For any of you that have an extra carboy around and don't have time for a full brew day:
I saw Ed Wort's Apfelwein thread on homebrewtalk a couple weeks ago and decided to give it a go. Dumped 5 gallons of apple juice into a carboy, 2 lbs of brown sugar (dissolved into a few cups of applejuice and brought to a boil with some yeast nutrient), and a packet of red star montrachet yeast directly into a carboy yesterday. Costs about $23 all in, (can be cheaper depending on the cost of apple juice). Takes about 20 minutes from start to finish. I actually also added a frozen can of apple juice concentrate as well as that supposedly enhances the apple flavor per brewer's comments.
Should come in around 9%+ abv... It's so easy that I did one 6 gallon carboy last weekend, and a 5 gallon this weekend. The yeast is a lot different than I'm used to. No Krausen whatsoever. You can literally fill the carboy up to the neck and slap an airlock on (it bubbles like soda, strange for us beer brewers). Sounds like this stuff is supposed to spectacular after 8 months of aging.
The original recipe calls for corn sugar, but I'm hoping to maintain some residual sweetness from the unfermentable portion of brown sugar (if any). The original version is apparently very dry, with the booze receding and the apple coming forward at around 8 months. People rave about this stuff at the 8 month mark.
The first batch is bubbling almost as fast as the batch I just started. I figure I'll rack to kegs in a month or 2 and forget about it. I have that extra gallon in the first batch that I'll force carb in a couple of soda bottles with the carbonator caps so I can try it young. Tempted to pour another 5 gallons of apple juice directly on the yeast cake after racking to the kegs, but the yeast is 59 cents a pack, so not sure it is worth it.
Anyone have any experience with this? I'll probably crack the first one in October for football season, and the 2nd at thanksgiving for the family gathering.