Curtis Sherrer is barreling aging single variety apples at Millstone Cellars. An old grist mill dating back to the 1850s houses the Tasting Room.
“We will have 50 barrels and then settle on 15 to pick from to blend for that one cider that will be bottled”
Curtis Sherrer, Millstone Cellars
“If you are looking to save money, all you need is a barrel. You don’t need chillers.”
Instead of pressing multiple apples and creating the sweet cider that will then be fermenting – Curt keeps apple varieties separate until he finds the perfect balance
At the “Old Grist Mill” they use a cloth press on site that dates back to 1850s.
Says Curt of the goal behind choosing to become a cidermaker, “Let’s take apple juice and see how close we can get to making a chardonnay”
“No one knows what the Jonathan apple variety can do at different maturity levels or what it can do on different yeasts. So we will have 20 barrels of Jonathan with different yeasts.
We used beer yeast, cider, wine, sherry yeast and now we have come down to four primary yeasts.”
Look at bending much like ones does with spices and ingredients: See what will make the most savory cider.
The learnings garnered from making cider from single variety apples, until the final blend are abundant. You will learn in this chat about:
If you visit expect more ciders on hand as they have seasonals and new ciders they are working on continually.
Not so much what the winemaker or cidermaker does. It’s what kind of fruit comes into the door. If you are getting quality fruit coming in through the door, It’s yours to screw up.