WSU Extension adds cider specialist
For half of her job, she will create workshops and other programs in an extension position to help established and novice cider makers. The other half will involve teaching classes at the new WSU campus in Everett.
“I’m really looking forward to working with both the industry side and the academic side,” said Ewing, who started at the beginning of March.
“Everyone has been really helpful so far,” said the Sacramento-area native. “I think it will be worthwhile for cider makers to attend and they’ll learn some new information.”
Ewing’s background is actually in the wine industry. She worked at wineries in Sonoma and Napa, Calif., and in New Zealand after graduating from the University of California, Berkeley with a degree in molecular environmental biology. She returned to academia to earn a master’s degree in food science from Virginia Tech, where she first started working with cider.
“My thesis was on how harvest maturities and post-harvest storage of apples affected the chemistry of hard cider,” she said. “The taste characteristics in cider are much more subtle than wine, so I’m still learning.”
“The industry is really collaborative, probably because it’s so small and growing,” she said. “Working with an industry that’s so eager for knowledge and looking to help each other is fantastic.”
She is helping fill those knowledge holes in the traditional extension manner of taking research, often produced by WSU, and making it more accessible to industry and the public.
She hopes to add more schools and workshops on topics like cider and food pairings and fermentation programs in general. For information about apple cider workshops, go to http://treefruit.wsu.edu/news/wsu-mount-vernon-cider-workshops/.
— Scott Weybright, Washington State University
Source: Washington State University News