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Is there a reasonable way to make it at home (say about 15 liters of
it)? If so, how? Sergio Pisa |
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sergio > wrote:
>Is there a reasonable way to make it at home (say about 15 liters of >it)? >If so, how? Lots of information on making cider is found in homebrewing forums. Once you have cider, getting to vinegar should in theory be similar to making wine vinegar, but I've never done it and have no idea what subtle differences there may be in the technique. Steve |
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On Sep 3, 3:05 pm, sergio > wrote:
> Is there a reasonable way to make it at home (say about 15 liters of > it)? > If so, how? > > Sergio > Pisa I don't know where you live, but when I was growing up in NJ we would buy the raw cider and stick the jug out on the back porch in the cold October air. We would try to catch it as "hard" cider but if we left it too long it went to vinegar. Good stuff too. Filter it thru a coffee filter. |
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"sergio" > ha scritto nel messaggio
oups.com... > Is there a reasonable way to make it at home (say about 15 liters of > it)? > If so, how? > > Sergio > Pisa Look for one of your neighbors who makes wine vinegar and ask for some mother. Put the mother into pressed apple juice and let it sit in a barrel until it become vinegar. It's no different from making wine vinegar other than what you start with. Where you get pressed apple juice in Italy, I don't know. -- http://www.judithgreenwood.com > |
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On Sep 4, 9:18 am, "Giusi" > wrote:
> Look for one of your neighbors who makes wine vinegar and ask for some > mother. Put the mother into pressed apple juice and let it sit in a barrel > until it become vinegar. It's no different from making wine vinegar other > than what you start with. Where you get pressed apple juice in Italy, I > don't know. Fine for the wine vinegar mother, I have it already of my own. The problem seems to be how to get the juice. I can finely mesh the apples with a professional meat grinder, but then? Should I have some kind of press like the ones (huge on a home scale!) used to squeeze raisins, or perhaps a centrifuge? Thanks a lot for any suggestion. Sergio Pisa |
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![]() "sergio" > wrote in message ups.com... > On Sep 4, 9:18 am, "Giusi" > wrote: >> Look for one of your neighbors who makes wine vinegar and ask for some >> mother. Put the mother into pressed apple juice and let it sit in a >> barrel >> until it become vinegar. It's no different from making wine vinegar >> other >> than what you start with. Where you get pressed apple juice in Italy, I >> don't know. > > Fine for the wine vinegar mother, I have it already of my own. > The problem seems to be how to get the juice. > I can finely mesh the apples with a professional meat grinder, but > then? Should I have some kind of press like the ones (huge on a home > scale!) used to squeeze raisins, or perhaps a centrifuge? > Thanks a lot for any suggestion. > > Sergio > Pisa > How about a tomato grinder? |
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On Sep 4, 1:28 pm, "Kswck" > wrote:
> How about a tomato grinder? Of course I am convensant with tomato grinders (though I have none, since I like to eat also the peel of my home grown tomatoes). I expect such a machine to give out a thick puree, though; nothing like a juice. Am I too pessimistic? Sergio Pisa |
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Giusi > wrote:
>Look for one of your neighbors who makes wine vinegar and ask for some >mother. Put the mother into pressed apple juice and let it sit in a barrel >until it become vinegar. Um... um... that won't work, because there's no ethanol in the apple juice. Steve |
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Steve wrote on Tue, 4 Sep 2007 17:49:02 +0000 (UTC):
??>> Look for one of your neighbors who makes wine vinegar and ??>> ask for some mother. Put the mother into pressed apple ??>> juice and let it sit in a barrel until it become vinegar. SP> Um... um... that won't work, because there's no ethanol in SP> the apple juice. I don't know if putting the mother (Lord, that sounds bad ;-) into the natural juice will have much effect but the juice *will* ferment to vinegar! James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
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James Silverton > wrote:
> ??>> Look for one of your neighbors who makes wine vinegar and > ??>> ask for some mother. Put the mother into pressed apple > ??>> juice and let it sit in a barrel until it become vinegar. > SP> Um... um... that won't work, because there's no ethanol in > SP> the apple juice. >I don't know if putting the mother (Lord, that sounds bad ;-) >into the natural juice will have much effect but the juice >*will* ferment to vinegar! It might, if there is wild yeast around and under the right conditions. Or it might not. You're going to get a more reliable result if you deliberately brew cider from the apple juice first. Steve |
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On Sep 4, 8:08 pm, (Steve Pope) wrote:
> You're going to get a more reliable result if you deliberately brew > cider from the apple juice first. Quite agreed on that Sergio Pisa |
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