118: Cider Dinner w/Gitche Gumee Ciderworks | MI

118: Cider Dinner w/Gitche Gumee Ciderworks | MI

Author: Ria Windcaller: Award-winning Cidermaker, Podcaster | Craft Beer Columnist March 7, 2018 Duration: 1:01:53

The main chat with Gitche Gumee begins at 12:00 minutes.

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Cider pairs well with food, especially Ethiopian dishes that have spicy overtones.

In this chat, Phillip Kelm and I were both attending CiderCon2018 in Baltimore thus the opportunity to dine at Ebenezer's Ethiopian Restaurant and chat cider.

This restaurant was chosen because it offered a Bring Your Own Bottle (BYOB) option. I wanted to be able to try Phillip's bottle of Entropy while dining.

Phillip begins with a pour of the "wild ferment" Entrophy.

We delve into his early beginnings in fermentation science... He started fermenting when he was 16 saying, "I couldn't buy beer, but could buy a beer kit." .. something that Phillip learned in Mother Earth News.

He became a mechanical engineer and first worked in the nuclear industry before moving onto brewing.

For most of his career he has been setting up brewing systems around the world via his business Gitche Gumee Brewing Services, a worldwide brewery installation & engineering business.

He also manages the Palau Brewing Company, home of Red Rooster Beers. Currently he is working on a cidery in India and is a partner at the South Korean cidery, The Hand and Apple.

Our dinner was primarily focused around his cidery based in Michigan's Upper Peninsula called Gitche Gumee Ciderworks, where he makes what he called "feral ciders".

 Apples used at Gitche Gumee

  • Foragers bring the apples to the cidery and Phillip in turns produces cider.
  • He pays .20/pound of apples. They are collecting apples by the ton.

Says Phillip, "There is no [apple] pedigree - they are wild chance seedlings."

Cidermaking technique used for the Entropy

  • no sulfites
  • no water
  • no yeast
  • no sugar
  • Using French oak barrels.
  • The cider is left to do its own thing in the right environment.

Additional cider making notes

  • Select only the best fruit
  • Only the best skin
  • No maceration
  • Rack over the lees
  • By February the cider is out of stainless after it has been racked off the lees at least 2 times already
  • Leave the yeast behind to starve.

Managing Wild Fermentation

  • Make sure that the fruit is "solid and ripe"
  • Apples are matured for at least a few days or a week

Contact Gitche Gumee Ciderworks

Website: http://www.gitchegumeeciderworks.com/

Address:

  • 350 N Lincoln Drive
  • Hancock, MI 49930

Mentions in this chat

Threadbare Cider and Mead

Totally Cider Tour: Normandy - September 23 - 29, 2018 contact ria@ciderchat. com to reserve your space on this upcoming trip.

Ask for the following ciders - By supporting these cidermakers, you in turn help Cider Chat

  1. Kurant Cider - Pennsylvania : listen to Joe Getz on episode 14
  2. Big Apple Hard Cider - NYC : listen to Danielle von Scheiner on episode 35
  3. Oliver's Cider and Perry - Herefordshire/UK ; listen to Tom Oliver on episode 29
  4. Santa Cruz Cider Company - California : listen to Nicole Todd on episode 60
  5. The Cider Project aka EthicCider- California
  6. Albermale CiderWorks : listen to Chuck Shelton on episode 56
  7. Cider Summit : listen to Alan Shapiro founder of this cider fest on episode 75.
  8. Ramborn Cider Co. Luxembourg s
  9. Big Fish Cider Co. Virginia
  10. Tanuki Cider Co. Santa Cruz California episode 103

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There’s a whole world in a glass of cider, and Cider Chat is your invitation to explore it. Hosted by award-winning cidermaker and writer Ria Windcaller, this podcast travels far beyond the bottle to meet the people who make the global cider culture so vibrant. Each conversation is a journey-you might find yourself in a heritage orchard learning the history of forgotten apple varieties, in a bustling taproom with an importer explaining regional traditions, or in a kitchen with a chef pairing cider with unexpected foods. The discussions get into the delightful nuances, too, whether that’s the semantics of what we even call this drink or how the concept of terroir translates from soil to sip. It’s not just about production; it’s about the community, the travel, and the stories that fermentation unlocks. This is for anyone curious about the craft, history, and sheer enjoyment of fermented apple juice in all its forms. So, pour a glass and settle in for a series that feels like a wide-ranging, informative, and genuinely good-humored chat with friends who happen to be obsessed with cider. You’ll come away with a deeper appreciation for every effervescent, tart, or sweet sip, hearing directly from the growers, makers, and enthusiasts who are shaping this drink’s exciting present and future.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 501

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