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Cider Making in Le Corboulo
2004 Report
of Cider and Music making in
Brittany 23-31 October 2004
earlier years (Oct 1998, Oct 1999)
Oct
2000 Oct 2001
Oct
2002 Oct
2003
Cider
or Sistr is the
first choice of drink for many Bretons, and it is a pity that the Michelin
Guide, with a sweeping generalisation, declared for all time that Breton
Cider is inferior to the Norman variety. Certainly, industrial-scale production
is often the norm in Normandy.
In the Breton
interior, trees are abundant, although careful husbandry has declined along
with the numbers working the land. Presses filled with flowers dot the
area; holidaymakers filling the former farmsteads or camping near the seaside
tend to drink wine from the South or lager from the North of France.
The good news
is that the local Routier-style cafés usually include a litre
bottle per four diners (and a bottle of red wine and mineral water!) and
also that the major Celtic music festival nearby at Cléguérec
is named En Arwen
(A Tree) for the local tradition of making Pear cider (Sistre
per or poiré,) and if you are there
at exactly the right moment, you may get some free!
There is a growing federation of traditional cider makers in the Region
and we hope to join the club
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Cider
Making at Le Corboulo - historical background
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When we bought
the property at Le Corboulo, we should not have been surprised to
find a full-sized cider press in the downstairs room of the oldest house;
all three neighbours within 50 yards have one in the shed or barn! Our
former owners had a licence to distil Calvados or rather Fine
de Bretagne. The main buildings of separate family farms tend to be
clustered together for community reasons while the fields are scattered
far and wide, so the concentration of hardware is not surprising either.
Our orchard - now no more than 6 trees after the ravages of mistletoe,
storms, old age and our tardy pruning, still need a fair bit of (preferably)
voluntary labour to harvest. For cider making, it is normal to wait for
at least half the apples to fall off and so the more hands and bent backs
the better.
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Modern Times - September
1998
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We started in September
1998 to collect and store the apples (thanks to Penny and Ian) although
the vital acquisition of a moulin aux pommes or 'scratter', as it
is called in Somerset, had been unsuccessful up to that time. In fact it
was not until early October 1998 that a chance visit to borrow a ladder
from a neighbour revealed such a moulin in the corner of her barn,
and a loan was immediately negotiated. A considerable application of wire
brushing, yard brooms, buckets and buckets of water and bleach by Dave
Hunt, a former Catering lecturer, got us to the starting point.
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The Process re-discovered
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Sackfuls of washed
apples go in the moulin aux pommes and two stout gents take a handle
on either side and wind until the plastic tub fills with mush and juice,
while the 'Stick-Lady', as the first holder of this post was dubbed, pushes
the apples down with a bit of 2"x2". The mush goes into clean polypropylene
sacks, in another tub on a cart as they are now a) dripping and b) heavy.
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Six or eight part-filled
sacks are the minimum 'cheese' to be built up on the base of the press,
with the bung in, as a large amount of juice is now flowing out. Two large
oak doors go on top either side of the centre screw post, embedded in the
concrete base (that's why this press is liable to stay put for another
twenty years minimum!) Four big baulks of oak cross these doors,
and then two yokes of railway sleeper girth, down onto which the crownwheel
is screwed. A wheel and pinion whizz this down a bit, and then you discover
what the ratchet and two-metre long iron handle are for!
Pulling the bung on the
press fills the bucket surprisingly fast, through a fine wire mesh to restrain
pips, bugs etc and thence into the home brew fermenter, with the
cover replaced quickly to ensure macro hygiene.
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Fermentation
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The first
phase of fermentation can take place with a reasonably close-fitting lid,
but I now know, to my cost, that when the first rush is over, or when nothing
much has happened because of winter weather, the juice or 'must', must
be protected from the air, otherwise oxidisation takes place, and the 'cider'
starts to taste like that from a half-emptied cask on a pub counter that
rarely sells any - I am afraid that a lot is sold like that and probably
accounts for many a tale of tourists' sad encounters with the stuff!
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The product top
What to do with
200+ litres of part-fermented Cider?
Opinions vary, but a few
include:
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Keep the September pressing
warm and drink it in October, while pressing the Christmas batch and having
a Cider Festival;
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Bottle everything that is down
to 1.000 gravity in Champagne-style bottles, with clipped or wired corks,
and drink it in the Spring, or Summer, if kept cool in the pig-sty;
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If it tastes nice, but hasn't
finished fermenting, add Calvados and drink it straight away with care!

Drinking the stuff straight
out of the press is also feasible, but the alcohol content (not zero even
in the virgin apple) is not yet enough to sterilise the various bugs and
yeasts present in fallen apples, and so an old-fashioned medicinal effect
may be experienced.
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