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	<title>Cider by Rosie &#187; tom oliver</title>
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	<description>Cider by Rosie blog - The Cider Making Year by Rose Grant in Dorset</description>
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		<title>The big tank</title>
		<link>http://www.ukcider.co.uk/ciderbyrosie/the-big-tank/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ukcider.co.uk/ciderbyrosie/the-big-tank/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2009 23:28:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Rose</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[diary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[apples]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cider]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[scrapyard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tank]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tom oliver]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Last year I decided to take my two ex winery aluminium &#8216;Sputnik&#8217; tanks to the scrapyard. They were taking up too much room in the ciderhouse. I was also not convinced that their internal enamel coating would continue to survive &#8230; <a href="http://www.ukcider.co.uk/ciderbyrosie/the-big-tank/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Last year I decided to take my two ex winery aluminium &#8216;Sputnik&#8217; tanks<br />
to the scrapyard. They were taking up too much room in the ciderhouse.<br />
I was also not convinced that their internal enamel coating would<br />
continue to survive being immersed in cider for a great deal longer.<br />
Scrap metal prices were good and I was able to more than cover their<br />
original cost of £50 on Ebay. Having less tankage has however made<br />
blending even more difficult than usual, since I&#8217;d lost two tanks that<br />
I could move the cider to, during the mixing process. I do like my<br />
draught to be truly composed of the complete season&#8217;s apples. It has<br />
become a &#8216;lodestar thing&#8217; for me that Cider by Rosie fully represents<br />
the season from mid September to Christmas and that its flavour<br />
remains the same throughout the drinking season.</p>
<p>This year it was impossible to fully blend until the first 1000 litre<br />
IBC had been emptied, due to the lack of tank space. The cider in this<br />
tank was acceptable but rather on the sharp side. Although in itself a<br />
blend of perhaps 4 varieties, they were early season apples which tend<br />
to be acidic. It sold well enough but I was not really happy with it.<br />
When it had gone I was able to blend the remaining 5 IBCs ( I make<br />
6000 litres of traditional draught). It was a moment of truth when I<br />
tasted the result, being very pleasing and having the same rich, soft<br />
dry, sort of flavour as in previous years. My full season ideal seemed<br />
to be vindicated once and for all. The romantic notion that Nature<br />
provides its own balance came to me, not for the first time.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve given this blending problem a lot of thought in recent years.<br />
I&#8217;ve mentioned it here which stimulated clever proposals involving<br />
pumping this way and that between the tanks to ensure that each<br />
contained the identical blend. One posting stood out in my mind. It<br />
was about Customs &amp; Excise inspections rather than blending. Tom<br />
Oliver remarked that he had difficulty explaining to the inspector<br />
that his 6000 litre blending tank was not used for the storage of<br />
cider! This is the solution for me too, I thought. Never mind the<br />
inspections. I will cross that bridge as and when needed. I want a<br />
6000 litre tank! I can do the initial fermentation of the whole<br />
season&#8217;s cider in it, whereupon all will be fully blended. Plentiful<br />
co2 will fill the headspace, safeguarding the juice as the season&#8217;s<br />
pressings progressively fill the tank. Then just after Christmas I<br />
will transfer the still fermenting cider to the 6 IBCs in the tank<br />
room, thus performing a racking in the process. Well that is the theory.</p>
<p>Today it became a reality. A massive plastic cylindrical water tank<br />
now stands in our garden. I can&#8217;t believe how big a 2 metre diameter<br />
tank actually looks! My mind has been working flat out thinking how to<br />
alter its role from being a giant garden ornament, to a functional<br />
item situated out of sight behind the cider house. I had thought it<br />
would be possible to move it by rolling, but have been dismayed by its<br />
great weight and the fact that it is impossible to get any sort of<br />
grip on such a large drum. It is over 2 M in height which is also<br />
unhelpful. I can see that I will definitely be in need of help from my<br />
friends.</p>
<p>A few weeks back Barry and Albert came with a very awkward load.<br />
Somehow back at Burley they had managed to get some very heavy items<br />
inside Barry&#8217;s big white cider van. One of these was a pallet of<br />
champagne bottles. These Barry had kindly bought on my behalf along<br />
with his own consignment from France. This weighed best part of a ton<br />
as did the other item. This was a 500 litre stainless dairy tank<br />
complete with outer cooling tank and refrigeration equipment! Barry<br />
and Albert had been determined to rescue this for me from a farm in<br />
the New Forest where it was no longer required. It will be perfect for<br />
keeving, due to the possibility of temperature control. I look forward<br />
to modifying it and putting it to good use. However the immediate<br />
problem was how to get these things out of the van and into my garage.<br />
Luckily Charles, a friend in the village, came along with his tractor<br />
and was able to lift them out with his front loader.</p>
<p>I am now very much in need of Charles with his tractor again! There is<br />
a strong lifting eye moulded into the top of the tank. I&#8217;m hoping that<br />
Charles will be able to lift the tank up and over the fence behind the<br />
cider house, once I have obtained permission from the owner for access<br />
to his adjoining field.</p>
<p>This is what the tank is like except that it is black. There is a 1 in<br />
BSP stainless outlet fitted near to the base. Luckily I thought of<br />
asking for that, as the standard fitting is brass.</p>
<p>Rose.</p>
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