Righty, a bit of tasting. Quite a few brews on the go at the moment so quite a lot of sampling to do
I've taken a photo of each to show what it looks like in the demijohns and the tag tells you the ingredients and the date I put the brews on. For each one I poured half a glass and gave it a whisk with a teaspoon to knock the gas out of it. I then gave it a sniff to check out the smell and took a taste. On the side I'd made up some sugar water with 250ml of water and 25g of sugar dissolved to sweeten the brews if they needed it.
Onto the tasting...
Rosé:
Quite strong in alcohol as planned! Not too dry, which is surprising, so it hasn't brewed all the sugar out. Maybe a bit too much tannin. Could do with a bit more fruit. Adding sugar water dilutes the flavour down a bit too much, so maybe it needs some strawberry Ribena instead. I'll see what it's like once it has cleared, but I think next time it might need 3 litres of juice instead of 2. It doesn't have the harsh almondy taste of the WOW, so I think it must have been the orange that caused it.
Cherry Kool Aid:
Still bubbling away and smells quite yeasty! There is residual sweetness in there and it has not finished brewing yet. The Kool Aid is maybe a bit too dilute. I can't taste alcohol at all, but I did aim to get this one at about 6% rather than wine strength. Slightly winey in taste. I'm not sure if I could drink large amounts of this, so I'm glad I only put 2 litres on as a bit of fun to see what it comes out like!
Tropical Punch Kool Aid:
Still bubbling, but not as much as the cherry Kool Aid. Not as yeasty smelling either, but it might be the extreme artificial
colors and flavors masking it! Check this out:
It's also quite sweet tasting and doesn't need any sugar. Adding sugar water makes it quite sickly sweet.
Cider - juiced apples:
This was the first of the ciders to go on and I put the apples (about 10kg) through my fruit juicer. Mistake. Why? Because it took ages and made extreme amounts of mess for not much juice! It's still a bit yeasty with a few bits of yeast floating in it. It's quite perfumed smelling, like the cider we made last year. Very dry to taste, slightly cidery, sharp, and very apply. Lots of tannin so I'm glad I didn't add any tea. It needs sweetening and is much improved with a bit of sugar water. This also brings out the cidery taste. It does taste very perfumey and it's not the yeast I can taste, so it must be the apples. This one might need to sit for a while once it has cleared.
Cider - pressed apples:
This was from the same batch of apples but pressed instead of juiced. You can see it is a bit more cloudy because it has been brewing for two weeks less. Quite a different smell to it - much more cidery. Sharp, dry, lots of tannin and definitely more cidery tasting than the juiced batch. No perfumey taste to it that I can detect. Sweetening improves it but it doesn't need much.
Cider - pressed apple (scrumpy):
This is from the rotten apples that had gone brown and mushy. It smells noticebly more scrumpy-like with a strong cider scent. Interestingly, it's clearer than the gallon from the good apples that went on at the same time, so I think the apples had a head start brewing in their skins before I pressed them! Taste - now we're talking! Proper strong scrumpy taste to it, quite dry, not quite as sharp as the other ciders and not as much tanin. A tiny bit of sugar water really improves it. I think I'm going to want to drink a lot of this one!