BreakingKZRG NewsLatest NewsLocal InterestsNews Joplin MONewstalk KZRGTrending

MU Extension offers free online Hard Cider School in February

COLUMBIA, Mo. – One of the favorite beverages of the Founding Fathers, fermented apple juice, known as hard cider, is growing more popular in Missouri.

Cider was the most common beverage in Colonial America. Colonists preserved their apple harvests by fermenting the juice. They used apple vinegar for pickling to preserve vegetables through long, harsh winters. When hard cider was plentiful, colonists used it to barter for goods and to pay bills, taxes and wages in the absence of hard currency.

Hard cider has enjoyed a resurgence in recent years. From 2001 to 2016, production in the U.S. increased annually by 27.3%. Hard cider is now estimated to be a $1.5 billion industry, with 910 cider producers in the U.S. as of 2020.

MU Extension is offering its first Hard Cider School in February via Zoom. The free online classes will be presented 6-7 p.m. on four consecutive Wednesdays.

Topics include growing apples for hard cider, controlling apple pests, the production process for hard cider, and fermentation and sanitation in the cidery. Register for the free sessions at extension.missouri.edu/events/hard-cider-school.

Many of the Founding Fathers were hard cider enthusiasts. Before George Washington’s 1758 election to Virginia’s House of Burgesses, he served 144 gallons of hard cider and other beverages to entice voters. John Adams was known to drink an invigorating tankard of hard cider each morning. Thomas Jefferson regularly drank cider made from apples harvested at Monticello. William Henry Harrison generously dispensed hard cider at campaign rallies during his 1840 presidential run.

Cider consumption began to decline by the late 1800s as many rural Americans abandoned their farms and orchards and moved to cities, where beer usurped cider. However, the most devastating blow to the hard cider industry was the enactment of Prohibition in 1919.

For more information, contact Michele Warmund at warmundm@missouri.edu(opens in new window) or 573-882-9632, or Misha Kwasniewski at mtk5407@psu.edu(opens in new window) or 814-865-6842.

 

Show More
Back to top button