

This heat would have done the job nicely without electricity. Honestly, I could have just put them in the dehydrator and left them with it turned off since I have it outside. I just spread them all out on my dehydrator trays and set the dehydrator to 135° F for about 12 hours. The great thing about these scraps is that they have been pressed to the point of being already quite dry, so dehydrating takes less time (unless you forget about them for a few days, which is fine in our Arizona heat). I love putting this in cereal, popcorn, pancake batter, smoothies, and so much more! I decided I would dehydrate the scraps, seeds, stems, peels, and all to turn into apple powder. Note: Please read the entire instructions from EC Kraus to get all the details and use their resources for any help you need. When the wine has cleared, you will use another dose of Campden tablets, bottle the wine into sterilized bottles, and cork. Siphon the wine, leaving most of the sediment into the carboy and leave for a few weeks, with an airlock in place. Everything that touches the wine at this point must be sterilized using a bleach solution or other specialized sterilizers to keep from contaminating the wine. You will use a hydrometer to check the specific gravity (learn more about that here ).Īt this point you need to have a sterilized 4-5 gallon carboy and siphon.

It should bubble and foam in that time, but then mostly stop. The Campden tablets kill any wild yeast or bacteria that is in the cider so that only the Lalvin EC-1118 yeast will be fermenting your wine.Īfter 24 hours, add the Lalvin-EC1118 yeast, place the towel back over the bucket, and leave for 4-5 days to ferment. īasically, you mix everything but the yeast together in a bucket, cover with a towel and let sit for 24 hours. You can get the detailed instructions here.
#Applewine recipe plus
Greg only kept 1 gallon, while I headed home with 4, plus a tub of apple scraps for drying.Īs soon as I got home I assembled my wine-making ingredients and got to work. A couple hours of sharing stories and building our apple-crushing muscles (ok, Greg did most of that), and we had enough juice. We determined that every 5 gallons of apples made 1 gallon of the most amazing apple cider you could imagine. We kept the largest apples out for making apple chips, but the rest we juiced. So, once we had all the apples in buckets we took them over to Greg’s amazing outdoor kitchen where he had the crusher set up at the sink and the juicer ready a few feet away. Our plan was to wash, crush, and juice the apples for making apple wine. Needless to say, we had more than enough apples for our project. That is, until Greg decided to shake the tree and, in one magical moment, it rained apples and we were all laughing at the fun of it. We started the morning by pulling out ladders and picking the apples, handful by handful. A couple weeks ago, Greg graciously invited Kari Spencer and me over to share some of his apple trees’ incredible bounty.
