originally posted by BJ:
The whole cidre scene in the US is really depressing. The Dupont is middling. You really have to just go to Normandy and Brittany and just drink the shit. It's a whole new world. Pasteurization fucks everything up.
My memory is that Rovani gave Bordelet 92 points.
BJ: The two Dupont ciders (normale, organic) that are imported to the States are neither pasteurized nor filtered. I don't agree that they're middling--they are, of course, made by a pretty big Calva producer, yet by my lights the Dupont organic unfiltered unpasteurized cider is quite good. Montreuil, imported on the Left coast by Charles Neal, is also unpasteurized and unfiltered. LDM brings in a couple of very good ciders from Julien Frémont; the "Grenier" is particularly good, as the apples go through a light passerillage before they are crushed. Bordelet is not my favorite, perhaps too refined for my peasant palate. I do like the fancy Bordelet cider from the 300 year old pear trees, but it feels, almost, wrong to refer to it as a cider.
As far as RS is concerned, it's not a problem if the cider is bottled with a sturdy enclosure. The yeast, over time, eats the RS, rendering the cider increasingly dry. I've seen this happen with pétillant naturel (e.g., Calek’s Blonde), too: a wine might, upon release, start off off-dry but after a year it ends up dry.
BTW, look out for a pretty comprehensive piece on cider in an upcoming issue of Art of Eating.