Apple Juice 🍎 Traditional

Hello, everyone! πŸ“· 😎

Unlike the last four years, this year there was a good apple harvest. Every time this happens, we make apple juice from them. Around the same time, late October. The last time we did it was five years ago.

The preparation of apple juice here always follows the same procedure - my grandparents, my parents, and now my family and I. That's why I wrote traditional - first picking, then grinding, finally pressing. Only the people and the means we use to do it change :)

I documented the whole process with photos, yes, I always have my phone in my pocket, no matter what I'm doing.
So this post is also a photo blog about the activity I was most involved in last month.

🍏 πŸ“· 😎 πŸ“· 🍎

We have an orchard with apple trees at my mother's house. This year, after five years, they were full of fruit, and it took my son and me a week, every afternoon for a few hours, to pick these apples.

In the end, quite a few of these apples were collected.
Let me also say that in our orchard, there are at most two types of apples, the so-called 'Bobovec' and 'Briner', which are sweet and sour, more suitable for juice, strudels, and pies. They're not pretty to look at, and they don't shine like the ones in stores.

My rough estimate is that there were about 600 kilos of apples.

As I mentioned, my son and I spent five days picking, and last Saturday we made the juice. This required some preparation.
First of all, we bought a new fruit grinder. The previous one, which my late father had commissioned fifty years ago, was already too old, and the electric motor no longer started.

Unboxing the new fruit grinder:

Much smaller and lighter than the old one, but at € 750.00, the price is relatively high.

Next, we had to prepare a place to grind and press the apples - the garage of our grandmother's house, which is now full of all sorts of stuff.

And then we started grinding and pressing.

The process is always the same.

First, we pick the apples again (because they constantly rot, they are not the most durable) and wash them.

Then they go to the grinder, where they are ground into pulp.

This pulp is white, but like peeled apples, it oxidizes very quickly in the air and turns brown. This is a natural process; there is nothing wrong with it.

Now the pulp goes into the press, where it is pressed and the juice is extracted. Our press is old, 50 years or more, and it was only when we started pushing that I noticed it was not suitable for such fine pulp, because a lot of it sticks out.

In addition to the mill/grinder/whatever, I should have bought a new press, but prices for galvanized presses start at €1000, and I wasn't ready to pay that much. After all, we're not a juice factory; the juice is only for the family, not for sale. The mill I bought was already oversized, and the pulp was too delicate.
That's how it is when I listen to others! :(

I had to find another solution, actually, an improvisation: I added a plastic mesh to the press to prevent the pulp from splashing out.

But then it was OK.

We were grinding and juicing from morning till night, the whole family. We squeezed about 150 liters of juice, which went into a green barrel.
We will drink it until it ferments, which usually happens in a week. Maybe I will try to make cider, and what is left will turn into apple cider vinegar in a couple of years.

We pasteurized 50 liters (read: boiled between 90-100 degrees Celsius) and poured the hot juice into plastic bags. This juice doesn't spoil and stays sweet all year long. We'll see.

And at the end of a rather tiring day, dinner.
Apples again!
Baked, stuffed with plum jam and ice cream.

Very tasty, but I would prefer beer. 🍻
I went to a nearby club for a beer and also recorded the concert.

Thank you for your attention!

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29 comments
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Congratulations, your post has been curated by Ecency. / Felicidades, tu post ha sido curado por Ecency.

Cured by: @osomar357

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Thank you very much for your support!

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Hello, happy Monday.
It's always a pleasure.
My best wishes.

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Wow, this was a lot of work. Congrats! And congrats for ingenious solution to all the problems !LOLZ

Do make some cider. Or even some calvados ;)

!invest_vote
!BEER

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Thanks. I would try calvados, but I have a huge old wood-fired boiler, and when it's boiling, it's pretty tiring because it takes a long time. Years ago, I tried, I brewed about 17 liters of apple brandy, it took a whole week, and I was drunk as a mamba the entire time πŸ˜΅β€πŸ’«

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It's the process that counts !LOLZ

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!INDEED but I'm not sure I could handle something like that right now, it takes a lot of fitness, you know that πŸ˜‚

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Nicely done, what an involved process! I may have missed in there, but what kind of apples were they? They looked good. It is work intensive, collecting them, grinding them, and then pressing them. But it gives you some great apple juice. I prefer beer too, I'm with you there. How was the concert? The lead singer looked pretty good! lol

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Thanks. They are so-called 'Bobovec' and 'Briner', two old Slovenian sorts. Yeah, the concert will be published. ASAP. But I'm still in July for concerts :)

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one thing that I don't like whenever I make apple juice for the customer is the oxidation, as it turn brown so quickly, which makes the fresh juice look like it has been spoiled. For those who used to drink it alot, they know the process, but for some, it bring a little bad comment. !LOLZ

that presser is so old, as it made in Yugoslavia. The product last longer than what used to be a great country.
!PIZZA !LUV

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!INDEED
I agree. But this kind of juice is entirely natural. Even pasteurization is an artificial process..
Now that I have experience with the new crusher, I know that I should take it together with the new water press. But it is too expensive, at least for me. I will combine it with nets in three to four years, when I do it next time. 😎

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What a nice harvest! And the apples being turned into juice I love that Nothing goes to waste because there’s always a way to make use of everything. I really believe in your skill and creativity in making that.

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Thanks. That's true. The rest could be used for cooking apple brandy.

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So many beautiful harvest you've got. And I must say that's a whole lot of work making a apple juice, maybe there should be a machine that does both process at a go.

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Thanks. Yes, there are machines for a completely automated process of producing juice, but the amount of apples I have is too small for something like that. And they are costly.

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Wow! I can only imagine the number of apples that will be needed for that machine to work in it's capacity because these ones that you call small doesn't seems small to me.

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These machines are for juice sellers. That's why they're so expensive. Prices start at €10,000.00. I got 200 liters of juice, which is not enough for any serious sales. I would need a few hectares of orchards for something like that, and then I would have to deal with it. That's not my intention. Apples don't ripen that abundantly every year, either. Only every three or four years.

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Oh, I see. That's a lot. Thanks for the enlightenment

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You're welcome. Actually, I don't know much about, I mean, fruit growing. I'm into entirely different things. But now that I'm older, I'm starting to appreciate it more and, of course, I'm still learning.

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Wow love the whole process in making apple juice!apple juice comes a lot of benefits to human..this is a good medicine to someone suffering from minor illnesses...and also this is very good because its being processed naturally.

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That's right. That's how it's always been done here. We don't put any preservatives in the juice, so it turns into cider and later into vinegar.

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They're not pretty to look at, and they don't shine like the ones in stores.

They look pretty to me. Natural fruit that I remember from local orchards as a kid. Not supermarket plastic.

!BBH

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!INDEED
The trees are 50 to 100 years old. The apples have not been treated with anything. That's why there are fewer of them every year.
If I wanted to plant new apple trees, I would have to spray them regularly against pests; otherwise, they wouldn't even grow.

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