Amazon Books and Shop in association with Amazon UK

Search Advanced Search
 Location:  Home » Cooking » General » Real Cider Making on a Small Scale  
Other Currencies
US Amazon Books
US Digital Cameras
Canada Book Store
Books & more
Books
DVD
Electronics
Personal Care
Home and Garden
Kitchen
Music
Outdoor Living
Software
Toys
VHS
Computer Games
Cameras
Fiction
Romance
History
Wildlife
Natural Science
Photography
Baby Names
Babies
Marriage
Maps
Travel
Politics
Children
Pets
Sport
Sailing
Fitness
Dieting
Cooking
Learning
Crafts
Nursing Books
Visit Scotland
Dogs
Dog Breeds
Marketing
Graphic Design
Architecture

Real Cider Making on a Small Scale

Real Cider Making on a Small Scale

zoom enlarge 
Authors: Michael J. Pooley, John Lomax
Publisher: Special Interest Model Books
Category: Book

List Price: £5.95
Buy New: £4.76
You Save: £1.19 (20%)




Media: Paperback
Pages: 112
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.8 x 0.4

ISBN: 1854861956
Dewey Decimal Number: 641
EAN: 9781854861955
ASIN: 1854861956

Publication Date: April 29, 1999
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

Similar Items:

  • Cider: Making, Using & Enjoying Sweet & Hard Cider
  • First Steps in Winemaking
  • Making the Best Apple Cider (Garden Way bulletin)
  • Success with Apples and Pears to Eat and Drink: A Practical Gardeners' Guide to Varieties, Husbandry, Harvesting, Storing and Making Juices, Cyder and Perry
  • The Alaskan Bootlegger's Bible

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The only book you will need to make successful cider at home.   November 4, 2008
I have been making approx 20 gallons per year of cider for the last three years,using only windfall cookers, eaters and crabs. I have produced superb cider with virtually no waste. This is entirely thanks to this book.
I always keep this book to hand, as a reference, whether pressing, fermenting,racking or bottling.
This book is the perfect balance between craft and science. Crushing apples with a timber post in a bucket, is not as suggested elsewhere, a hippy style communal event- but is in fact an entirely practical (and cheap) method of preparing apples for pressing.
I would thoroughly recommend this book to anyone contemplating making their own cider. In fact I would not recommend starting without it



4 out of 5 stars A very useful book   July 8, 2006
 49 out of 49 found this review helpful

Real cidermaking is an excellent book for a newcomer to cider making. I bought it last year and followed what it said, and this year we are drinking lovely dry sparkling cider from our two apple trees. It was our first time ever trying to make cider, and the results are truly fantastic.

It is very much geared to the home cider maker who has tree with a lot of apples and wants to use them.

It usefully tells you why you should do something - eg sterilising properly - and what happens when you don't. This type of approach ensures that you don't cut corners because you know the consequences of doing so.

By and large the book is clear but I found that because you are making cider from real apples, and not using a kit, it pays to read it several times before trying to make cider. We found that for two trees-worth of apples, it took us a whole day just to press the apples, so it's not something you can do in an afternoon - you need to plan ahead.

It also has a useful diagram of how to make a cider press, which I intend to follow this year.

I recommend this book whole heartedly, and I would also recommend that anyone attempting to make cider should try to get two presses, and this is the time consuming part.

The book mentions pounding up apples in a bucket (much to the annoyance, it seems, of another reviewer), but we were lucky enough to borrow a scratter and this does make pulping the apples much easier. That said, they aren't cheap - around 200 or so. I recommend trying to borrow and press and scratter if you are making the first time.

But back to the book - it's a great guide.



3 out of 5 stars Written by hippies!   October 11, 2004
 36 out of 54 found this review helpful

Written by hippies for hippies. This book explains how to make cider using the most labour intensive methods possible. The whole emphasis being on developing a community spirit rather than making cider simply. Easier methods are mentioned in passing but dismissed with no good reason. The perfect example being the use of mills for crushing apples, the author would clearly prefer getting sweaty with a big stick or enlisting child labour.

No mention whatsoever on the use of the freeze-thaw process which largely eliminates the need for crushing and still makes for great cider.

If you want to see photos of hippies in arran jumpers bonding this is the book! If you are not already part of a commune bound together by the virtues of alcohol then this book may have limited appeal.


5 out of 5 stars Get brewing...   May 6, 2003
 54 out of 57 found this review helpful

The book was great, it provides all the details you'd need to make your own cider as a complete beginner. From making your own apple press through to possible problems with brewing and storing, everthing needed to get brewing your own is there. I was drinking my first 11% ABV within 2 months.
It's a practical guide obviously written by someone who appreciates the reasons why you'd want to brew your own booze!!!
If you want to get into cider brewing this is a very good start.


More Books and Shopping ideas

Management Six Sigma

Photo Shop for cameras.

Other areas of our Zeugma website include Pictures of Swans, Photos, read the blog, learn about Scotland