I love wine.  And I love cider.  Beer? Not so much... Although some of the micro-wheat-beers have proven enjoyable over the last few years.  Well, since my budget has been lean, I've been trying to minimize what I am spending on alcohol without eliminating it.

I can sip on two ciders all night, but I will drink more than half a bottle of wine. I wondered why my alcohol intake was so much higher with the wine.  Then I realized that volume is the key.  A bottle of wine is approximately 25 ounces of liquid.  If I drink 2/3 of a bottle of wine, I've drunk about 16 ounces of liquid. Two ciders is 24 ounces of liquid.  Ah Ha!  Now it's all making sense.

And when I look at the cost...well, let's calculate an $8 bottle of wine.  2/3 bottle of wine = $5  A six pack of Strongbow (one of my faves) is $8, so 2 ciders is $2.60.

And look at the math?!?!

2 ciders = 24 oz of liquid + approx 283 calories + 7 carbs + 5% alcohol + $2.60

2/3 bottle of wine = 16 oz of liquid + approx 400 calories + 12 carbs + 13.5% alcohol + $5

Oh yeah, and did I mention that hard cider is gluten-free? So, obviously hard cider is a better choice for me all the way around.  Still, if you calculate the cost of drinking 12 ciders a week, it's about $16 a week, or $64 a month, which is a measurable chunk.  So I had come across a post awhile back talking about it being fairly inexpensive and easy to brew hard cider. Hmmm -- that's interesting.

I came across this blog post on a blog called The Paupered Chef.    And their follow-up post indicated success with brewing a Strongbow-like cider.  So, off I went to Wine Craft for supplies to brew two gallons of hard cider.

  • 1 packet of lager yeast = $5 (enough for 5 gallons of cider)
  • 2 rubber stopper airlocks = $2.50
  • 2 #6 rubber stoppers = $1.85

Luckily, Whole Foods was in the shopping center next to Wine Craft, so I popped in for 2 gallons of organic cider in glass bottles.  $7 each

Put them together in less than 5 minutes and now just have to be patient.  The airlocks and stoppers can be reused, so I'm not going to count them into my costs.  A gallon is a little over 10 12-ounce ciders at a total price of $8.  That's about $0.80 per cider or $1.60 a night (for two).  The other thing that I like is that I sometimes don't want a full 24-0unces of cider.  Sometimes 16 ounces would hit the spot, so it may turn out to be less waste.  If they turn out decent, then I will expand my operation so I can have some ready and some brewing at all times.

Stay tuned...

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