List of cider producers in Devon

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This is a list of cider brands from Devon in the United Kingdom. Although the neighbouring county of Somerset is better known for its apple orchards, Devon has an equally long orchard and cider tradition. [1] Many Devon cider producers are using traditional Devon varieties of apple [2] During the 17th and 18th centuries, a condition known as Devon colic, a form of lead poisoning, was associated with the consumption of cider, [3] vanishing after a campaign to remove lead components from cider presses in the early 19th century.

Contents

Devon ciders

List of operational cider producers in Devon
NameTownWebsiteMap Coords
Aston Manor Brewery [4] Tiverton Aston Manor Brewery 50°53′37″N3°29′53″W / 50.8937°N 3.4980°W / 50.8937; -3.4980 (Aston Manor Brewery)
Ashridge Cider [5] Staverton Ashridge Cider 50°28′37″N3°43′22″W / 50.4769°N 3.7227°W / 50.4769; -3.7227 (Ashridge Cider)
Berry Farm Cider Axminster Berry Farm Cider 50°47′32″N3°22′56″W / 50.7921°N 3.3823°W / 50.7921; -3.3823 (Berry Farm Cider)
Green Valley Cyder Exeter Green Valley Cyder 50°41′06″N3°26′54″W / 50.6849°N 3.4483°W / 50.6849; -3.4483 (Green Valley Cyder)
Heron Valley Kingsbridge Heron Valley 50°20′55″N3°47′25″W / 50.3485°N 3.7904°W / 50.3485; -3.7904 (Heron Valley Cider)
Luscombe Drinks Buckfastleigh Luscombe Cider 50°28′08″N3°47′11″W / 50.4688°N 3.7865°W / 50.4688; -3.7865 (Luscombe Drinks)
Milltop Orchard Newton Abbot Milltop Orchard Cider 50°31′33″N3°32′01″W / 50.5259°N 3.5336°W / 50.5259; -3.5336 (Milltop Orchard Cider)
Lyme Bay Cider Axminster Lyme Bay Cider 50°45′41″N3°03′41″W / 50.7613°N 3.0614°W / 50.7613; -3.0614 (Lyme Bay Cider)
Sandford Orchards Crediton Sandford Orchards 50°47′19″N3°38′44″W / 50.7886°N 3.6455°W / 50.7886; -3.6455 (Sandford Orchards)
Ventons Devon Cyder Clyst St Lawrence Ventons Devon Cyder 50°47′32″N3°22′41″W / 50.7921°N 3.3781°W / 50.7921; -3.3781 (Ventons Devon Cyder)
Winkleigh Cider Company Ltd Winkleigh Winkleigh Cider Company Ltd 50°51′19″N3°57′08″W / 50.8552°N 3.9522°W / 50.8552; -3.9522 (Winkleigh Cider Company Ltd)
Hunts Cider Stoke Gabriel Hunts Cider 50°25′02″N3°37′02″W / 50.4172°N 3.6173°W / 50.4172; -3.6173 (HUNTS CIDER)
Norcotts Cider Honiton Norcotts Cider 50°47′52″N3°11′02″W / 50.7979°N 3.1840°W / 50.7979; -3.1840 (Norcotts Cider)
The Tricky Cider Co Churchinford The Tricky Cider Co 50°54′51″N3°08′48″W / 50.9143°N 3.1466°W / 50.9143; -3.1466 (The Tricky Cider Co)
Thompstone's Cider Ashburton Thompstone's Cider 50°31′10″N3°45′37″W / 50.5195°N 3.7604°W / 50.5195; -3.7604 (Thompstone's Cider)
Ostlers Cider Mill Barnstaple Ostlers Cider Mill 51°05′51″N3°59′15″W / 51.0976°N 3.9874°W / 51.0976; -3.9874 (Ostlers Cider Mill)
Bollhayes Cider [6] Cullompton 50°55′11″N3°11′29″W / 50.9197°N 3.1914°W / 50.9197; -3.1914 (Bollhayes Cider)
West Lake Cider Beaworthy West Lake Cider 50°47′53″N4°12′12″W / 50.7980°N 4.2033°W / 50.7980; -4.2033 (West Lake Cider)
Indicknowle Traditional Farmhouse Cider Combe Martin Indicknowle Traditional Farmhouse Cider 51°10′50″N4°00′45″W / 51.1806°N 4.0124°W / 51.1806; -4.0124 (Indicknowle Traditional Farmhouse Cider)
Killerton Estate Cider Broadclyst Killerton Estate 50°47′29″N3°27′13″W / 50.7914°N 3.4536°W / 50.7914; -3.4536 (Killerton Estate Cider)
Chucklehead Cider Shillingford Chucklehead Cider 50°59′38″N3°25′52″W / 50.9940°N 3.4312°W / 50.9940; -3.4312 (Chucklehead Cider)
Burscombe Farm Cider Sidford Burscombe Farm Cider 50°42′52″N3°15′20″W / 50.7145°N 3.2555°W / 50.7145; -3.2555 (Burscombe Farm Cider)
Yarde Real Cider Stoke Gabriel Yarde RealCider 50°24′26″N3°36′53″W / 50.4072°N 3.6147°W / 50.4072; -3.6147 (Yarde Real Cider)
Hancock's Devon Cider, Clapworthy Mill South Molton Hancock's Devon Cider 51°00′22″N3°52′56″W / 51.0060°N 3.8823°W / 51.0060; -3.8823 (Hancock's Devon Cider, Clapworthy Mill)
Countryman Cider Tavistock Countryman Cider 50°35′52″N4°17′40″W / 50.5979°N 4.2945°W / 50.5979; -4.2945 (Countryman Cider)
Palmerhayes Cider Calverleigh 50°54′59″N3°31′01″W / 50.9163°N 3.5170°W / 50.9163; -3.5170 (Palmerhayes Cider)
Whitestone Farm Traditional Cider Totnes 50°23′31″N3°37′39″W / 50.3920°N 3.6275°W / 50.3920; -3.6275 (Whitestone Farm Traditional Cider)
Lower Grimpstonsleigh Cider Kingsbridge Lower Grimpstonsleigh Cider 50°19′42″N3°45′30″W / 50.3283°N 3.7582°W / 50.3283; -3.7582 (Lower Grimpstonsleigh Cider, Kingsbridge)
Courtneys of Whimple Whimple Courtneys of Whimple 50°46′03″N3°21′23″W / 50.7674°N 3.3565°W / 50.7674; -3.3565 (Courtneys of Whimple)
Reddaway's Farm Cider Chudleigh Reddaway's Cider (Facebook page) 50°35′14″N3°32′48″W / 50.5872°N 3.5468°W / 50.5872; -3.5468 (Reddaway's Farm Cider)
Sampford Courtenay Cider Sampford Courtenay Sampford Courtenay Cider 50°48′00″N3°58′12″W / 50.7999°N 3.9701°W / 50.7999; -3.9701 (Sampford Courtenay Cider)
Ridgeway Cider Holcombe Rogus Ridgeway Cider 50°57′40″N3°20′27″W / 50.9610°N 3.3408°W / 50.9610; -3.3408 (Ridgeway Cider)
Green Man Cider Barnstaple Green Man Cider 51°03′45″N4°00′14″W / 51.0625°N 4.0040°W / 51.0625; -4.0040 (Green Man Cider)

See also

Related Research Articles

Calvados French apple brandy

Calvados is an apple or pear brandy from Normandy in France.

Perry is an alcoholic beverage made from fermented pears, similar to the way cider is made from apples. It has been common for centuries in England, particularly in the Three Counties ; it is also made in parts of South Wales and France, especially Normandy and Anjou.

Cider apples are a group of apple cultivars grown for their use in the production of cider. Cider apples are distinguished from "cookers" and "eaters", or dessert apples, by their bitterness or dryness of flavour, qualities which make the fruit unpalatable but can be useful in cidermaking. Some apples are considered to occupy more than one category.

The tradition of wassailing falls into two distinct categories: the house-visiting wassail and the orchard-visiting wassail. The house-visiting wassail is the practice of people going door-to-door, singing and offering a drink from the wassail bowl in exchange for gifts; this practice still exists, but has largely been displaced by caroling. The orchard-visiting wassail refers to the ancient custom of visiting orchards in cider-producing regions of England, reciting incantations and singing to the trees to promote a good harvest for the coming year.

Scrumpy

Scrumpy is a type of cider originating in the West of England, particularly Devon, Dorset, Somerset, Wiltshire, Gloucestershire and Herefordshire. Traditionally, the dialect term "scrumpy" was used to refer to what was otherwise called "rough", a harsh cider made from unselected apples.

Thatchers Cider is a family-owned cider maker in Sandford, North Somerset, England.

Cider house

A cider house is an establishment that sells alcoholic cider for consumption on the premises. Some cider houses also sell cider "to go", for consumption off the premises. A traditional cider house was often little more than a room in a farmhouse or cottage, selling locally fermented cider.

Kingston Black

The Kingston Black, also known as "Black Taunton", is a cultivar of apple originating from the United Kingdom and used in making cider. The name of the cultivar comes from the apples' dark red or purplish skin, though despite the name, the fruit does not have a black hue.

Cider fermented alcoholic beverage from apple juice

Cider is an alcoholic beverage made from the fermented juice of apples. Cider is popular in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland and widely available. The UK has the world's highest per capita consumption, as well as its largest cider-producing companies. Cider is also popular in many Commonwealth countries, such as India, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Aside from the UK and its former colonies, cider is popular in other European countries including Portugal, France, northern Italy, and northern Spain. Central Europe also has its own types of cider with Rhineland-Palatinate and Hesse producing a particularly tart version known as Apfelwein. In the U.S., varieties of fermented cider are often called hard cider to distinguish alcoholic cider from non-alcoholic apple cider or "sweet cider", also made from apples. In Canada, cider cannot be called cider if there are no apples. Furthermore, according to the Food and Drug Regulations in Canada, cider cannot contain less than 2.5% or over 13% absolute alcohol by volume.

Cuisine of Devon

The cuisine of Devon in England has influenced, and been influenced, by other British cuisine.

Cider in the United Kingdom is widely available at pubs, off licences, and shops. It has been made in regions of the country where cider apples were grown since Roman times; in those regions it is intertwined with local culture.

Tom Putt traditional variety of dual purpose apple

'Tom Putt' is a traditional variety of dual purpose apple, often used as a cider apple, originating in Devon. It was also known as Ploughman, Coalbrook, Marrowbone, Thomas Jeffreys and by many other local names.

Slack-ma-Girdle is an old variety of cider apple formerly widely grown in the South-West of England. It is one of a group of similar and closely related varieties all often known by the name "Woodbine".


Dufflin is an old variety of cider apple from the County of Cornwall, England. It was included in orchard trials by Long Ashton Research Station in 1957.

Yarlington Mill is a traditional cider apple cultivar originating from the village of Yarlington, in the North Cadbury area of Somerset, England.

Major is a cider apple cultivar first grown in the United Kingdom in the area of Devon and Somerset.

References

  1. An Agricultural Geography of Great Britain: ISBN   1483113825; by D. W. Gilchrist Shirlaw (page 139)
  2. In Praise of Devon: A Guide to Its People, Places and Character; by John Lane (page 115) ISBN   1870098757
  3. "Science of Cidermaking Part 3 - Juicing and Fermenting". www.cider.org.uk.
  4. "Cider maker wins hatful of awards at international competition". Kidderminster Shuttle.
  5. [ dead link ]
  6. [ dead link ]

Further reading