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@@randallparker8477⚠️ God has said in the Quran: 🔵 { O mankind, worship your Lord, who created you and those before you, that you may become righteous - ( 2:21 ) 🔴 [He] who made for you the earth a bed [spread out] and the sky a ceiling and sent down from the sky, rain and brought forth thereby fruits as provision for you. So do not attribute to Allah equals while you know [that there is nothing similar to Him]. ( 2:22 ) 🔵 And if you are in doubt about what We have sent down upon Our Servant [Muhammad], then produce a surah the like thereof and call upon your witnesses other than Allah, if you should be truthful. ( 2:23 ) 🔴 But if you do not - and you will never be able to - then fear the Fire, whose fuel is men and stones, prepared for the disbelievers.( 2:24 ) 🔵 And give good tidings to those who believe and do righteous deeds that they will have gardens [in Paradise] beneath which rivers flow. Whenever they are provided with a provision of fruit therefrom, they will say, "This is what we were provided with before." And it is given to them in likeness. And they will have therein purified spouses, and they will abide therein eternally. ( 2:25 ) ⚠️ Quran
🔴 What Is Islam? 🔴 Islam is not just another religion. 🔵 It is the same message preached by Moses, Jesus and Abraham. 🔴 Islam literally means ‘submission to God’ and it teaches us to have a direct relationship with God. 🔵 It reminds us that since God created us, no one should be worshipped except God alone. 🔴 It also teaches that God is nothing like a human being or like anything that we can imagine. 🌍 The concept of God is summarized in the Quran as: 📖 { “Say, He is God, the One. God, the Absolute. He does not give birth, nor was He born, and there is nothing like Him.”} (Quran 112:1-4) 📚 🔴 Becoming a Muslim is not turning your back to Jesus. 🔵 Rather it’s going back to the original teachings of Jesus and obeying him. More .....👇 🔴 THE RETURN OF JESUS
Yeah I’m wondering who’s going to finish his project first, Jason or Spag’s and his wife’s closet. I’ve always wanted a apple press though. Thanks Jason
I think the awkward way the pressing wheel was designed so that you can put a stick or something similar in between the four rods to apply some extra torque and pressure to get every last bit of apple juice. Nice build!
Problem with using the long stick like it was designed for is that the whole frame either wants to tip over or rack. I think a diagonal brace and a base member to stand on is needed.
The author does like to from scratch, ruclips.net/user/postUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO shaping and trimming wood from large blocks into fine finished products. As another reviewer mentioned, most projects require a lot of high-dollar equipment that most of us don’t have the room or budget for. But, knowing how to do these things, even if we won’t be able to practise the full stack project, is still great.
Yeah, in the US, cider is the fresh pressed apple juice. Apple juice is the cider after it has been filtered (and usually pasteurized) until clear. Hard cider is fermented apple cider/juice. My father would make his own hard cider by setting a couple gallons of purchased fresh-pressed cider (from a local farm) in the larder with either loose fitting caps or actual wine-maker's airlocks, and wait for the natural yeasts already in the cider to do it's job. As I recall it was mixed results, but usually turned out well.
It's a US thing. Different nomenclature to describe apple juice products. I'm still trying to figure out how he's going to consume 25 gallons of cider before it ferments or go bad...
I absolutely love that. He has put an AC motor on a device that he was unwilling to use the festool domino. Love the content, love the humor and love the answers to laziness
I remember as a 8 year old in the 60s, helping my Italian grandfather press the grapes each year for his wine. All by hand and the Press was a huge round concrete pedestal with a heavy bar that you had to insert above your head and you got a half a turn and then you had to pull it out, walk around to the other side and do it all over again. It reminded me of the old Grist Mill in the Western movies with the kid riding the mule around and around. Even after he no longer made wine, just going into the cellar and smelling the fermented residue stirred up great memories. Thanks for posting this and making an old man smile.
The small wheel with the 4 tubes on it is shaped like this so you can hook a long wooden stud in between them and use the big leaver to really crank the press down and squeeze all of the juice out.
@@vincentdesjardins1354 sure is, but there's a wee problem... *looks at pulp containing another glass of cider. *looks at cows *looks at pulp Sorry cows, you lose.
Hey Jason, Chris from Minneapolis here. I sincerely want to thank you. Last night my almost 6 year old daughter, this Friday the 13th is her bday, broke both bones in her forearm. Watching this vid in full gave me a little break from getting the visual of horror in her face out of my mind. She's doing fine now. She seems a little depressed or just in pain but it'll pass with time. So again, a heartfelt thank you so so much Jason. Truly awesome vid btw.
White oak would be the preferred lumber for the trays, buckets and press plate anyway. Being almost completely impervious to water it would definitely be a family heirloom for many generations to come. Production presses are usually hard maple but mostly due to cost efficiency.
You might want to create a wooden in-feed chute for the apple shredder so fingers are further way from the blades, especially if you intend to press (gang) your kids into apple cider production in the future
31:49 the reason for the shape of the press handle is because your suppose to shove a long a long stick in between the nubs for leverage when pressing and easily reposition it between the nubs after rotating it.
Great build and brought back many memories doing this with my family for decades. Interesting using the fly wheel to go on the screw handle. However you might find you could squeeze more cider from the apple pieces if you use a good axe handle between the 4 stubs sticking up on the handle rotate under pressure. Also need to build a nice maple hopper on top of grinder so you can dump in large amount of apples. Thank you for my morning coffee drinking entertainment and nostalgia time!. I am 62 and started making cider since mid 20's so you got this kid!
One of my favorite builds you’ve done. Can’t say it enough, how much I appreciate that you still actually make stuff and not just advertise. Loved this build.
You build armatures out of wood? So that's where electricity comes from. And all this time I thought you had to wait for a lighting storm to fly a kite with a metal key hanging on the string.. Technology is just passing by me faster and faster! 😮
My daughter has been shopping for a makeup vanity (eww, shopping). I was taking her to dance and had one of your videos playing in the background. I didn't know she was watching it until she said she wanted you to build a vanity. Broke my heart she didn't ask me, but at least she has good taste.
Beautiful build! My father in law has an orchard and we press apples, on a press very similar to yours, every year. We usually save around 15 gallons to make hard cider. Absolutely delicious.
Steel is iron with added carbon. Often steel has other additives like nickel and niobium (previously called columbium). As for whether your parts are iron or steel you would have to refer to your manufacturer, typically cast parts are iron due to its lower melting point (depending on mixture). If I had to guess based on the application of your parts, I would guess you have a high carbon iron, as a low carbon iron tends to be more brittle. Steel in this application runs the risk of warping over time from the stresses applied. For the joins on an heirloom project like this I would go for dowels. Historically that would be accurate. In early American years square nails, dowels and hand made screws would be the most common joint hardware. Given that dowels are today's only commonly available option that's my recommendation. You may be interested in the benefits of square nails and hand twisted screws. Alternative to these, historically, dovetails and other cut in joins are probably most common.
I though pure iron was weak. I think iron has always been unknowingly steel in one way or another, but we reefer to steel as such when the recipe is calculated.
@@SRG-Learn-Makers from a chemistry standpoint nothing is pure, but effectively pure iron is brittle. It's hard, the break rotors in your car are "pure" iron (to my knowledge anyway) as are a lot of wood burning stoves since it radiates heat well. A lot of iron is purified with silicon, and I'd imagine there's an amount left over in the process. Bear in mind that I'm nothing like an expert. A lot of foundry research for various projects but this is what I've learned.
Trying to remember back to my college days. Cast iron usually contains more than 2% carbon, where as cast steel contains between 0.1-0.5% carbon. There is also a difference in how the carbon is distributed. carbon in cast iron forms rosettes which it doesn’t do in steel. But I could be mistaken as I studied this a very long time ago.
Love thisAs a kid, I went with my Grandad to his parents homestead in White Bird, ID. We found the remnants of their old cider press, so Grandpa took it home and rebuilt it. I know have great memories of cider making 'parties'. So happy to see you doing this project!
This was absolutely AWESOME brother!!! I'm soooo happy to see another really cool build! My son watched this with me and said to me that he wants to build this so I will probably have to start building this shortly so he can do another project with daddy (he's 4 and loves watching things get made out of just regular things...). Thank you so much for another inspirational build brother! Can't wait for the next one!
My family still has an original apple press we used on the farm. The press handle was designed to put a piece of wood in it for leverage. We usally had about a 4ft piece of wood in it. What ever was handy. The mushroom topic the round wheel is what holds the lever in. Love your content and creativity. Thanks!
Nice build, Jason! This brought back a lot of memories. My hometown has a craft festival in early October, and my scout troop used to run a cider booth. Our press was a little taller, and we had to hand crank it, but the cider was the best!
That was the best, most interesting, video I've watched in a long time. I have a 100 year old single barrel apple press in my garage, waiting to be restored. All of the original metal hardware, nuts, and square bolts, are there. All of the wood needs replaced, but enough of it is there for a pattern. I was going to go with white oak though.
My friends father had one of these when I was a kid. As I recall, the apple grinder thingy was a maple branch turned to round. It had a bunch of roofing nails stagger nailed into it about halfway. Driven by an electric washing machine motor, apples didn't stand a chance. And you are right, there's nothing like apple cider that you just pressed moment ago! Nice video, thanks for sharing.
My grandfather had an apple press. Every time I asked about it he said it’s only fun to use the first time. From there, it’s nothing but work and flies! I always wanted to try it. Guess I’ll live vicariously through you, Jason.
I've started making my own code and mead this year. I was literally thinking, "i should build my own press," then this video popped up. Talk about serendipity!
The build is awesome but I'm really nervous about that automatic grinder... without a guard, cap or emergency stop, it's a scary thing to have around kids and people with long hair.
My grandpa made one of these completely from scratch using an old car jack for the press and a small electric motor for the crusher. We made homemade apple cider for years, not to mention apple sauce. I wish I could go back to those days.
My grandfather was a carpenter too. He had pretty weird tools and NEVER used any kind of glue or electric tools or power for his builds. Everything was handmade from trees, not planks, not plywood, he cut the trees himself. Basically we had a grape press made entirely from wood. All the frame, bucked, screw, wheel and even the big barrel to store the juice to make some nice vine were made of wood. I was exploited in child labour to pick up the grapes and bring them to the press, as a reward I drank all the grape juice I wanted and it was delicious.
This went to my all time favorites from you or pretty much any other channels I've seen, very unique idea and I really want to do something similar in future :)
There's so many uses for that good juice. I used to live on a apple farm, my cousins had pear farm. We had presses for the left overs and sold those in gallon containers. It was hard work.
Okay, it's really cool build. But I'm wondering, what about the fixo in the bottom tray / drip spout? Is that actually food safe? Because that juice is running right through there...
What a great build! And timely. I just discovered Switchel and it's become my favorite "gatorade". Lots of videos on youtube about how to make your own, but I've come to prefer 1/2 cup of Apple Cider Vinegar + 1 tsp of Ginger + 1 gloop of Unsulphured Molasses + 1/2 cup Light Brown Sugar + 1 gallon water. It sounds odd, but our people have been drinking it at least since the 1700's and it was considered a vital part of the diet, especially for when you were working hard and getting up a sweat. And, to bring it back to an apple press build.... I actually tried making some Switchel using Apple Juice instead of the water, brown sugar, and molasses. I figured that the Apple Juice would have plenty of sweetness to it already, and I was right. By adding a teaspoon of Ginger and a half-cup of vinegar, I transformed that Apple Juice into a truly divine beverage that reinvigorated me far far better than any sports drink has. I dare say that it even did more for my constitution than good ol' Iced Tea. While that might be heretical to say, I cannot tell a lie. And to think, this was a common drink at least in the Northern States, and so well known that a punch bowl of the stuff was kept on the floor of congress so the politicians could refresh themselves while giving one of their trademark speeches. Somehow, amazingly, this fantastic restorative fell by the wayside when it should have been enshrined in every home. Imagine how much better off we'd all be if only people had a tasty, invigorating drink that they could make at home, with wholesome ingredients! I know that I feel gobs better after drinking this stuff for a few weeks, and nothing has compared to it in terms of helping me get over a day in front of the forge, swinging a hammer for a few hours. So look up Switchel here on RUclips and make yourself a batch. You'll be glad you did.
What a great build! Anyone know whether the adhesive used on this build is food safe? I'd be worried that the adhesive could contaminate the apple juice/sauce.
Yes, at least how he used it. Titebond 3 is approved by the FDA for “indirect food contact”, which basically means that you shouldn’t use it as a finish but it’s fine for its intended purpose.
Loved this. Totally something I thought I’d never see you build. That’s why I loved it. Now take all that cider and you love whiskey and make your own brand of Apple whiskey. Lol. Great video Jason
I did this this year. I have a 2 stage grinder, a rotary fruit mill and then a 1.5hp garbage disposal. It works like a charm when combined with press and press plates.
Love it! When I was a kid, we lived on a property with lots of old apple trees and we rented a similar press every fall. It was hand cranked, and also attracted a ton of wasps. But the juice was amazing. One of my fondest childhood memories.
I have great memories as a kid heading to the neighbor's house and spending the day making cider, my favorite part was feeding the leftover pulp to the sheep, and yes they loved it as much as your neighbor's cows. Nothing better than fresh, real apple cider.
Nice build. I use a small bar sink and a heavy duty garbage disposal with a plunger. The pulp comes out creamy. I use a heavy cheese cloth for a press liner. After pressing it is dry and dense. I have used your type of chopper but didn't like the chunkiness of the pulp. The better you grind the more juice you get from the pulp.
Watching from England. This is an excellent video that demonstrates both your skill and imagination. Just a minor point - cider is the product *after* fermentation with yeast and/or sugar... i.e. alcoholic beverage - otherwise it's just apple juice. Edit... this comment was posted before I read the comments.
Had one similar as a child and my father would make wine each year. It’s amazing and I’m probably going to order plans so I can recreate it. Great video
I know you won’t give this a ❤ but to answer your question @9:10 , yes there is both cast iron and cast steel. Cast steel is a better quality to use in certain circumstances
I would have stuck with dowels for most of it and kept with a single wood type so it would expand at the same rate when wet. Also the press part the crank handles are made that way so you can use a pole (or 2x4) to get exta leverage for the final part of pressing. You left quite a bit of juce in the apple behind. I'd say you need a chute for the grinder too, keep those fingers safe and less splattering.
a) Amazing video as always! b) please tell me you're going to ferment some of that juice into cider (fun fact: in most of the world the word 'cider' implies that it's fermented apple juice...what we in the US call cider the rest of the world just calls apple juice) and c) I've been wanting a press, so I think you've inspired me to take on building one myself.
What you have here is a mixture of apple brut, containing the pulp, the lipe, and the juice You need to filter all of this, using pantyhose or a cotton cloth. You'll have raw apple juice, let it ferment in barrels for a few months and you'll have homemade cider. add a piece of plastic to the bottom of your grinder to prevent splashing. and a cover / funnel on the top, so that only the apple goes in and not your hands. just add a large funnel at the top to act as a reservoir and you can drop the apples by the shovel and not one by one.
I grew up near an apple orchard in Michigan and went there often on school trips. Fresh apple juice is absolutely delicious and your video brought back a lot of great childhood memories. Excellent job and enjoy.
Not bad. Used on almost identical in ~1978. Built my first press in ~1980, which I used until the early 2000s. Somewhat different, higher-output, configuration. One recommendation. I also used plywood for my tray. Not really very durable. I would recommend you do what the first press I used (like the one you built) had: A stainless steel tray. Apple juice is fairly acidic, so mild steel and aluminum are out. I would also suggest that you spray in a solution of pectolytic enzyme and SO2 (probably from potassium metabisulphite) as you're grinding. The pectolytic enzyme--available at home brewing stores--dramatically improves the juice extraction, by breaking down the substantial amount of pectin in the apples. The SO2 limits browning of the juice. You could consider fermentation, too. There are lots of books telling you how. Most complete is probably the one by Claude Jolicoeur. We used to do anywhere from 50-120 gal a year as sparkling hard cider. I recommend Gravenstein for single-apple cider (as does the WSU Experiment Station).
One of my fond memories was pressing cider with my dad, grandfather, and brother. When my grandparents passed, my brother inherited the cider press. We worked on restoring it. Every once in a while, my brother and I get together to make more cider. I also make wine and beer and those carboys would be great for making hard cider. 😁 Something fun to do with cider is to get a slushy machine and make cider slushies.
Freeze the cider in milk jugs. Come some hot day next summer, put a jug in the fridge. When about half thawed, shake jug vigorously. Slushy! ( I add some clear carbonated beverage.)
Nice job! In the beginning, I thought you were going to say that you wondered if there was a way to make the apples go up. 😂 Now you just need to make a still!
Try Cementall. It has no aggregate, cures hard and smooth as glass. It's the most expensive though. Also try raised lettering instead of recessed. To achieve raised letters on the final product you must recess into the mold and also make the lettering and designs backwards so they reflect the correct way on the final product. I use foam instead of wood and router out the letters and shapes I want, you can use a CNC or Shaper Origin too if you have them. These are really fun projects.
Cleaning is going to be a real chore… grandparents had a similar crusher and press that had a metal tray liner with funnel…easy to clean and sanitize..
The possibilities are endless. You can make Cider, Hard Cider, Apple Wine, Apple Pie (the drink, not the food), and so much more. And you are absolutely correct. Fresh apple cider is amazing. I worked on an apple orchard one summer before I went into the Navy. Got to see how everything was made and tasted most of it. As well as so many different kinds of apples. Flory Apples are still my all time favorite apple. Also known as Banana Apples, Flory Banana Apples, Winter Banana Apples, and Winter Apples. As the name implies, it has an apple banana flavor.
Yes... speaking from apple ountry USA... the 4 posts on the press wheel is to take a rod, bar, etc... put it in between and apply lots of extra force to get every drip out of the pulp. If you took that wheel off, used a bar to turn it... you probably would have achieved 30+ gallons of cider instead of 25.
A couple of things to mention here. First, you can have cast steel it's just not very common on smaller items it mostly gets used on larger industrial things. The simple difference between iron and steel is that steel is iron that has carbon added to it during the smelting process. Different types of steel has different things added for instance stainless steel has oxygen bubbled through the molten iron . Second, cider is an alcoholic drink made from fermented apples. If it is not fermented, ie non alcoholic, then it is just apple juice. Cider can't be made from anything else. For instance, fermented pears are called Perry , in the example you have where you have a mixture of apples and pears there are no hard and fast rules but probably the best name would be apple and pear cider. There are of course plenty of flavoured ciders around from people such as Koppaberg or Old Moult with all sorts of additional fruits such as kiwi or raspberry etc, but they are all flavours that have been added to cider. In cooking a lot of people talk about using apple cider vinegar, that's just cider vinegar. If it ain't from apples it ain't cider. Just like if it ain't from a pig then it ain't pork. One last thing to mention, great video and a super cider press. ( apples only 😏)
I had a mishap with Thixo if it helps anyone. I did a giant teak table and jointed it with thixo. What I learned was, when you put in a fresh tube, you need to force a bit out in the trash or something to make sure it mixes completely in the tip. I had sections that never cured and leaked out in the joints as it didn’t completely mix. Later I realized the mistake and had to go back and fix it. Total boat was awesome and sent me a bunch of new tubes and tips for free.
Well heck, I wish you had made this two months ago before I went about making my own scratter and press! Major improvements to mine though, so I'll definitely be building it for next season. Throwing in an edit after watching; if you want to keep that cider shelf stable and keep it from turning into vinegar (which is real handy by it's own merit, though less tasty), then you can either boil it for about 5 minutes, though that will denature some of the flavor compounds, or you can get yourself some campden to chemically sterilize it and keep the flavor. Either way, just make sure to keep it out of direct sunlight since UV will still do a number on it! P.S. Cider is great to can apples in for later use, can be made into jelly, and also can be used in place of water when making apple butter!
You could also make a loader chute. Stock the chute with product above the masher. Incorporate an access door from chute to masher. Save your back a bit. Your gonna need it if your hoping for your 150th birthday...shouldn't be too complicated..
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2 words... APPLE JACK.
@@randallparker8477⚠️ God has said in the Quran:
🔵 { O mankind, worship your Lord, who created you and those before you, that you may become righteous - ( 2:21 )
🔴 [He] who made for you the earth a bed [spread out] and the sky a ceiling and sent down from the sky, rain and brought forth thereby fruits as provision for you. So do not attribute to Allah equals while you know [that there is nothing similar to Him]. ( 2:22 )
🔵 And if you are in doubt about what We have sent down upon Our Servant [Muhammad], then produce a surah the like thereof and call upon your witnesses other than Allah, if you should be truthful. ( 2:23 )
🔴 But if you do not - and you will never be able to - then fear the Fire, whose fuel is men and stones, prepared for the disbelievers.( 2:24 )
🔵 And give good tidings to those who believe and do righteous deeds that they will have gardens [in Paradise] beneath which rivers flow. Whenever they are provided with a provision of fruit therefrom, they will say, "This is what we were provided with before." And it is given to them in likeness. And they will have therein purified spouses, and they will abide therein eternally. ( 2:25 )
⚠️ Quran
🔴 What Is Islam?
🔴 Islam is not just another religion.
🔵 It is the same message preached by Moses, Jesus and Abraham.
🔴 Islam literally means ‘submission to God’ and it teaches us to have a direct relationship with God.
🔵 It reminds us that since God created us, no one should be worshipped except God alone.
🔴 It also teaches that God is nothing like a human being or like anything that we can imagine.
🌍 The concept of God is summarized in the Quran as:
📖 { “Say, He is God, the One. God, the Absolute. He does not give birth, nor was He born, and there is nothing like Him.”} (Quran 112:1-4) 📚
🔴 Becoming a Muslim is not turning your back to Jesus.
🔵 Rather it’s going back to the original teachings of Jesus and obeying him.
More .....👇
🔴 THE RETURN OF JESUS
How much for that same one you made, brother. It's nice
@@randallparker8477 Applejack is one word
Jason will do ANYTHING to keep from working on the Airstream, lol.
I was thinkin he'd do anything to stay out of the house 🤣
Either way great video as always
😂😂😂😂😂
Yeah I’m wondering who’s going to finish his project first, Jason or Spag’s and his wife’s closet. I’ve always wanted a apple press though. Thanks Jason
Lol
It’s not just him. I’ve currently taken up sewing to avoid my book binding project 😅
I think the awkward way the pressing wheel was designed so that you can put a stick or something similar in between the four rods to apply some extra torque and pressure to get every last bit of apple juice. Nice build!
This is exactly correct
Problem with using the long stick like it was designed for is that the whole frame either wants to tip over or rack. I think a diagonal brace and a base member to stand on is needed.
@@leonschmidt7 no different than his current solution. You’re just making the lever arm longer.
Came here to say the same thing
Exactly what I was going to say
The author does like to from scratch, ruclips.net/user/postUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO shaping and trimming wood from large blocks into fine finished products. As another reviewer mentioned, most projects require a lot of high-dollar equipment that most of us don’t have the room or budget for. But, knowing how to do these things, even if we won’t be able to practise the full stack project, is still great.
You're supposed to use a 2x4 on the small wheel to get more leverage when pressing. That's why the small wheel is shaped like that.
Maybe this is a US vs Australia thing, but around here it's not cider until it ferments. It's just delicious fresh apple juice.
Was thinking the same thing 😂 bet it tasted really good tho
Yeah, in the US, cider is the fresh pressed apple juice. Apple juice is the cider after it has been filtered (and usually pasteurized) until clear. Hard cider is fermented apple cider/juice. My father would make his own hard cider by setting a couple gallons of purchased fresh-pressed cider (from a local farm) in the larder with either loose fitting caps or actual wine-maker's airlocks, and wait for the natural yeasts already in the cider to do it's job. As I recall it was mixed results, but usually turned out well.
@@Sembazuru, Thanks, very informative.
@@Sembazurucider is alcoholic. It has been since 55BC. It originates from the South West of England.
It's a US thing. Different nomenclature to describe apple juice products. I'm still trying to figure out how he's going to consume 25 gallons of cider before it ferments or go bad...
Wow, just sat down with a morning coffee and here comes a video from Bourbonmouth. What a wonderful way to start my day.
Its Saturday. ;-) @@mikediamond437
Same!! 🙏
@@mikediamond437
No, I don't work while having my morning coffee 😂😂
I absolutely love that. He has put an AC motor on a device that he was unwilling to use the festool domino.
Love the content, love the humor and love the answers to laziness
My thoughts exactly. Disappointed he didn't use the wheel. But it's his project to do with as he wishes I suppose.
Just leave it it will ferment
I remember as a 8 year old in the 60s, helping my Italian grandfather press the grapes each year for his wine. All by hand and the Press was a huge round concrete pedestal with a heavy bar that you had to insert above your head and you got a half a turn and then you had to pull it out, walk around to the other side and do it all over again. It reminded me of the old Grist Mill in the Western movies with the kid riding the mule around and around. Even after he no longer made wine, just going into the cellar and smelling the fermented residue stirred up great memories. Thanks for posting this and making an old man smile.
The small wheel with the 4 tubes on it is shaped like this so you can hook a long wooden stud in between them and use the big leaver to really crank the press down and squeeze all of the juice out.
Yup, you can tell theres more juice to be had by the pressings not sicking together like a cake.
@@dougaltolan3017 tastier apple pulp for the cows ;)
@@vincentdesjardins1354 sure is, but there's a wee problem...
*looks at pulp containing another glass of cider.
*looks at cows
*looks at pulp
Sorry cows, you lose.
a yoke, verb to put to work
Hey Jason, Chris from Minneapolis here. I sincerely want to thank you. Last night my almost 6 year old daughter, this Friday the 13th is her bday, broke both bones in her forearm. Watching this vid in full gave me a little break from getting the visual of horror in her face out of my mind.
She's doing fine now. She seems a little depressed or just in pain but it'll pass with time.
So again, a heartfelt thank you so so much Jason.
Truly awesome vid btw.
White oak would be the preferred lumber for the trays, buckets and press plate anyway. Being almost completely impervious to water it would definitely be a family heirloom for many generations to come. Production presses are usually hard maple but mostly due to cost efficiency.
I love how every project you do is so different. Loved the build
You might want to create a wooden in-feed chute for the apple shredder so fingers are further way from the blades, especially if you intend to press (gang) your kids into apple cider production in the future
Also, a bigger hopper is less work overall, as you can load up A LOT of apple to munch in the hopper before actually munching it.
I have plans to use an old stainless kitchen sink for that purpose once I get a shredder made
@@bunhelsingslegacy3549
If you are using a kitchen sink for the hopper, it would be super easy to attach an "in sink disposal" as the grinder
31:49 the reason for the shape of the press handle is because your suppose to shove a long a long stick in between the nubs for leverage when pressing and easily reposition it between the nubs after rotating it.
Great build and brought back many memories doing this with my family for decades. Interesting using the fly wheel to go on the screw handle. However you might find you could squeeze more cider from the apple pieces if you use a good axe handle between the 4 stubs sticking up on the handle rotate under pressure. Also need to build a nice maple hopper on top of grinder so you can dump in large amount of apples. Thank you for my morning coffee drinking entertainment and nostalgia time!. I am 62 and started making cider since mid 20's so you got this kid!
One of my favorite builds you’ve done. Can’t say it enough, how much I appreciate that you still actually make stuff and not just advertise. Loved this build.
As an armature woodworker, I love watching you create amazing projects and my 10 year old loves your funnay narration. Keep it up buddy.
You build armatures out of wood? So that's where electricity comes from. And all this time I thought you had to wait for a lighting storm to fly a kite with a metal key hanging on the string.. Technology is just passing by me faster and faster! 😮
@@martinoamello3017 I was thinking "armature" as in the skeleton of a puppet!
My daughter has been shopping for a makeup vanity (eww, shopping). I was taking her to dance and had one of your videos playing in the background. I didn't know she was watching it until she said she wanted you to build a vanity. Broke my heart she didn't ask me, but at least she has good taste.
Beautiful build! My father in law has an orchard and we press apples, on a press very similar to yours, every year. We usually save around 15 gallons to make hard cider. Absolutely delicious.
Using Thixo MAY be overkill but we can guarantee it will never, ever, fall apart 😂
Steel is iron with added carbon. Often steel has other additives like nickel and niobium (previously called columbium). As for whether your parts are iron or steel you would have to refer to your manufacturer, typically cast parts are iron due to its lower melting point (depending on mixture). If I had to guess based on the application of your parts, I would guess you have a high carbon iron, as a low carbon iron tends to be more brittle. Steel in this application runs the risk of warping over time from the stresses applied.
For the joins on an heirloom project like this I would go for dowels. Historically that would be accurate. In early American years square nails, dowels and hand made screws would be the most common joint hardware. Given that dowels are today's only commonly available option that's my recommendation. You may be interested in the benefits of square nails and hand twisted screws. Alternative to these, historically, dovetails and other cut in joins are probably most common.
I though pure iron was weak. I think iron has always been unknowingly steel in one way or another, but we reefer to steel as such when the recipe is calculated.
the best way i explain this is: Iron is a raw material. Steel is an alloy that uses iron as its base raw material.
but what you said works too. LOL
@@SRG-Learn-Makers from a chemistry standpoint nothing is pure, but effectively pure iron is brittle. It's hard, the break rotors in your car are "pure" iron (to my knowledge anyway) as are a lot of wood burning stoves since it radiates heat well. A lot of iron is purified with silicon, and I'd imagine there's an amount left over in the process. Bear in mind that I'm nothing like an expert. A lot of foundry research for various projects but this is what I've learned.
@@CopperTOPDave yeah, I have a tendency to over complicate things. But you're right, iron is on the periodic table, and steel is made from iron.
Trying to remember back to my college days. Cast iron usually contains more than 2% carbon, where as cast steel contains between 0.1-0.5% carbon. There is also a difference in how the carbon is distributed. carbon in cast iron forms rosettes which it doesn’t do in steel. But I could be mistaken as I studied this a very long time ago.
What I do is turn down the volume and just watch. Just like old Wordless Workshop, I get the idea and a chuckle. Nice work
The spokes on top of the press screw are for a beam/board to give you leverage while pressing.
Love thisAs a kid, I went with my Grandad to his parents homestead in White Bird, ID. We found the remnants of their old cider press, so Grandpa took it home and rebuilt it. I know have great memories of cider making 'parties'. So happy to see you doing this project!
Interesting and cool build. You should do a follow-up showing your brewing/fermenting setup
My family has been doing this for years with a similar press. It's a great tradition and highlight of our fall. I think this year we made 75 gal.
This was absolutely AWESOME brother!!! I'm soooo happy to see another really cool build! My son watched this with me and said to me that he wants to build this so I will probably have to start building this shortly so he can do another project with daddy (he's 4 and loves watching things get made out of just regular things...).
Thank you so much for another inspirational build brother! Can't wait for the next one!
My family still has an original apple press we used on the farm. The press handle was designed to put a piece of wood in it for leverage. We usally had about a 4ft piece of wood in it. What ever was handy. The mushroom topic the round wheel is what holds the lever in. Love your content and creativity. Thanks!
Nice build, Jason! This brought back a lot of memories. My hometown has a craft festival in early October, and my scout troop used to run a cider booth. Our press was a little taller, and we had to hand crank it, but the cider was the best!
Same…in NC
That was the best, most interesting, video I've watched in a long time. I have a 100 year old single barrel apple press in my garage, waiting to be restored. All of the original metal hardware, nuts, and square bolts, are there. All of the wood needs replaced, but enough of it is there for a pattern. I was going to go with white oak though.
Impressive project! Freshly squized apple juice just taste wonderful! One question - is the glue you used for the tray (thixo?) food safe?
Nope. It also contains bisphenol.
Pick up a plastic tray to go under the buckets and cut a hole in that or line the tray with some flexible plastic sheet. Epoxy is not food safe.
My friends father had one of these when I was a kid. As I recall, the apple grinder thingy was a maple branch turned to round. It had a bunch of roofing nails stagger nailed into it about halfway. Driven by an electric washing machine motor, apples didn't stand a chance. And you are right, there's nothing like apple cider that you just pressed moment ago! Nice video, thanks for sharing.
My grandfather had an apple press. Every time I asked about it he said it’s only fun to use the first time. From there, it’s nothing but work and flies! I always wanted to try it. Guess I’ll live vicariously through you, Jason.
And the cleaning. My god, the cleaning.
I've started making my own code and mead this year. I was literally thinking, "i should build my own press," then this video popped up. Talk about serendipity!
The build is awesome but I'm really nervous about that automatic grinder... without a guard, cap or emergency stop, it's a scary thing to have around kids and people with long hair.
My grandpa made one of these completely from scratch using an old car jack for the press and a small electric motor for the crusher. We made homemade apple cider for years, not to mention apple sauce.
I wish I could go back to those days.
I never thought I needed an apple press ... now, I'm not so sure! Great build and great video!
My grandfather was a carpenter too. He had pretty weird tools and NEVER used any kind of glue or electric tools or power for his builds. Everything was handmade from trees, not planks, not plywood, he cut the trees himself. Basically we had a grape press made entirely from wood. All the frame, bucked, screw, wheel and even the big barrel to store the juice to make some nice vine were made of wood. I was exploited in child labour to pick up the grapes and bring them to the press, as a reward I drank all the grape juice I wanted and it was delicious.
This went to my all time favorites from you or pretty much any other channels I've seen, very unique idea and I really want to do something similar in future :)
There's so many uses for that good juice. I used to live on a apple farm, my cousins had pear farm. We had presses for the left overs and sold those in gallon containers. It was hard work.
Okay, it's really cool build. But I'm wondering, what about the fixo in the bottom tray / drip spout? Is that actually food safe? Because that juice is running right through there...
Next up: learning how to ferment cider! Not bad for making it up as you went along. Seems to be perfectly servicable. Thanks for sharing!
You’d be hard “pressed” to find a better video!
What a great build! And timely. I just discovered Switchel and it's become my favorite "gatorade". Lots of videos on youtube about how to make your own, but I've come to prefer 1/2 cup of Apple Cider Vinegar + 1 tsp of Ginger + 1 gloop of Unsulphured Molasses + 1/2 cup Light Brown Sugar + 1 gallon water. It sounds odd, but our people have been drinking it at least since the 1700's and it was considered a vital part of the diet, especially for when you were working hard and getting up a sweat. And, to bring it back to an apple press build.... I actually tried making some Switchel using Apple Juice instead of the water, brown sugar, and molasses. I figured that the Apple Juice would have plenty of sweetness to it already, and I was right. By adding a teaspoon of Ginger and a half-cup of vinegar, I transformed that Apple Juice into a truly divine beverage that reinvigorated me far far better than any sports drink has. I dare say that it even did more for my constitution than good ol' Iced Tea. While that might be heretical to say, I cannot tell a lie. And to think, this was a common drink at least in the Northern States, and so well known that a punch bowl of the stuff was kept on the floor of congress so the politicians could refresh themselves while giving one of their trademark speeches. Somehow, amazingly, this fantastic restorative fell by the wayside when it should have been enshrined in every home. Imagine how much better off we'd all be if only people had a tasty, invigorating drink that they could make at home, with wholesome ingredients! I know that I feel gobs better after drinking this stuff for a few weeks, and nothing has compared to it in terms of helping me get over a day in front of the forge, swinging a hammer for a few hours. So look up Switchel here on RUclips and make yourself a batch. You'll be glad you did.
What a great build! Anyone know whether the adhesive used on this build is food safe? I'd be worried that the adhesive could contaminate the apple juice/sauce.
Yes, at least how he used it. Titebond 3 is approved by the FDA for “indirect food contact”, which basically means that you shouldn’t use it as a finish but it’s fine for its intended purpose.
This is by far one of my favorite projects of yours yet. Great job, great video. Enjoy the cider.
Loved this. Totally something I thought I’d never see you build. That’s why I loved it. Now take all that cider and you love whiskey and make your own brand of Apple whiskey. Lol. Great video Jason
I did this this year. I have a 2 stage grinder, a rotary fruit mill and then a 1.5hp garbage disposal. It works like a charm when combined with press and press plates.
So how long do you think you can keep the cidre well after you pressed it?
Not long. Homemade cider goes bad pretty quickly. Maybe a week or so.
@@JohnClark-tt2bl That's what I was wondering as well, is boiling it a thing to kill the bacteria or will that change the flavor too much?
@@justfasial01 It shouldn't change the flavor too much. Hot cider is a thing as well anyway.
Love it! When I was a kid, we lived on a property with lots of old apple trees and we rented a similar press every fall. It was hand cranked, and also attracted a ton of wasps. But the juice was amazing. One of my fondest childhood memories.
I have great memories as a kid heading to the neighbor's house and spending the day making cider, my favorite part was feeding the leftover pulp to the sheep, and yes they loved it as much as your neighbor's cows. Nothing better than fresh, real apple cider.
Neat little machine, but it's apple juice, not cider 😅 anyway great video as always 👍 😀
Difference in local terminology. In the US, this is cider...juice is filtered (clear), cider is unfiltered (cloudy), and hard cider is fermented.
Nice build. I use a small bar sink and a heavy duty garbage disposal with a plunger. The pulp comes out creamy. I use a heavy cheese cloth for a press liner. After pressing it is dry and dense. I have used your type of chopper but didn't like the chunkiness of the pulp. The better you grind the more juice you get from the pulp.
So, I know there are certain epoxies that ARE food safe, but I couldn't find anything on THIXO that indicated it was. Any info on that?
Watching from England. This is an excellent video that demonstrates both your skill and imagination. Just a minor point - cider is the product *after* fermentation with yeast and/or sugar... i.e. alcoholic beverage - otherwise it's just apple juice.
Edit... this comment was posted before I read the comments.
Love the humor, love the information and the lessons in woodworking life. Thanks
That's not cider, it's apple juice, give it 4 to 6 months to ferment
Had one similar as a child and my father would make wine each year. It’s amazing and I’m probably going to order plans so I can recreate it. Great video
Don't know if it is just me, or if others understand that too, but man i love you for 2:06
That is sweet, Literally. Nice build.
I would recommend making a hopper for the apple smasher to catch spray and allow you to drop many in at a time.
Without a doubt, one of your best builds ever Jason! 👏👏🍎🍎🍏🍏👍👍
I know you won’t give this a ❤ but to answer your question @9:10 , yes there is both cast iron and cast steel. Cast steel is a better quality to use in certain circumstances
I would have stuck with dowels for most of it and kept with a single wood type so it would expand at the same rate when wet.
Also the press part the crank handles are made that way so you can use a pole (or 2x4) to get exta leverage for the final part of pressing. You left quite a bit of juce in the apple behind.
I'd say you need a chute for the grinder too, keep those fingers safe and less splattering.
a) Amazing video as always! b) please tell me you're going to ferment some of that juice into cider (fun fact: in most of the world the word 'cider' implies that it's fermented apple juice...what we in the US call cider the rest of the world just calls apple juice) and c) I've been wanting a press, so I think you've inspired me to take on building one myself.
I built this same press from scratch several years ago. It’s been an awesome machine
What an ingenious idea for an episode, different and very entertaining ❤
Best Apple-cide video I've seen in a while! Thank you Jason!
Jason, one of your very best ideas and builds. Way to go.
What you have here is a mixture of apple brut,
containing the pulp, the lipe, and the juice
You need to filter all of this, using pantyhose or a cotton cloth.
You'll have raw apple juice,
let it ferment in barrels for a few months and you'll have homemade cider.
add a piece of plastic to the bottom of your grinder to prevent splashing.
and a cover / funnel on the top, so that only the apple goes in and not your hands.
just add a large funnel at the top to act as a reservoir and you can drop the apples by the shovel and not one by one.
I grew up near an apple orchard in Michigan and went there often on school trips. Fresh apple juice is absolutely delicious and your video brought back a lot of great childhood memories. Excellent job and enjoy.
Not bad. Used on almost identical in ~1978. Built my first press in ~1980, which I used until the early 2000s. Somewhat different, higher-output, configuration. One recommendation. I also used plywood for my tray. Not really very durable. I would recommend you do what the first press I used (like the one you built) had: A stainless steel tray. Apple juice is fairly acidic, so mild steel and aluminum are out.
I would also suggest that you spray in a solution of pectolytic enzyme and SO2 (probably from potassium metabisulphite) as you're grinding. The pectolytic enzyme--available at home brewing stores--dramatically improves the juice extraction, by breaking down the substantial amount of pectin in the apples. The SO2 limits browning of the juice.
You could consider fermentation, too. There are lots of books telling you how. Most complete is probably the one by Claude Jolicoeur. We used to do anywhere from 50-120 gal a year as sparkling hard cider. I recommend Gravenstein for single-apple cider (as does the WSU Experiment Station).
Need to turn some of that into hard cider 👍Little brewers yeast an an S-stopper to prevent the bottles exploding ought to see you right.
One of my fond memories was pressing cider with my dad, grandfather, and brother. When my grandparents passed, my brother inherited the cider press. We worked on restoring it. Every once in a while, my brother and I get together to make more cider.
I also make wine and beer and those carboys would be great for making hard cider. 😁
Something fun to do with cider is to get a slushy machine and make cider slushies.
Freeze the cider in milk jugs. Come some hot day next summer, put a jug in the fridge. When about half thawed, shake jug vigorously. Slushy! ( I add some clear carbonated beverage.)
I just spent last weekend making cider. I found it funny that this was recommended.
Nice job! In the beginning, I thought you were going to say that you wondered if there was a way to make the apples go up. 😂 Now you just need to make a still!
That's awesome!!! A lot of work but so worth it!
Try Cementall. It has no aggregate, cures hard and smooth as glass. It's the most expensive though. Also try raised lettering instead of recessed. To achieve raised letters on the final product you must recess into the mold and also make the lettering and designs backwards so they reflect the correct way on the final product. I use foam instead of wood and router out the letters and shapes I want, you can use a CNC or Shaper Origin too if you have them. These are really fun projects.
Cleaning is going to be a real chore… grandparents had a similar crusher and press that had a metal tray liner with funnel…easy to clean and sanitize..
Brings back memories of my childhood looking at that thing. Tasty Cider
I got some Tim Taylor/Home Improvement vibes with this video. More power!
That project was so cool! Great job! It is beautiful.
This is fast becoming my favourite channel on the Tube🤓
your humor is gold. I kinda want an apple press now, but after buying the apples, it would probably be cheaper to just buy the cider.
The possibilities are endless. You can make Cider, Hard Cider, Apple Wine, Apple Pie (the drink, not the food), and so much more. And you are absolutely correct. Fresh apple cider is amazing. I worked on an apple orchard one summer before I went into the Navy. Got to see how everything was made and tasted most of it. As well as so many different kinds of apples. Flory Apples are still my all time favorite apple. Also known as Banana Apples, Flory Banana Apples, Winter Banana Apples, and Winter Apples. As the name implies, it has an apple banana flavor.
Yes... speaking from apple ountry USA... the 4 posts on the press wheel is to take a rod, bar, etc... put it in between and apply lots of extra force to get every drip out of the pulp. If you took that wheel off, used a bar to turn it... you probably would have achieved 30+ gallons of cider instead of 25.
A couple of things to mention here. First, you can have cast steel it's just not very common on smaller items it mostly gets used on larger industrial things. The simple difference between iron and steel is that steel is iron that has carbon added to it during the smelting process. Different types of steel has different things added for instance stainless steel has oxygen bubbled through the molten iron . Second, cider is an alcoholic drink made from fermented apples. If it is not fermented, ie non alcoholic, then it is just apple juice. Cider can't be made from anything else. For instance, fermented pears are called Perry , in the example you have where you have a mixture of apples and pears there are no hard and fast rules but probably the best name would be apple and pear cider. There are of course plenty of flavoured ciders around from people such as Koppaberg or Old Moult with all sorts of additional fruits such as kiwi or raspberry etc, but they are all flavours that have been added to cider. In cooking a lot of people talk about using apple cider vinegar, that's just cider vinegar. If it ain't from apples it ain't cider. Just like if it ain't from a pig then it ain't pork. One last thing to mention, great video and a super cider press. ( apples only 😏)
This is awesome. Exactly the kind of project that makes me want a proper woodshop. ❤
I feel honored to have my name spoken so much in a video 😂
I had a mishap with Thixo if it helps anyone. I did a giant teak table and jointed it with thixo. What I learned was, when you put in a fresh tube, you need to force a bit out in the trash or something to make sure it mixes completely in the tip. I had sections that never cured and leaked out in the joints as it didn’t completely mix. Later I realized the mistake and had to go back and fix it. Total boat was awesome and sent me a bunch of new tubes and tips for free.
That press is a thing of beauty. Great work.
Your videos are great and easy to follow, everything is perfectly explained in detail and even an amateur like myself can do it.
Homemade Cider to me (UK viewer) has an abv of 6.5%, and sometimes you remember drinking it. Happy days.
Great job .Giving some of the cider to your neighbors or use it as cider bath
Great project! I have same problem and this is a solution! Cheers from Portugal!
Your zip! Zap! Zoop! at 11:18 made you sound just like the classic Froggy Gets Dressed book!
Well heck, I wish you had made this two months ago before I went about making my own scratter and press! Major improvements to mine though, so I'll definitely be building it for next season.
Throwing in an edit after watching; if you want to keep that cider shelf stable and keep it from turning into vinegar (which is real handy by it's own merit, though less tasty), then you can either boil it for about 5 minutes, though that will denature some of the flavor compounds, or you can get yourself some campden to chemically sterilize it and keep the flavor. Either way, just make sure to keep it out of direct sunlight since UV will still do a number on it!
P.S. Cider is great to can apples in for later use, can be made into jelly, and also can be used in place of water when making apple butter!
Awesome build. Now that the apple crusher is motorized, I would build some guard to protect hand or loose objects.
I fully agree. A feed hopper with a baffle that would pass apples but not arms might work well. I hate to imagine what could happen without something.
@@duncanallan2930 If anything did happen, it would just be protein fortified cider. No need to add the protein powder. (Yes, I'm being sarcastic.)
Really enjoyed this video,relaxing too watch and enjoyed the build,very cool press, im impressed.
You could also make a loader chute. Stock the chute with product above the masher. Incorporate an access door from chute to masher. Save your back a bit. Your gonna need it if your hoping for your 150th birthday...shouldn't be too complicated..