cider sparkling but not sweet

Hi, my cider is getting really good in terms of carbonation and appearance. But, I can’t get it to a desired sweetness content.
After fermentation (1-2 months) I do a simple pasteurization and include a% of apple juice (20-30%).
After that, I do the filling and wait about 1-2 months to the cider get ready.
Despite the good formation of gas and flavor, there are no traces of sweetness. Can someone help me? Thanks

Its nearly impossible to make sweet cider since the sugar ferments put.  There are ways to kill the yeast nd backsweeten, but I don’t do that so I’m no help there.  Another alternative is to just add a bit of apple juice to your glass before pouring the cider.  My preferred method to get a sweetish cider is through apple and yeast selection.

1450?

From your description, it sounds like you’re using the naturally occurring CO2 from the fermentation of additional juice to carbonate your cider.  As Denny said, this will definitely make it more difficult to get a sweet cider.  Usually when back sweetening you should first add a sulfite (such as campden tablets or other metabisulfite), and then add potassium sorbate.  This will prevent fermentation from starting up again when you add additional sugars.  Although it will also prevent you from carbonating via fermentation.  You will need to keg the cider and force carbonate if you want it to be sparkling.

What else?  I’ve used a lot of years for cider over the years.  One year we lreswwed juice and I realized that was the only yeast I had on hand.  In 20 years of making cider that was the best batch ever, so that’s what I continue to use.  Along with crabapple from one of our trees, it makes fantastic cider.

I definitely want to give it a go in my next cider, although I don’t know when as I’d have to order it online and I don’t want liquid yeast to set around for a long time in a possibly warm warehouse waiting for ups to get around to picking it up.

Many advantages to kegging. Case in point here, love hard cider and yes it ferments till its like dry champaign. Simply tossing in a can of concentrate after a short conditioning brightens up the sweet. Seems whatever yeast left slowly works on it at fridge temps and creates supper fuzz. If the sweetness cold ferments out just pop in another can. I have to embarrass my neighbor to get her lips off the tap.  :stuck_out_tongue:

I recently just kegged a Cider.  I added campden tablets and potassium sorbate as Joe mentioned.  I added back 1/2 gallon of apple juice after that for a 5 gallon batch.  It has a nice balance wouldn’t consider it sweet and is definitely not as sweet as some ciders I’ve tasted.  I haven’t notice it fermenting out or building pressure.  I would not follow this process if I was bottling, way to risky.  I would follow Denny’s recommendation and just add apple juice to taste in the glass when drinking if you wanted a sweet hard cider and could only bottle.