared beer, a champagne bottle pours two nice glasses.
I tried rootbeer once, using cake bread yeast. YUK! It is the only time I have lost bottls too, to high co2 pressures.
A good beer/wine shop should have everything you need. They should have some beer and/or wine brewing guide sheets which would also have pertinent info to cider.
It sounds good, I'd give it a try/w3tcompact/icons/grin.gif
I would bottle the cider in 12oz brown beer bottles. That's a nice amount for cider. You could also try 22oz bottles. If I bottle beer, I like to use champgne bottles. Part of the sparkling wine process is to cap it in the bottle and age it a bit. Then they chill it, pop the cap, and stuff it with a cork.
For a shared beer, a champagne bottle pours two nice glasses.
I tried rootbeer once, using cake bread yeast. YUK! It is the only time I have lost bottls too, to high co2 pressures.
A good beer/wine shop should have everything you need. They should have some beer and/or wine brewing guide sheets which would also have pertinent info to cider.
It sounds good, I'd give it a try/w3tcompact/icons/grin.gif