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454: Wild Ferment Meets Fine Cider: Inside Oliver’s Barrel Room

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Manage episode 475967356 series 1026268
Content provided by Ria Windcaller, Ria Windcaller: Award-winning Cidermaker, and Podcaster | Craft Beer Columnist. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ria Windcaller, Ria Windcaller: Award-winning Cidermaker, and Podcaster | Craft Beer Columnist or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.
Rainy Days Goes Best with Dry Cider in the Barrel Room

Walking into the barrel room at Oliver’s Cider and Perry Company, you might think you know what to expect. But surrounded by whitewashed stone walls, standing beneath the old Hessian sacking floor, and facing rows of aging barrels, I quickly realized this wasn’t just a cidery—it’s a living, breathing creative space for cider making.

Tom Oliver sources fruit both from his farm and from local orchards across Herefordshire. This isn’t an estate cidery where everything is grown on-site—but what sets Oliver’s cider and perry apart is Tom himself. A master blender with an instinct for balance, he brings character to every bottle. And while the farm may not produce every apple, it certainly imparts its own terroir through the land, the barns, and the quiet, purposeful rhythm of the work.

Tom and Ria In this Cider Chat

Blending Tradition with Innovation

  • Tom is now experimenting with distillation: apple brandy, pommeau-style blends, and barrel-aged perry into brandy too!
  • He’s careful with naming, refusing to call something a “Pommeau” unless it honors French tradition.
  • Barrels sourced from rum, sherry, port, bourbon, and white wine shape each unique blend.

Tasting in the Barrel Room

In the barrel room

We tasted perries straight from the barrel—some from single ancient trees, others blended with gin pears or red pear varieties. Each sip revealed:

  • Confectionary sweetness
  • Banana, melon, pineapple notes
  • Mellow malolactic fermentation

This isn’t a showpiece cidery as Tom puts it, “It’s a working farm“, evolving from a hop yard and now cider. Tom calls it “just a part of the agricultural calendar.” No pretense, just purpose.

Tom Oliver straddles the line between tradition and experimentation with ease. Whether it’s a single-varietal showcase or a spirit-kissed blend, the goal remains the same: make cider that speaks of time, place, and people.

Contact info for Oliver’s Cider and Perry Co. Mentions in this Cider Chat
  continue reading

462 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 475967356 series 1026268
Content provided by Ria Windcaller, Ria Windcaller: Award-winning Cidermaker, and Podcaster | Craft Beer Columnist. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ria Windcaller, Ria Windcaller: Award-winning Cidermaker, and Podcaster | Craft Beer Columnist or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.
Rainy Days Goes Best with Dry Cider in the Barrel Room

Walking into the barrel room at Oliver’s Cider and Perry Company, you might think you know what to expect. But surrounded by whitewashed stone walls, standing beneath the old Hessian sacking floor, and facing rows of aging barrels, I quickly realized this wasn’t just a cidery—it’s a living, breathing creative space for cider making.

Tom Oliver sources fruit both from his farm and from local orchards across Herefordshire. This isn’t an estate cidery where everything is grown on-site—but what sets Oliver’s cider and perry apart is Tom himself. A master blender with an instinct for balance, he brings character to every bottle. And while the farm may not produce every apple, it certainly imparts its own terroir through the land, the barns, and the quiet, purposeful rhythm of the work.

Tom and Ria In this Cider Chat

Blending Tradition with Innovation

  • Tom is now experimenting with distillation: apple brandy, pommeau-style blends, and barrel-aged perry into brandy too!
  • He’s careful with naming, refusing to call something a “Pommeau” unless it honors French tradition.
  • Barrels sourced from rum, sherry, port, bourbon, and white wine shape each unique blend.

Tasting in the Barrel Room

In the barrel room

We tasted perries straight from the barrel—some from single ancient trees, others blended with gin pears or red pear varieties. Each sip revealed:

  • Confectionary sweetness
  • Banana, melon, pineapple notes
  • Mellow malolactic fermentation

This isn’t a showpiece cidery as Tom puts it, “It’s a working farm“, evolving from a hop yard and now cider. Tom calls it “just a part of the agricultural calendar.” No pretense, just purpose.

Tom Oliver straddles the line between tradition and experimentation with ease. Whether it’s a single-varietal showcase or a spirit-kissed blend, the goal remains the same: make cider that speaks of time, place, and people.

Contact info for Oliver’s Cider and Perry Co. Mentions in this Cider Chat
  continue reading

462 episodes

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