Burrow Hill Cider Farm

Burrow Hill Cider Farm is a cider farm in Somerset, England at the base of Burrow Hill overlooking the Somerset Levels.

Cider Brandy Still

It has views of most of South Somerset on clear days. The cider is made in traditional vats and uses age old traditional methods of production. Every October is "Apple Day" when the apples are harvested from locally owned orchards.

In 2003 the company won the NFU Great British Food Award.

Cider Bus

Burrow Hill Cider has a 'Cider Bus' at the Glastonbury Festival selling a variety of cider-based drinks, including Hot Spiced Cider.

Somerset Cider Brandy

Somerset Cider Brandy is an apple brandy that has been in written records as far back as 1678.[1] A modern version was first produced by Burrow Hill in 1987. It reportedly became the first legal distillery in Somerset for 150 years, when in 1989, the farm received the first full cider-distilling licence ever issued by the UK's HM Customs and Excise.[2]

gollark: I was going to subnetwork it anyway.
gollark: and hopefully nobody will put marshmallows in.
gollark: I'll just have a bunch of them unfiltered and hope it works out.
gollark: Probably.
gollark: What, so run them all into a bunch of ingot formers and hope one will either be waiting for more of that metal type or be empty? Clever.

References

  1. Morris, Steven (15 September 2011). "Victory for Somerset as cider brandy wins protected status". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  2. Still life, with apples, Daily Telegraph, Oct 21, 2006

Further reading

  • James Crowden, Cider: The Forgotten Miracle, Cyder Press Two (1999), ISBN 0-9537103-0-0 - includes the story of the early days of Somerset Cider Brandy

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