JUICE OF THE APPLE  
		by  Michael Phillips   

  Don't settle for thin, homogenized, store-bought "apple juice".
Home-grown cider is cheaper and infinitely more refreshing.   

(Mother Earth News  //  December/January 1995)   


  Let the apple cider renaissance begin!  Bring forth the jugglers of
Newton Pippins.  Roll out the barrels of pomological splendor.  Squeeze the
bland and insipid back into the Red Delicious whence it came.  Americans
are set to rediscover colonial notions of good apple cider.   
  Cider is a word that means different things to different people.  Its root 
meaning, from the Old French SIDRE, is "the fermented juice of the apple."
Go anywhere in Europe and ask for cider and it will be alcoholic to the last  
drop.  Our colonial forebears here in North America desired nothing less of
their first cider than a warming taste to get through a long winter.  "Hard
cider" came into vogue as a means of distinguishing the first pressed juice
of the apple -- today's "sweet cider" -- from the fermented brew that once
flowed by the barrelful.  Changing the term "fermented" to "fermentable"
ends this ambiguity, and settles the commercial debate of whether apple
juice that's been heat-treated or had chemical preservatives added is still
cider.  Federal regulations somewhat skirt this issue by empowering the word 
"fresh" to give consumers assurance of purchasing a true apple cider.  But
be warned: all apple juice sold today as cider isn't necessarily "fresh"
cider.   
  Even without such linguistic meandering, cider is still far from the rich
drink enjoyed a century or more ago.  Varietal blends have fallen by the
wayside along with a once-vibrant regional agriculture.  Small farm orchards 
have been consolidated into an "apple industry" that favors but few of the
varietal thousands.  The best cider is made from a blend of apples that
balances sweetness with tang and body with clarity.  However, many good
cider varieties are no longer grown in commercial orchards because today's
apple profits lie with dessert-quality fruit.  The dropped apples and graded 
culls that now go into store cider and juice blends do not have nearly the
value of dessert fruit, and orchardists need 80 percent or more of their
crop in this later category to survive economically.  Cider has essentially
become a waste product in a country where it was once THE treasured national 
beverage.   
  Where once grocers chose from twenty to thirty regional favorites, the
apple varieties available in supermarkets today are limited to but three or
four.  What can we say of a society that apparently supports a greater choice 
of paper towel brands than apple varieties?  I've even heard it said at one 
industry meeting that commercial cider makers are better off not blending
their insipid juices, as the juices in a blended cider might dare to
separate (by density) on the grocer's shelf.  Taste, as anyone who's eaten a 
tough winter tomato can affirm, is sacrificed to such commercial "perfection".   
  Happily, interest is regional fruits has been increasing among both
backyard gardeners and smaller commercial orchardists, and you need no
longer be held hostage to the few cider blends available in the grocery
store.  Making your own "juice of the apple" will not only do your palette a 
tremendous favor, but give you an entirely new idea of what America really
tastes like.   

GATHERING YOUR APPLES.    

  The road to cider ambrosia begins with the varieties of apples available
to be pressed.  You can grow those apples, purchase them from nearby orchards,
or take to the countryside and explore abandoned farmsteads and hedgerows in 
search of palatable fruit.  Wild apples, in offering something more than the 
bland sweetness of today's commercial favorites, have a place in a robust
cider blend.  
  Trees found growing near abandoned stone foundations or in now-neglected
orchards are a good source of these old time cider apples.  Large-trunked
trees set at a consistent spacing indicate grafted origins.  The seedling
trees sprouting under the drip line are likely windfallen progeny of the
mother variety, and any bearing fruit should be tasted with that genetic
potential in mind.  Local orchards often grow a wider range of apple
varieties than commonly found in the supermarket.  Pick-your-own operations
will guide you to the ripest fruit, but purchasing "orchard run" apples by
the bushel spares you picking labor and saves on the price of graded fruit.
The best cider apple deal is found in bins of windfallen fruit, but even
hand-selecting drops like those won't suit the discriminating cider maker.
  You should be just as gentle picking apples for cider purposes as you are
with dessert-quality fruit.  A good picking rhythm -- once you have the
basics down -- is no slower than a bruise-and-batter technique.  And, as
you'll soon learn, the best cider is made after "sweating" the apples for a
week or two.  Unnecessary bruises have that much more time to decay.
Heavily bruised apples essentially make a bruised cider, in which
fermentation has begun even before the fruit has been pressed.   
  Old-time cider makers insisted on pressing sound, ripe apples only.  It
was said that an apple that reached the ground imparted an earthy flavor to
the cider.  My own prejudices against windfallen fruit don't go quite that
far, but as a nation, our standards for an acceptable cider apple have
undergone quite a decline.  J.M. Trowbridge stated his position
emphatically in THE CIDER MAKER'S HANDBOOK in 1903: "Whoever thinks that any 
apple is good enough for cider had better not engage in the business."
  Dropped apples for cider are suspect as well in the recently published
scare about E. COLI bacteria in cider.  It was always thought cider was too
acidic to harbor this bacterium, which, in tainted meat, has made people
sick enough to die.  E. COLI can only be present if the apples used for
cider have been in contact with "hoofed and horned" animal droppings (mice,
for once, are not a concern).  A conscientious cider maker would never use
fallen apples gathered in a pasture, but no apple grower can assure that
deer won't find ways into the orchard.  Rinsing apples down with a hose isn't 
necessarily an effective wash.  Quality goes hand in hand with safety if all 
the apples being pressed have been picked directly from the tree.    
  Apple varieties ripen at different points in the harvest season, and some
varieties ripen unevenly on the same tree over the course of several weeks.
The seeds of a ripe apple will have begun to turn brown: cut one open for a
look.  "Spot-picking" the best colored fruit on the outside canopy of the
tree allows the sunlight to reach in and color the inner apples for picking
two weeks or so later.  Apples that aren't yet ripe make a green-tasting
cider, and once overmature, if they haven't dropped, press out a less zesty
cider.   
  Cider apples should be set aside to "sweat" until you have an assortment
of varieties ready to press.  The woodshed or porch is a good odor-free spot, 
out of the scalding sun and protected enough from a deep freeze.  Our cider
apples are set aside by variety in bushel boxes for two weeks or so before
pressing.  The apples yield their juices more readily after this mellowing,
and the flavor of the cider is fuller.  When a good firm squeeze leaves
finger indentations on the fruit, it's ready for ginding.  Some apples
varieties -- Rome, Jonathan, and Newton come to mind -- are best pressed
ripe from the tree, as their juices begin to bitter after storage.
  Many cider-making handbooks will tell you to thoroughly wash your fruit
before pressing.  If you're taking the bruised and stubble-spiked route of
windfallen fruit, I heartily agree.  Blasting the apples with a garden hose
in an old washtub (with holes drilled to allow good drainage) works well.
Pull any rotting fruit you see, and stay away from those pasture drops!
There's no need though, to wash hand-picked organic fruit that never came in  
contact with the ground.  What to do with fruit sprayed with chemicals is a
personal decision.  One or two low-impact sprays done early in the summer
have probably been sufficiently rinsed by the rain.  Then again, I know of
people who cut away both the stem and calyx end of the apple where residues
are more likely to stay behind.   

SCREW-PRESSING BASICS.   

  Choose a cool day to press your cider outside -- lower temperatures reduce  
the risk of vinegar bacteria and just may keep those pesky yellow jackets
at bay.  All of your cider equipment should be clean: make sure it's scrubbed 
and rinsed down thoroughly with clean water (NO soap) after each day's
pressing.  Vinegar bacteria and fruit flies quickly take up residence where
good sanitation is lacking.   
  Get the flywheel on your press turning to speed before dumping the apples
into the grinder hopper.  Grinders are designed to be self-feeding, so
there's no need to get off-flavored fingers anywhere near the rotating
cylinder.  A nylon press bag placed in the tub catches the mushy pomace as
it comes down through the grinder.  The press bag serves as a filter to
keep seeds and bits of apple from flowing out with the juice.  Once full,
fold the bag closed and place the wooden pressing disk in position.  
  Turn the screw slowly to apply pressure to the pulp.  A stainless steel,
enamel, or plastic pot should be in position beneath the tray to catch the
cider flow, with enough capacity on hand to contain at least three gallons
of juice.  David Crooks, sales manager at Happy Valley Ranch, advises,
"Make a quarter- to half-turn at a time and let the juice flow out
naturally.  Too quick a press results in a cloudy juice, and you'll get
less of it."  Stop turning the screw when you encounter solid resistance,
as what little juice left in the pomace isn't worth overstressing the
press frame to get.  Expect to take twenty minutes or so each go-around.
The final juice blends all the varietal tastes in a way that the first
irresistible gush of cider may not.     
  Custom pressing at a cider mill is a good option for families with lots
of apples but no press of their own.  Here in Lost Nation, we ask people
to call ahead for an appointment to press a minimum of eight bushels of
apples into a custom tank.  Golfball-size fruit is rejected, as it tends
to clog the conveyor leading up to the grinder above the press.  You get
the juice from your apples, whatever the blend.  We charge seventy-five
cents a gallon, and another quarter per gallon jug if you need containers.
Some mills charge a little more than this, others a little less.  Custom
pressing is not only an irresistible family outing in the early cold
season but one that keeps the colonial tradition of a community mill works
alive.     

PROCESSING ALL THAT CIDER!     

  At two to three gallons to the bushel, harvesting even a few trees
eventually leads to a copious amount of cider.  The more select apples go
to storage for fresh eating.  A considerable root cellar may give you the
option of storing end-of-the-season cider apples as well, to be pressed out
on a weekly basis through the rest of the winter months.  Still, most of us
will want to get the job done in two or three press days, and the earlier
apples demand it.  The question now: what to do with all that cider??  
  High-volume customers at our mill are good for five gallons of sweet
cider every two weeks.  My own personal consumption isn't quite there, as
the laxative effect of cider on the human stomach sets a limit on this
pleasure.  One can only drink so much fresh cider!  Sweet cider kept cold
is good for drinking one to two weeks after pressing (depending on the
cleanliness of your press) and perhaps two weeks more for those with some
fizz tolerance.   
  Cider begins to turn fizzy as the natural yeasts in the juice begin to
convert the apple sugars to alcohol.  We're still a good way from a
noticeably alcoholic cider at this point, though many of the charming
ladies who come to our mill after church on Sundays suspect me on this.
But more on hard cider in a bit.  My own preference is to let cider mellow
for a few days in either the refrigerator or a cool cellar to enjoy it at
its optimum.  Carbon dioxide production -- an honest man would admit this
to be yeast flatulence -- kicks into high gear after several weeks
regardless of keeping temperature, and then fizzy cider becomes too strong
for all but the most obstinate cider head.   
  Freshly pressed cider freezes incredibly well.  The taste after the thaw
is nearly indistinguishable from that of those glorious fall days when the
juice was pressed.  The secrets of a good result are but two; don't let the
cider sit around for a few days before freezing, and pour out one and a
half inches from a full jug before placing it upright in the freezer.
Cider expands when frozen, and that airspace keeps tops from blowing.
Freeze your cider in plastic jugs rather than glass bottles to prevent a
lateral expansion burst.  Frozen cider is at its best if thawed before next
year's harvest comes pouring off the press.  
  I put up most of our year's supply of apple juice on the canning shelves.
Space in our small chest freezer is at a premium, and the peas and berries
of summer leave room for just a few jugs of frozen cider.  Luckily, fresh
cider becomes juice in just the time it takes to heat it to 170øF and keep
it at that temperature for 10 minutes.  Be sure to use a stainless steel or
enamel pot, which won't react with the cider and cause a metallic taste.
Heating to a higher temperature is a mistake, despite what the more
conservative processing books advise; the yeasts and bacteria of concern
are killed off at 170øF, but nutritional value and flavor is not fully
precipitated out.  This heat treatment prevents the cider from fermenting.
The hot juice is then simply poured into hot, sterilized canning jars to
within half an inch of the top and the sterilized lids screwed down.  Apple
juice stored in a cool, dark place will keep almost indefinitely.   
  Homemade apple juice is as good as the cider used to make it, though
admittedly the tangy effervescence of cider is lost in heating.  The apple
juice in grocery stores, generally being made of a bland cider, is rather
bland itself.  Kids taste this difference quickly, and if you've found them
not drinking the cheap store brand, give 'em a shot at your orchard's best.
 
CIDER JELLY.   

  Cider can also be boiled down much the same as maple sap in the making of
maple syrup.  The natural pectin found in the apple leads this evaporation
to a jellied end, however.  A true New England cider jelly comes "fully
puckered", with no sugar added to lessen the tangy apple flavor.   
  Boil down fresh cider in a stainless steel pot as rapidly as possible
till it approaches the jelly boiling point of 220øF.  The hot cider will
"sheet" off a testing spoon in a continuous lip when it reaches the jelly
stage.  Pour it into hot, sterilized jars and secure with sterilized lids.
One gallon of cider will be reduced to just over two eight-ounce jars of
jelly.  Apple molasses -- the syrupy stage of boiled cider -- may result if
the apples used for cider had a low pectin content or if you didn't
evaporate the cider far enough.  Wild or crab apples in the cider blend
help ensure a good set.  Don't be disappointed with apple molasses though -- 
it lends itself wonderfully to Shaker boiled cider pie or as a perfect
glaze on roast duck or ham.    

HARD CIDER.   

  There was a time when farmers deemed their winter supplies incomplete
until several barrels of cider were stored in the cellar.  Freezing sweet
cider in plastic jugs in the 1700s and 1800s wasn't an option, nor would
anyone have given a hoot for pasteurized juice.  These were the days when
cider had but one connotation -- hard cider.  Britons never gave up their
pints of scrumpy, nor the French their champagne cider, but here in the
States popular interest in hard cider is just renewing.   
  Not that we'll ever return to the voluminous days of colonial consumption.
One settlement of 40 families near Boston put away three thousand barrels
of cider for the winter of 1721.  Cider was as good as cash in the barter
economy of the day.  One diary from 1805 records trading a half-barrel of
cider for a child's schooling.  Cider was considered good for one's
constitution, and even President John Quincy Adams started his day with a
glass or two.  Cider's popularity and moderate alcohol content (averaging 6
percent) created a schism in the growing temperance movement in the early
nineteenth century -- while some groups were out in the countryside
attacking cider orchards with hatchets, others were serving cider to aid
the discussion on the deleterious effects of rum and other distilled
spirits.  This societal acceptance of cider carred through the Prohibition
years of the 1920s when a farmer's hard cider was one of the few exemptions
to the Volstead Act.   
  Making hard cider is relatively straight-forward.  Oak barrels are the
traditional fermenting vessel, but the first-time cider maker is probably
better off using a less-temperamental glass carboy.  A used whiskey keg, if
you can find one, is a 48-gallon cider commitment, where a five-gallon
carboy batch allots more attempts to playing around with different juice
blends and sugar ratios.   
  The carboy, rubber stopper, and plastic air lock should first be
sterilized with a Campden tablet solution to kill any unwanted bacteria.
You can obtain these brew supplies at any home-brew and wine supply store.
A sloshing rinse does the trick.  Fill the carboy to the top with freshly
pressed cider if making a natural cider -- utilizing the natural yeasts and
sugars already in the juice -- or leave room to add sugar and a champagne
yeast before topping off.  The potential alcohol of your hard cider is
determined by the sugar content of the unfermented juice, or "MUST".   
  Apple sugars generally lead to a 5 to 7 percent alcohol content,
depending on the varieties used and the influence of weather and soil.
Adding a full cup of sugar per gallon of must pushes the alcohol potential
up to 10 to 11 percent, provided the fermentation goes completely to the
dry side.  A couple of handfuls of organic raisins is an old-time
alternative to sugar.  A sweeter cider results if the yeast stops working
before all the sugar is consumed, which is more likely in a cool room or if
too much sugar was added.  Using a hydrometer to determine the specific
gravity of the must takes the guesswork out of targeting your sugar
content.     
  Keep your full carboy at room temperature for the primary fermentation.
Keep the cap off the air lock at this point, for the jug will froth and
foam vigorously for a few days.  When this boiling-over stage is complete,
wipe down the sides of the carboy and thoroughly rinse the airlock.
Utilize some of the Campden tablet solution for the water seal in the now -
clean air lock; this prevents vinegar bacteria from getting into the cider
while at the same time allowing carbon dioxide gas to escape during the
secondary fermentation.  A regular bubbling will continue for three months
or more, depending on holding temperature and the vigor of the yeast.  A
smoother cider results from a slower fermentation at cooler temperatures in
the 40ø to 60øF range.  When the bubbling subsides, the cider is ready for
a first taste and to be bottled.   
  Siphon the cider from the carboy with a flexible plastic tube so as not
to disturb the sediment at the bottom.  Rinse all your bottles and caps
with the precautionary Campden tablet solution -- recycled wine bottles
work well; but if corked, wet them on their sides so the cork stays
swollen.  Allow neck room for temperature expansion in a glass bottle with
a screw top -- I once gave to friends a full gallon jug of cider from my
cellar stores that shattered soon after being placed in their warmer
kitchen.  A hard cider with a minimum alcohol content of 5.7 percent will
keep for years and get mellower with age.  Limit your annual production for
personal consumption to 200 gallons though (in a household with two adults),
to stay within the confines of Federal law.  A bottle of hard cider should
be consumed within a week or two of being opened, for once exposed to air,
vinegar bacteria will take the cider to a final conclusion.    

CIDER VINEGAR.    

  Cider vinegar is the end result of cider left to sit in the open air.
The alcohol converts to an acetic acid in the presence of vinegar bacteria,
classified en masse as acetobacter.  My first attempt at making vinegar was
simply setting aside a few jugs of sweet cider that had gone fizzy to "do
its thing", in the hopes of producing a few interesting gifts for friends.
Some months later one jug was a delightfully clear vinegar, but the other
two remained cloudy and off-tasting.  There are numerous strains of bacteria
that made foul play of the sugars in these latter jugs of partially-fermented
cider.  I was lucky in the one.  The surest way to make good vinegar every
time is to make hard cider first and then rely on "mother".    
  A vinegar mother is the gelatinous mass of acetobacter to be found
floating on the top of a finished crock of vinegar.  You can purchase a
"Mother of Vinegar" at many health food stores, or start your own.  Simply
pour some hard cider into a pint jar, cover with cheesecloth to keep out
fruitflies, and place in a warm dark place.  The acetobacter will form a
motherly layer on top in a few weeks and you'll notice the distinct smell
of vinegar.   
  Vinegar should be made in a wide-mouthed container, or in a partially
filled cider barrel, to expose a large surface of the hard cider to air.
Add the vinegar mother as a leavening for further acetobacter growth.
Cover the container or bung hole with several layers of cheesecloth to keep
out dust and insects.  Vinegar should be made in a warm dark place, and
expect this process to take several months.  Time preserves the delicacy of
flavor found in a natural cider vinegar that is lost in the 48-hour
acetator process of industrial vinegar making.  You can expect an acid
strength equal to the alcohol content of your hard cider; thus the 6
percent alcohol of a natural cider converts to a 6 percent acetic acid
vinegar.  Stronger vinegars should be distilled with distilled water to
reduce acidic sharpness.   
  A culture so strongly tied to even its vinegar readily builds up a
collection of cider tales.  Regional lore may garner stories like this one
of Bill Lord, extension fruit specialist here in New Hampshire.  It seems
one fellow from Union Village hadn't been seen for two months one winter.
Finally, he showed up at the general store for supplies.  "What'cha been
doing these days, Nathaniel?" asked the shopkeeper.  "Working at home,"
came the taciturn reply.  "Not much doing in winter, is there?"  "Perhaps
not, though you'll have to allow it's hard work hauling thirty gallons of
cider up the cellar stairs, two quarts at a time."     
  Nathaniel's two quarts will be more in demand as the apple again becomes
known for its varietal array.  And if you still don't find a Wickson blend,
or even ol' Granniwinkle herself, on your local grocer's shelf, don't
despair.  Plant some trees, turn that hand screw, and lift your mug up
high.  Three cheers for the cider renaissance!    



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 		SIDE BARS    
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	A GOOD CIDER BLEND   

  Most of us will determine our cider blends when we dump the apples into
the grinder hopper.  Apples are categorized primarily by sugar content,
tannin, and acid.  American tastes lean toward the sweet side in fresh
juice, but a more flavorful hard cider will result from a blend favoring
the tart side.  Neutral, low-acid apples like Cortland, Baldwin, and even
the much-maligned Delicious give a sweet base juice to blend with more
aromatic apples like Northern Spy, Gravenstein, and any of the russets.  A
handful of crabby cider makers get very exacting about proper proportions,
but my advice is to trust your intuition and have fun.  Pressing one bushel
at a time on a screw press gives you many opportunities to "Try, try, and
try again."   

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	CIDER APPLES OF RENOWN    

  Heading the list of classic cider apples are the Golden Russet, Ribston
Pippin, and the Roxbury Russet.  Each of these makes a singularly rich
cider by themselves, a nonblended distinction afforded few apple varieties
over centuries of opinionated cider making.  Bill MacKentley of St.
Lawrence Nurseries in Potsdam, New York, likens a Golden Russet cider to
"the nectar of the gods."  Russets tend to yield a third less juice by
volume than other varieties, but when dealing with heavenly ambrosia, who
cares?    
  The North Orchard at Thomas Jefferson's Monticello estate in Virginia was
dedicated exclusively to the pursuit of fine cider.  Virginia Hewes Crab,
Golden Permian, and the lost Talliferro were particular favorites of Mr.
Jefferson.  Tom Burford of the nearby Burford Brothers Nursery in Monroe
does a cider-making workshop here each October:  "It's become commonplace
to me now to hear people say, 'I didn't know there were so many tastes in
apples.'"  The spicy Grimes Golden gets a strong Virginia commendation for
hard cider makers, with a sugar content of 18.8 percent fermenting to 9
percent alcohol.   
  Out in Courtland, Kansas, amongst the wheat and milo fields, Dan and
Carla Kuhn are defying the windswept plains with orchard plantings for
their Depot Cider Mill.  Jonathan apples squeeze out a sprightly subacid
juice that the Kuhns blend in the renaissance spirit with Stayman Winesap,
Arkansas Black, and Saint George.  There are apples for every region and a
cider for every taste.   
  My own cider favorites don't need to withstand tree-leaning winds as much
as deep, cold winters.  I'll know in the decades to come if these vintage
cider apples -- Sweet Bough, Peck's Pleasant, Fameuse, Wickson, Ashmead's
Kernal, St. Edmund's Russet, to name a few -- continue to pass the winter
hardiness test on our sloping mountainside.  Equally exciting are
twentieth-century selections of Malus domestica that offer both marketable
fruit and tasty juice.  Milton adds an aromatic sweetness to our
late-September pressings.  Tree-ripened Paulareds make a good, mildly tart
juice base.  Macoun, today's vogue apple, crunches sweetly into the October
nectar flowing from our water-powered press.   
  Most of these latter apple varieties have been developed by growing out
pollinated seed of two known varieties.  For northern growers, the
University of Minnesota brought forth a series of Malinda-crossed varieties
with wonderful cider qualities, Harrison, Sweet Sixteen, and the
nutty-flavored Chestnut Crab among them.  Bill MacKentley affirms the worth
of this century's selections: "The cardinal rule of a good breeding program
is to release an apple only if it is superior to its parents."  Name
recognition aside, the buying public is missing out on the likes of Sharon,
Joyce, and Wellington.    
  Home cider makers and orchard entrepreneurs will deserve high praise for
reviving cider to its full array of flavor by blending apples like these.
Such acclaim doesn't belong only to our era, however.  As Mr. Jefferson
might aptly remind us through the easy drawl of Tom Burford, "Oh no, we had
that a while."   

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	CIDER PRESS SOURCES    

  The hand screw press is the one affordable option for today's home cider
maker.  (Smaller hydraulic presses start at $2000, and apparently the
European ratchet-style presses are no longer available in this country.)
Three press makes are available, two of which share the same manufacturing
facility.  Happy Valley Ranch and Jaffrey presses are both made in Kansas;
the Phoenix Foundry in Marcus, Washington, crafts their line on a
custom-order basis.  All three report sales on the rise, pointing again to
the renewed interest in cider making.   
  Single-tub presses are by far the most popular, a choice generally based
on lower cost and acceptance of a one bushel pace.  The double-tub American
Harvesters allow one family member to continue grinding apples while the
alternating tubful is pressed.  A joyous cider crew can expect to crank out
one and a half to two and a half gallons of cider per bushel batch,
depending on the juiciness of the apple varieties pressed.    
  A good grinder is integral to any pressing operation.  Cider makers long
ago discovered that apples first grated to a juicy pulp yield 60 percent
more juice than whole apples.  Jaffrey has upgraded to an all-metal grinder
to match the quality of its "Apple Eater" counterpart at Happy Valley Ranch.
These come with 12-18 pound flywheels respectively, that, once set in
motion, require less effort to keep the grinder turning than a continuous
crank handle.  The Phoenix Foundry adds a 1:3 gear ratio on its double-tub
models to improve the flywheel conversion effort that much again.   
  Any of the Happy Valley Ranch and Phoenix Foundry presses are more
durable than the single-tub Jaffery.  They offer a rugged 1.5" Acme
threaded screw topped with a cast-iron cross arm or nut, compared to the 1"
Acme thread of the Jaffrey topped with a 20" T-bar handle.  More pressing
leverage can be gotten with the 4-pronged cross arms, but using a bar
longer than three feet needlessly risks damaging the press frame.  The
Jaffrey frame is made of 3"x2" sturdy maple; both Happy Valley Ranch and
the Phoenix Foundry use 3"x3" laminated hardwoods that are less likely to
twist or crack with age.  The beveled tub staves on these prove easier to
clean than the square-edged Jaffrey.   
  The Jaffrey Cider and Wine Press is distributed through various farm
catalogs, and the best price I've found, $362.50 plus freight, is through
Orchard Supply.  One nylon press bag is included, but add another $39.50 if
you want the wood hopper attachment for the grinder and $18 for a
juice-gaining tray rack.  The Happy Valley Ranch single-tub Homesteader
comes with the tray rack (but no press bag or hopper) for $399 plus
freight; the HVR double-tub American Harvester sells for $549 plus freight
similarly equipped.  All three of these presses come with an unconditional
one-year guarantee.  Bill Courtis at the Phoenix Foundry feels particularly
sure about his work and ups the warranty period to five years.  His
single-tub Villager cider press with a flywheel handle sells for $423 plus
freight; the four-legged American Harvester press with gear handle sells
for $683 plus freight.  Knock off $60 if you opt for the HVR flywheel
equivalent.  The Phoenix Foundry hand rubs in the final linseed oil coat
before shipping, and includes the wooden hopper but no tray rack.  
  All three companies sell the hardware for their presses if you choose to
do your own woodwork.  Craftier folk can rig a more-traditional rack and
cloth press, using either an antique house screw or an auto hydraulic jack,
and order only a grinder.   

ORCHARD SUPPLY  		HAPPY VALLEY RANCH    
  POBox 540   			  Route 2, Box 83   
  Conway, MA  01341 		  Paola, KS  66071   
  1-800-634-5557   		  (913) 849-3103   

The Phoenix Foundry  
  POBox 68  
  Marcus, WA  99151  
  (509) 684-5434   

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	CIDER APPLE SOURCES   

  Some nurseries specialize in propagating once-favored apple varieties.
Buying regionally connects you with growers who best know which trees are
hardy as well as "taste suited" for your latitude and climate.  I've seen
descriptions of the Ben Davis as once being the South's leading winter
apple, yet here in New England it's a disappointing hardball.  Similarly,
the MacIntosh won't take on that wonderful blend of sweet tartness when
grown in a less frosty clime.  The catalogs of these nurseries are
extremely helpful in telling which apples are good for cider, fresh eating,
cooking, drying, or storing.  A good start might be three trees each for
the September, October, and November cider harvest.  Bear Creek's catalog
offers a helpful chart of approximate ripening dates at their Washington
nursery (these dates will vary with location, but the sequence of varietal
ripening will remain the same.)  Both the Burford Brothers and Southmeadow
Fruit Gardens offer more extensive varietal guides for $12 and $9
respectively.    
  Growing your own trees requires patience in this era of instant
convenience, but you'll find the pleasures of the orchard year well worth
the wait.  Particularly when it gets to be cider pressing time!   

CLASSICAL FRUITS  		BEAR CREEK NURSERY   
  8831 AL Hwy 157  		  POBox 411  
  Moulton, AL  35650   		  Northport, WA  99150  
  (205) 974-8813  		  No telephone available   
  Catalog Free  		  Catalog Free   

BURFORD BROTHERS  		SOUTHMEADOW FRUIT GARDENS  
  Route #1  			  POBox  SM   
  Monroe, VA  24574  		  Lakeside, MI  49116   
  (804) 929-4950  		  (616) 469-2865   
  Catalog  $2  			  Price list free   

ST. LAWRENCE NURSERIES    
  325 State Hwy 345  
  Potsdam, NY  13676   
  (315) 265-6739   
  Catalog $1  

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    Source: geocities.com/tominelpaso