Friday, October 30, 2009

Cider Time

As fall weather turns cold, it forces apples on the trees to make the final conversion of sugars. Then, its time to press. For Mormon pioneers, apple pies were a nice indulgence, but the main purpose of the crop was for cider and cider vinegar. Brigham Young's daughter Clarissa remembered his cellar in the orchard, where large barrels of hard cider mellowed through the winter.

Last weekend we went to the pioneer village and helped press cider. Here are some photos from that process.








One of the main points of interpretation for the visitors was that apples have yeast on their skins, so any juice from crushed apples will begin fermenting immediately. It was a surprise to many that "juice" was not a common beverage, but instead hard cider. Someone asked "What's the difference between juice and cider?" Shannon replied, "About a week." A French woman asked about this seeming contradiction to Mormon doctrine. I explained that all religions experience change; just as Vatican II under Pope John Paul revolutionized the practice of Catholicism, Mormonism today is much different than Mormonism historically.

7 comments:

Cowboy Curtis said...

Well maybe we should start making "Brigham's Hard Cider" to compete with Mike's Hard Lemonade. I know what I'm taking to the next ward pot luck...

Brock said...

So one woman said, "Well they couldn't drink it, so what would they do with it all?" And I said, "I guess they just watched it piling up in the cellar. I mean, what could they do?"

Cowboy Curtis said...

Ha ha ha ha, oh brother...

Scarehaircare said...

LOL! I'll have to find somewhere local that will let me participate in cider making.

This reminds me of a fun story. When my husband was a cub scout, he was sent to his den leader's food storage room to get a few bottles of her ward-famous homemade grape juice for their snack. He went too far and found VERY old bottles. The cub scouts opened it up, drank it up while the den mother was cleaning up, and stumbled home. The poor den mother was then inundated with phone calls from shocked mothers of drunk cub scouts.

Brock said...

Hmmm... it sounds like she made wine purposefully... if it was just by accident, then the carbonation would have exploded the bottles. Maybe she didn't seal them tight and the carbonation escaped slowly through a leaky seal.

Scarehaircare said...

LOL! If her wine stash was on pupose then it makes the story that much more funny! My MIL still looks shocked every time she tells the story.

Cowboy Curtis said...

Check this out from NPR:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=120464000&ft=1&f=1001

Story about hard cider making a comeback in New England.