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Pressing fresh apple cider is a dying art
NorthJersey.com ^ | 11.22.06 | CAROLINA BOLADO

Posted on 12/19/2006 7:18:06 PM PST by Coleus

Multimedia: Making apple cider
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Doris Heddy remembers when apple cider was the drink of choice each autumn.  Years ago, it was the most popular drink, but now there are choices that are unbelievable," she said, referring to an ever-growing soda and bottled water market.  Heddy owns Van Duyne's Cider Mill in Montville, the remnants of a large farm that dates back to the late 18th century. Every year, from late September until April, she sells thousands of gallons of fresh apple cider, pressed from apples trucked in from Mellick's Orchard in Oldwick.  "Doris has a real loyal fan base," said Brian Cooke, who's helped her press cider for two decades. "A lot of them have been coming for generations. They can remember coming here with their father or their grandfather." Many remember penny cups at the mill: For a penny, you could buy a cup and sit as long as you wanted and get free refills. According to Cooke, the neighborhood kids used to compete to see who could drink the most cider.

THE BASICS

What: Van Duyne's Cider Mill

Where: 160 Pine Brook Road in Montville

Hours: Open weekdays 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturdays 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sundays 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Van Duyne's will be open on Thanksgiving Day from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m.

Cider usually is available until Easter.

Phone: 973- 227-1464

The cider mill, established in 1898, is the oldest one Heddy knows of in the area. The only one older, Nettie Ochs in Livingston, closed last year after the death of the patriarch who ran it. Heddy, has seen some of Ochs' customers this season.  The press she uses has been in the mill since the late 19th century. "It was steam engine powered, then gas," Cooke said. "Then, in 1970, we went modern and got electricity."  Every Thursday or Friday, after pressing cider for three hours -- a yield of about 100 gallons -- Heddy and Cooke spend another three or four hours cleaning all the equipment, especially important because they don't pasteurize, so everything must be kept spotless. Federal law requires pasteurization for cider sold wholesale, or technically in another building than the one in which it was pressed, but Heddy sells all her cider direct to her customers at the mill.

The farm used to grow apples, but only 12 of the original 160 acres remain, six of which can't be used because they're too close to the Passaic River and have flooding issues. Heddy remembers when the farm grew raspberries, peaches, apples, corn and other vegetables that her father and grandfather would sell at a market. When she was young, they even had dairy cows and would send the milk to a nearby dairy farm for processing.  'Everyone that inherited the farm sold it off to development," Heddy said. "In my father's generation, there were eight children, and my grandmother split it up among the eight."  It's the same story of most farms in the Garden State. They've been sold piecemeal to developers over the years as real estate has become increasingly valuable. Cider mills have an added burden: regulation, which began in the mid-1950s and closely monitors the production of cider.

"The stiffer regulations caused a lot to go out, plus farming in general is not as big as it used to be," said Bob Best of Best's Fruit Farms in Hackettstown, where his family has made cider since the early 1950s. "For example, the UV machine was $20,000, and a little guy can't afford that for a few hundred gallons of cider. So it forced the little guy out and the bigger guys were able to survive."  That UV machine is what Best uses to kill any possible bacteria in his cider. Pasteurization kills bacteria with heat, which changes the taste of the cider; Best's machine uses UV rays, which kills microorganisms but doesn't alter flavor. Pasteurization gives the cider more of a cooked-apple taste, he said. It also extends shelf life. Unpasteurized cider stays good refrigerated for about a week; UV-treated cider will keep for two weeks.  Heddy and Cooke still do it the old-fashioned way, mainly because they can't afford to update the equipment. Cider isn't as popular as it used to be, they said.

"Now you have 25 flavors of Pepsi and 30 bottled waters, so we're really just a novelty at this point," Cooke said. "You can still buy cider for less from a supermarket, but we're grateful that people still come here for it."  Heddy and Cooke press cider from late September through April, when they shut down for the summer. The busiest time is around Thanksgiving, when they'll sell 400 to 500 gallons in two days.  "We're just constantly pressing for two days straight," Cooke said. "Squeezing and pressing, that's all we do, but it's good. It's a nice thing. I enjoy it."  Doris Heddy and Bob Best enjoy cider strictly as a drink; Best's wife, however, also uses it as a water substitute in several recipes, including doughnuts and applesauce, which he says are terrific.  Here's a recipe given to Heddy by one of her customers. www.northjersey.com/foodblog.


TOPICS: Food; Gardening; Local News; Outdoors
KEYWORDS: applecider; apples; farming; johnnyappleseed; nj; njfarms; pomologist; pomologists; pomology
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1 posted on 12/19/2006 7:18:08 PM PST by Coleus
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To: Coleus

Brings back a memory . . .

My RN wife and I had just arrived in Spokane the day before--or there abouts--to live upstairs of another Christian Shrink and his wife and two kids in a large former RC parish house on South Hill.

He had just gotten a new apple cider press.

He thought it quite kosher to chunk the apples in the cider press worms and all.

But the best was yet to come.

Both kids had colds. Runny noses and the whole sheeebang.

Both kids would take a bite of apple . . . snot running freely down onto the apple being bitten into . . . and after a bite or two of the mucus anointed apple . . . in it would go into the cider press with the worms and all the rest.

Whereupon daddy would offer RN wife and I a drink of the gloriously fresh apple juice/cider.

We . . . restraining out gag reflexes . . . declined as graciously as we could. I think I actually took a courtesy sip or two. Wife did not let any touch her lips, as I recall.

People can sure be funny. Especially the guy in my mirror.


2 posted on 12/19/2006 7:34:28 PM PST by Quix (LET GOD ARISE AND HIS ENEMIES BE SCATTERED. LET ISRAEL CALL ON GOD AS THEIRS! & ISLAM FLUSH ITSELF)
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To: Coleus

I am sure home school people do that as to many private schools like the Waldorf School.


3 posted on 12/19/2006 7:43:12 PM PST by mojo114
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To: Coleus
http://www.windyridgeorchard.com/ Where New Hampshirites and Northern Vermonters can still buy unpasturized, fresh pressed apple cider.

And if you lay it by, in a keg, well ambrosia is one of the few words that come to mind.

4 posted on 12/20/2006 1:30:10 PM PST by Candor7 (Into Liberal flatulance goes the best hope of the West, and who wants to be a smart feller?)
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To: Coleus; little jeremiah

Cider pressing with a bunch of friends and a nice bring a dish to pass meal is a blast. We are missing so much because we don't do things like this in our culture any more.


5 posted on 12/20/2006 2:23:35 PM PST by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: metmom

"We are missing so much because we don't do things like this in our culture any more."

Yes we are, Metmom!

I have a ton of apple trees, but weather-depending they don't produce well each year. I let Nature do her thing; no chemicals for me, and my area is famous for a late frost after the trees have all bloomed, so it's an every-four year event.

On years when we have a bounty, we borrow the old Cider Press from the in-laws. It weighs about a million pounds, so I need All Hands on Deck to move the d@mn thing, LOL!

We've had great time doing just what you suggested. Pressing cider, drinking fresh apple juice, setting some aside for Hard Cider and the chickens just LOVE crushed up apples.

Good times. :)


6 posted on 12/20/2006 2:29:07 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: Coleus
Unpasteurized cider stays good refrigerated for about a week

If you add some yeast and sugar and put it in the cellar, (or linen closet) it will be real good in about a month....

7 posted on 12/20/2006 2:34:11 PM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear (We must have faith For when it is all said and done, Faith manages. And the impossible is achieved)
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To: metmom

When I was a small kid my father would take us to nearby orchards and get fresh pressed cider. Of course, the orchards are gone now. And all the cider I've seen in stores in years is pasturuized.

That cider we used to get was like nectar of the gods.

I wonder why people think that good farmland can be neglected or covered with houses and shopping centers forever. Nothing is as valuable as good rich farmland.


8 posted on 12/20/2006 2:56:29 PM PST by little jeremiah (Only those who thirst for truth can know truth.)
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To: little jeremiah

I've got an orchard with a number of cider apple trees. The problem is that, even though I'm in the Manzano Mountains of NM (manzano means apple in espanol) the weather, water and altitude mean a good crop only every 5-8 years. Tough, but worth it.


9 posted on 12/20/2006 3:01:26 PM PST by Tijeras_Slim
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Late frosts really are a bummer.


10 posted on 12/20/2006 6:48:56 PM PST by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin; little jeremiah

Cider freezes beautifully. We use empty rinsed out soda bottles and leave some head space for it to expand. Since the caps screw on so tightly, they hardly ever leak.


11 posted on 12/20/2006 6:51:20 PM PST by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: Tijeras_Slim

Is that near Silver City? Got a friend in Albuquerque who wants to buy some property near a place of that name. (I think I got it right). He says it's mountainous, around 6000 feet, and has some pine and rivers.

He's not a rich man, either.


12 posted on 12/20/2006 7:23:13 PM PST by little jeremiah (Only those who thirst for truth can know truth.)
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To: metmom

I have more gallon milk jugs saved than I'll ever be able to fill with cider. ;)


13 posted on 12/20/2006 7:28:12 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: little jeremiah

The Manzanos are the range just east and a bit south of Albuquerque. The Sandias are just east and alongside Albuquerque. SIlver City is more in the SW corner of the state. Pretty country all.


14 posted on 12/21/2006 5:59:53 AM PST by Tijeras_Slim
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To: Tijeras_Slim

Thanks! I've visited him in Albuquerque highway 40 is about all I've seen of NM.


15 posted on 12/21/2006 7:57:53 AM PST by little jeremiah (Only those who thirst for truth can know truth.)
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To: little jeremiah

Take 40 about 10 miles east of Albuquerque and visit Tijeras sometime! :)


16 posted on 12/21/2006 7:59:12 AM PST by Tijeras_Slim
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To: Tijeras_Slim

Next time we drive through that way, we will!


17 posted on 12/21/2006 2:30:48 PM PST by little jeremiah (Only those who thirst for truth can know truth.)
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To: Quix

Quix,

There is nothing like it. I grew up near an orchard which had the best pressed cider you would ever drink. One of my high school friends worked there and ran the cider press. They used to store the cider in huge refrigerated barrel like vats and would fresh pour you a 1/2 gallon or gallon jug. It's taste was amazing.


18 posted on 12/21/2006 2:35:17 PM PST by DarthVader (Conservatives aren't always right , but Liberals are almost always wrong.)
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To: DarthVader

True. It is a great drink.

But, please, spare me the fresh virus infested nasal mucus as an added ingrediant!


19 posted on 12/21/2006 3:38:50 PM PST by Quix (LET GOD ARISE AND HIS ENEMIES BE SCATTERED. LET ISRAEL CALL ON GOD AS THEIRS! & ISLAM FLUSH ITSELF)
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To: little jeremiah

It will be the most fascinating 3 minutes of your life! :)

If you ever get a chance, the orchards up in Dixon NM produce some fantastic apples. Plus the scenery is good too.


20 posted on 12/21/2006 4:35:39 PM PST by Tijeras_Slim
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