I’ve Brewed Tons of Cider… But Never With Cider Yeast (Until Now)

I’ve Brewed Tons of Cider… But Never With Cider Yeast (Until Now)

I’ve brewed a lot of cider over the years.
Under pressure. With beer yeast. And yes — one time with my sourdough starter, because apparently I enjoy confusing microorganisms and myself equally.

But somehow — and I still don’t know how this happened — I had never actually brewed cider with cider yeast.

Not once.

That realization hit me like the last hydrometer hitting the floor on brew day.
So obviously… we had to fix that.

Let’s kick it.


🎥 Watch the Full Video

Want to see how the fermentation behaved under pressure, the pour, and the tasting as it actually happened?
I walk through the numbers, the process, and the final verdict in the full video.

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cider look 2 copy

The Blind Spot: Why Had I Never Used Cider Yeast?

My channel is mostly about beer. Brewing beer, fermenting beer, obsessing over beer, and occasionally doing things I probably shouldn’t — all in the name of science.

But I have brewed quite a few ciders.

They’ve been good.
Some have been very good.
A few were… educational.

After a previous cider experiment using Angel Yeast A01 that turned out surprisingly well, Angel Yeast casually mentioned:

“You know… we actually make cider yeast.”

And suddenly, it clicked.

I had used:

  • Lager yeast

  • Different ale yeasts

  • Sourdough starter

…but never cider yeast (or wine yeast, for that matter).

That felt wrong. Almost irresponsible.

So this experiment was born.

The Plan: Simple, Clean, and Under Pressure

This was a split-batch experiment, but in this post we’re focusing entirely on the cider fermented with BV818 — a yeast most commonly used for white wine.

Yes, that might sound confusing.

Stay with me.

BV818 behaves in a way that actually makes it very interesting for cider.


The Cider Recipe (Small Batch)

  • 3.5 L Swedish “Äppelmust”
    (fancy, unfermented apple juice)

  • 2 dl apple juice concentrate
    (to bump gravity naturally)

  • BV818 wine yeast, rehydrated

  • A pinch of BrewNutri-Z

  • Fermented under pressure: 22 PSI (1.5 bar)

That’s it.

No spices.
No hops.
No funny business.

I wanted to let the yeast do the talking.

juice for hard cider copy

Why BV818 Makes Sense for Cider (Even If It Says “Wine Yeast”)

BV818 is technically a wine yeast, but its characteristics line up beautifully with what we want in a dry, clean cider:

  • Wide fermentation range: 10–30°C

  • Alcohol tolerance: up to 18%

  • Low H₂S and volatile acidity

  • Neutral sensory profile — it lets the fruit shine

In other words:
It doesn’t try to be the star of the show.

It lets the apples speak.

For cider, that’s exactly what you want.

    Angel yeast bv818 copy

    Gravity, Volumes, and the Numbers (Yes, We’re Nerdy)

    Before adding concentrate, the gravity sat at 1.044.
    After adding the concentrate, it landed at 1.055.

    I measured both batches.

    Because I’m that guy.

    The final volume came out to 3.7 liters, which fits perfectly in the iGulu fermenter. Everything neat. Everything controlled. Very satisfying.

      Fermentation: Warm, Fast, and Aggressive

      This fermentation took off instantly.

      Almost suspiciously fast.

      Temperature Schedule

      • 25°C for 2 days

      • 26°C for 2 days

      • 28°C for 3 days

      That’s warm.

      On purpose.

      Under 22 PSI, I was honestly a bit confused that the pressure didn’t hold down the krausen quite as much as I expected.

      Which makes me wonder…

      What would have happened at these temperatures without such high pressure?
      Would it have tried to escape through the safety valve?
      Would I be cleaning apple foam off the ceiling?

      Experiments for another day.

      fermentation scheduele cider copy

      Conditioning Time (Patience, Doctor…)

      This cider was brewed on November 30th and tasted again on January 5th, giving it about a month to condition.

      I did try it very young in a slightly questionable bonus video for my OnlyHans followers (aka Patreon) — curiosity got the better of me — but this post is about the properly conditioned version.

      And yes.

      Time matters.

       


       

      The Pour: Looks Can Be Deceiving

      The pour was… beautiful.

      • Pale yellow

      • Slight haze

      • Aromatically very clean

      I didn’t use finings. Just time.

      And it carried no head whatsoever.

      Which — yes — it’s cider.
      Calm down.

       


       

      Pouring cider bv818 copy

      Final Numbers (Here’s the Fun Part)

      • Original Gravity: 1.055

      • Final Gravity: 0.998

      • ABV: ~7.5%

      That’s wine strength.

      If you don’t want something that strong — skip the concentrate. Simple as that.


       

      Aroma & Flavor: Wine-Like, Dry, and Sharp

      The aroma is unmistakably apple — but not sweet apple.

      More like fermented apple juice drifting into white wine territory.

      Very dry.
      Very clean.
      Slight alcohol presence.

      This is not a crushable summer cider.

      This is a sip-and-think cider.

      If you like wine, you’ll love this.


       

      cider aroma copy

      So… Is This “Real Cider”?

      That’s the question this brew raised for me.

      Because after tasting this, it suddenly made sense why:

      • Cider yeast exists

      • People don’t always use beer yeast for cider

      • Some ciders taste more like wine than beer-adjacent apple soda

      This was absolutely beautiful — and it might explain why people choose cider yeast in the first place.


       

      cider taste test copy

      Final Verdict (And What’s Next)

      Fermenting cider with BV818 under pressure delivered:

      • Clean fermentation

      • Insane attenuation

      • Wine-like dryness

      • Zero nonsense

      Would I do it again?

      Absolutely.

      Next up:

      • A Saison yeast cider, recommended by one of my YouTube followers

      • A proper head-to-head comparison

      I do these experiments so you don’t have to.

      DrHans out. 🍎🍺


       

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      Contact Email: drhansbrewery@gmail.com

       

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