Angry Orchard Crisp Apple Hard Cider (12 oz. bottles, 24 pk.)


By Angry Orchard
Item # --
Current price: $0.00

Highlights

  • Crisp and refreshing with a lightly sweet, ripe apple flavor
  • Culinary apples: Braeburn, Fuji, Granny Smith, Gala
  • French Bittersweet Apples: Amere de Berthecourt, Beden, Medaille d’or, Michelin, Binet Rouge
  • ABV: 5%
  • Gluten free

About this item

Angry Orchard has been making ciders for decades. Eager to learn more about the art of cider making, their team has experimented with different styles, crafting ciders for themselves and sharing them with close friends. After years of experimenting with different types of apples from all over the map and different cider-making techniques learned along the way, they came up with a really imaginative, creative recipe. Something different and special.

What Does Hard Apple Cider Taste Like?

Angry Orchard Crisp Apple has a bright, crisp apple flavor, just like biting into a fresh apple. It's a perfect balance of sweetness and bright acidity from culinary apples and dryness of traditional cider making apples, resulting in a complex, yet refreshing, hard cider.

How Does the Cider Making Process Work?

Culinary and bittersweet apples are harvested fully ripe and stored for up to one month in porous plastic or wooden boxes. The sugar content increases as the apples age, which means more sugar to convert into alcohol during fermentation. The apples are then washed and milled to a pulp before the juice is pressed out. Historically, milling was done in a circular stone trough with a rotating wheel drawn by a horse. These days modern shredders are used, but the end result is the same—pulp that can be pressed into juice.

The pulp is then pressed and mashed to capture the juice. Back in colonial days, straw was used to contain the pulp during pressing. Today, electric-hydraulic “rack and cloth” presses are used to press pulp into juice. Wine yeast is added to the juice, which then goes through a lengthy fermentation process in which the sugar is converted to alcohol. During this time, the cider is wood aged, which adds subtle spice and vanilla notes.


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