Post-Tribune

It’s cider season

- By Rebekah Peppler The New York Times

Autumn is here and, despite the aggressive push for pumpkin spice, it’s unequivoca­lly apple — and cider — season. At its most basic definition, cider is fermented apple juice.

But like wine, it can skew tart, sour, dry, bitter, sweet, wild, herbal, acidic, sparkling with big bubbles or fine, fizzy bubbles, or not sparkling at all. Some ciders aren’t even made from apples, but pears or other pomaceous fruit. If you’re a cider aficionado, there is always a new expression to try; if you’re newer to the world of ciders, it’s safe to assume that, if you taste enough, you’ll find one suited to your palate.

Cider has a long history. Records of cidermakin­g date to the Roman Empire, and many historians believe the Romans discovered it while invading what is now modern-day England. After the Norman Conquest of England in 1066, the drink spread across Europe, with regions developing different production methods and traditions influenced by terroir, apple varieties and local customs.

To that end, traditiona­l English ciders often lean dry and tannic; French cidre tends to be sweeter, lower in alcohol and light in sparkle; and Spanish sidra is frequently funky, tangy and unfiltered. While close in proximity, the northern Basque and Asturias regions — Spain’s two main cidermakin­g areas — produce different styles: Basque cider is typically more acidic and savory; Asturian cider fruitier. A similar contrast plays out in two of France’s neighborin­g cider regions, Brittany and Normandy. Breton cider is often drier and a bit stronger than off-dry, complex Norman bottles.

In North America, cider was extremely popular in the 17th century, but the once-bracing drink fell out of favor amid a rising preference for beer and a move to urban developmen­t in the mid- to late-19th century.

By the end of Prohibitio­n in 1933, many of the orchards producing small tannin-rich, often-astringent cider apples were destroyed and replaced with sweeter, more palatable table apples, and the cider industry didn’t recover in the way the beer and spirits industries eventually did. But since the late 1990s, U.S. cider has moved from post-Prohibitio­n’s candy-sweet iterations to serious bottles that employ heritage and contempora­ry techniques and craft ciders that range from bone dry to juicy and delightful­ly funky.

Enjoyable on its own as an aperitif or served alongside a meal, cider has also found its way into cocktails. Andra “AJ” Johnson, beverage director and managing partner at Serenata in Washington, D.C., and a founder of DMV Black Restaurant Week, likens its role in mixed drinks to that of sparkling wine.

With the addition of sparkling wine, she said, “you’re giving your cocktail another dimension, adding acidity, a bit of tannin quality, balancing the richness or sweetness of the cocktail’s base, and cleansing your palate at the same time.”

Ciders, she added, “are going to act the exact same way.”

Start simple, and combine cider and vermouth in equal parts over ice. For another easy option that’s low-ABV (alcohol by volume), swap wine for cider in a Kir cocktail, and call it a Kir Breton. Or, if you’re looking for something with more spirit, top a base of gin, sherry and orange liqueur with an effervesce­nt glug of dry cider.

“It’s all about creating balance,” she said. “It is not something to be overthough­t.”

The best way to figure out which cider is most balancing is to taste a bunch and experiment. Johnson suggests using a richer cider to counter a more fruitforwa­rd base. Pair a sweeter base with a drier-leaning cider, or vice versa.

Since many ciders are sold in larger-format bottles, you can start the evening with a ciderbased cocktail or two, then drink the rest of the bottle alongside a meal. If you have any left over at the end of the night, Johnson suggests making a cider syrup by combining the remaining cider with sugar in a 1:1 ratio and gently “throwing” or pouring the mixture back and forth between two shakers until the sugar is fully dissolved.

Once you find a cider you like, you can keep pouring it yearround: If history is any indication, the apple, autumn’s quintessen­tial fruit, has staying power.

 ?? DAVID MALOSH/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? A gin cider cocktail. Added to cocktails, sipped on its own or even turned into a syrup, cider is anything but simple.
DAVID MALOSH/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS A gin cider cocktail. Added to cocktails, sipped on its own or even turned into a syrup, cider is anything but simple.

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