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Originally Posted by: heeler This is something that I am trying and hoping it will be palateable. If ya'll have made this in the recent past and will give me advice to make it better I'm all ears. I'm fermenting
64F-68F, hoping it will stop the juice from souring.
This is for a 5 gallon wash---
5 jugs of Peach/Mango nectar,(real fruit).
2 cans of peaches in heavy syrup
3 Beanno tabs - disolved
A good squirt of lemon juice for the acid.
Enough pectin enzyme for a 5 gallon wash.
3 pkg of bakers yeast
1 spoonfull of distillers yeast.
2 spoonfulls of yeast nutrients.
10 LBs of sugar.
My plan is to distill very rapidly for the most flavor carryover I can get.
Regular ole pot still. After stillin I'm gonna cut this to around 90 proof for easy sippin if its drinkable. Not really planning on oak aging but if you've made this and thats what MADE it for you I'll sure givera go. Also gonna grill char some fresh peaches and add that to a jar or two. Now I've tryed something like this before and was surly dissapointed but since then I think I've learned enough to try again so we'll see what happens.
Peach/Mango Brandy 2nd Edition This is another Peach/Mango recipe I'm going to add to this thread just so it will be here incase anybody wants to try it. This is the first time I've done this version so we'll see what happens..
The recipe goes like this......
3 jugs of Mango Nectar
3 jugs of Peach Nectar
each of the jugs mentioned are qt. boxes actually
1 can of sliced peaches in heavy syrup
9 lbs of sugar
Enough pectin enzyme for a 5 gallon wash.
3 spoons fulls of BrewHaus yeast nutrients
2 packs of bakers yeast (Fleischmans)
2 spoons of DADY distillers yeast
Ferment on the cooler side -- 68-74F
I cooked or steeped the juice for 45 minutes, to creat the mash effect and then I added a big can of slice peaches and went another 15 minutes just for good measure. I didn't bring this to a boil and just cook the flavor out of it I just steeped it to unlock the flavor. It might not work but I'll find out after stillin.
And of course what makes this a brandy is the fruit nectar and the sliced peaches, you know real fruit. Remember check your gravity - if it's too high just add water to thin it a bit or your yeast will struggle and you wont be happy. Under or right at 1090 is perfect.
Of course I'm gonna ferment this in my Ferm/chiller and since I have room I made up another fermenter of the Gerber wash recipe to utilize the entire chiller.
So here are some pics just because........
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Edited by user Tuesday, August 18, 2020 2:03:02 PM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified