5 Ciders to Drink to Celebrate the Harvest

If you’re part of the Instagram cidersphere, your feed has likely been rife with harvest photos. Though the perfect time for apple picking varies a bit from region to region, autumn is when farmers and orchardists are out there, harvesting apples in epic numbers.

Harvest Ciders

What better way to celebrate the hard and hopeful work that happens during the harvest season than with harvest ciders?

By “harvest ciders,” we mean ciders that allow the apples and their native yeasts to speak of the land and climate where the fruit was grown, ciders that highlight the qualities of the apples themselves. We mean ciders made with local cider apples, firm with tannins and explosive with acid, which taste of place and not of sugar or other additives. These ciders are made once a year, usually after harvest, similar to wine’s production schedule. After they age for however long the cider maker chooses, the ciders are released, and once they’re sold out, that’s it. This is a markedly different method than year-round cidermaking (more akin to craft beer’s methodology).

While the warm weather usually has us reaching for crushable session ciders (with other fruits and hops more than welcome to the party!), in the fall we long for the esoteric, thought-provoking complexity of harvest ciders.

Here are five to try:

Eden Harvest Ciders

Eden Ciders‘ website has perhaps the most concise definition of “harvest cider” that we’ve come across. The qualifications include:

  • Heirloom and tannic cider-variety apples, grown sustainably and locally in a way that supports rural communities, and building long-term relationships with orchards that grow rare, high-flavor varieties of apples.
  • Apples harvested at peak ripeness, as opposed to under-ripe for storage and shipment to grocery stores.
  • Apples pressed at harvest, or soon after, when flavors, sugars and acids are at their most excellent, as opposed to bringing apples out of cold storage months later when their characteristics have dulled. For Eden, this means making one batch of each cider per year, a very different approach from many modern ciders that produce a new batch from a recipe every few weeks.
  • A slow, cool fermentation that is similar to wine making, allowing flavors to develop over time, and to express the unique character of the apple varieties and their terroir.
  • Maturing ciders so their acids, tannins and any residual sweetness are fully integrated and balanced. This means allowing time to do the work instead of cheap, fast techniques, like adding sugar, acid or tannin out of bags, finding agents to speed clarification, or enzymes to fix microbiological issues.

It’s a lot to consider, and it shows how thoughtful and careful owner Eleanor Leger and her team are in their approach and their philosophy. Any cider from Eden makes a grand toast to the harvest season, though we love the everyday, easygoing nature of the Harvest Cider cans. The lineup consists of Peak Bloom, Deep Cut and Brut Rosé, each made with apples from Vermont orchards, which are gently pressed immediately after harvest and given slow, cool fermentations.

Tasting notes: Peak Bloom: applesauce, honey, white grape, slate; Deep Cut: peach, black tea, citrus; Brut Rosé: bright red berry and apple with light earthy tannin and lingering crispness.

Farnum Hill Farmhouse

This cider-making operation at legendary Poverty Lane Orchards uses bittersweet cider apples varietals, like Dabinett, Ellis Bitter and Yarlington Mill, believing they “make far better cider than fruit-bowl apples.” Farnum Hill’s ciders showcase these apples’ wild and diverse flavors, ranging from fruity and herbal to mineral and earthy notes, each harmonizing with the help of balanced tannins and acid.

Farnum Hill Farmhouse, packaged in camping-friendly cans, is a more casual, rustic cider than some of its ciders in larger format bottles. It’s blended with early-ripening apples for a crisp, pale gold and bubbly drinking experience with a touch less alcohol than Farnum Hill’s other varieties.

Tasting notes: Citrus, pineapple, bittersweet apple and a whiff of barnyard funk, with a clean, appetizing finish.

Big Hill Ciderworks Golden Russet

Big Hill Ciderworks is located in the heart of Adams County, PA, one of the most prolific apple-growing regions in the U.S. Big Hill presses, ferments, bottles and distributes all of  its ciders from the many varieties of apples grown on its land. This is beautiful, providing orchard-driven ciders with no added sugars, sweeteners, colors or flavorings. Many of its ciders are blends of different apples, which are all really balanced and expressive, but we especially love the pure clarity of its Golden Russet cider. This is a single varietal cider that sings with the flavor of of this old American cultivar of a domesticated apple that’s known for its intense tartness.

The cider spends the winter resting on lees (leftover yeast particles), and is then racked and barrel-aged for eight months before bottling. Big Hill says this cider is “a true expression of our microclimate and the terroir of our orchards.”

Tasting notes: Notes of vanilla and burnt sugar with a smooth, lush flavor and balanced dryness.

Art + Science Clutch Cider

Art + Science is a natural cider, perry, and wine producer in rural Yamhill County, Oregon, headed up by husband-and-wife team Dan Rinke and Kim Hamblin (learn more about them via our Instagram Live Q&A chat!). To make cider, they foraged for fruit and purchase from nearby small orchards, then ferment with indigenous yeasts. While they wait for their own estate orchards to fully come into production, the couple explores mostly on privately-owned lands, from abandoned and neglected orchards to seedlings trees growing wild in nature. While this isn’t an agricultural “harvest” in the traditional sense, to us, the effort, labor and persistence involved with foraging is its own harvest to be celebrated!

Art + Science’s Clutch Cider is an orchard-based cider sourced from twenty year old English cider apples planted at Northrop Acres outside of Amity, Oregon. The fruit is milled and pressed, and then fermented naturally with native yeast with nothing else added  – no added sulfur, acid, sugar or forced carbonation.

Tasting notes: Traditional and dry, with a bit of barnyard funk, upfront acidity and notable tannic structure.

Scar of the Sea Newtown Pippin Hard Cider

Scar of the Sea, founded by Mikey Giugni and Michael Brughelli, two college friends with a shared affinity for the ocean, makes cider and wine that are influenced by the maritime soils, and climates of the Central Coast of California. Its ciders are made with apples harvested from a handful of orchards dotted across the Mountain foothills, coastal valleys and high deserts of the nearby terrain. These include Bear Creek Ranch in Santa Cruz, Chadmark Farms in Paso Robles and Kids Inc Orchards in the Sierra Foothills. The apples harvested from these small farms create ciders that are terroir-driven, balanced and complex.

Its Newtown Pippin Cider is made from a harvest of Newton Pippin apples from Bear Valley Ranch in Aptos, California, which was planted between 1940 and the 1960s farmed without any chemical inputs After barrel fermentation with native yeast in French oak barrels, the cider is barrel-aged aged sur lie for 12 months. Then, it’s re-fermented in the bottle with a dosage from 2020 fresh juice to add carbonation.

Tasting notes: Very bright with aromas of bubble gum, banana runts and apples. Tart and dry.

What are your favorite harvest ciders to reach for as the weather cools? Let us know!

  • Eden Cider photos: Dish Works
  • Harvest photo: Jack's Hard Cider
  • All other photos: Courtesy of the respective cideries