The Blackmore Vale logo

Core values

Date:

Tracie Beardsley raises a pint glass to one of Dorset’s youngest cider makers – moving an ancient craft into a thriving 21st-century business

Bill Meaden grows some of Dorset’s rarest vintage apple varieties in his orchards.
All images: Courtenay Hitchcock The BV

While his schoolmates were scrumping apples for fun, a 15-year-old Bill Meaden was carefully hand-picking them and taking the first steps to running his own craft cider business. Along side his father Simon – a third-generation Dorset farmer – Bill recalls trips with his father, Simon – a third-generation Dorset farmer – to the Square and Compass at Worth Matreavers, where the duo made their early batches of ‘liquid gold’. ‘Apples on the ground are such a waste, so we’d harvest from unused orchards on the Rushmore Estate and dabble in cider making,’ says Simon.
Bill got the cider-calling so strongly that when travelling the world as a college-leaver, he ached for the taste of home: ‘A lot of countries don’t make cider’, he says. ‘I realised how special our long cider heritage is, especially here in Dorset.’

Bill Meaden (left) with dad Simon outside the original Cider Shack – now a pop-up cider bar All images: Courtenay Hitchcock The BV

Cider-making in Dorset is recorded as far back as the 13th century: the Blackmore Vale was home to prolific cider producers in the 1700s.
Buoyed with enthusiastic, entrepreneurial spirit, he returned home at the age of 19 and juggled working as a metal fabricator with a part-time job as a brewer at Sixpenny Brewery, while making his own cider at weekends.
‘I was a young man enjoying an artisan pursuit that is dominated by older people … but they were all so generous in sharing their knowledge with me, for which I’m forever grateful,’ he says.
Bill’s first cider press was thanks to his metalworking skills – a handmade hydraulic press, powered by the farm tractor. Today, it stands redundant outside the modern cider processing barn, framed by the new orchards Bill himself has planted – it’s a visual timeline of how his labour of love has ripened in 14 years. Inside, a huge, second-hand industrial press processes up to 100 tonnes of fruit in three months. Apples are riddled, washed, milled and pressed into award-winning still cider, apple juice, and the sparkling new hit – Dorsecco. ‘We couldn’t resist jumping on the prosecco bandwagon,” he says.
‘No two ciders are ever the same,’ says Bill. ‘Even with the same apple trees – the yeast, soil and weather all play a role. The old whisky barrels we use to store the vintage cider influence the taste, too.
‘Every batch is unique. That’s the magic.’

Bill’s first homemade cider press now sits unused outside the modern pressing barn – a visual timeline of the growth of the business All images: Courtenay Hitchcock The BV
The huge, second-hand industrial press processes up to 100 tonnes of fruit in three months. All images: Courtenay Hitchcock The BV

Family business
Cranborne Chase Cider is run by the whole Meaden clan. It’s all-hands-to-the-orchards for harvesting, then back to the farm for processing, fermenting, barrelling and packaging. Around the big farmhouse table, the family tastes the latest batches of cider.Bill’s mum Denise helps design the packaging labels and runs the farm’s shepherd’s hut guest accommodation. The cider shop itself is a converted hut. The basic rule there is ‘anyone home answers the bell!’

Contrary to popular belief, some cider apples make very tasty eaters! All images: Courtenay Hitchcock The BV


Simon farms arable crops and also runs a bench hire business – if you’ve been to one of our local country shows, you’ve probably sat on one of them. Bill’s wife Orla, a solicitor, handles the paperwork and at weekends helps run the pop-up Cider Shack – another converted shepherd’s hut which is a popular presence at local country shows.

In the orchards that Bill has planted. All images: Courtenay Hitchcock The BV


And if the family hasn’t got enough to do managing around 2,000 apple trees across 20 orchards, they also run Last of the Summer Cider – a music and cider festival. It takes place on their farm during September and visitors can expect DJs, live music, steam engines, cider-pressing demos, ferret racing, blacksmithing, crafts and pottery.

Cranborne Chase Cider Shop: the family rule is ‘anyone home answers the bell!’ All images: Courtenay Hitchcock The BV


Simon says: ‘We nearly lost everything as pig farmers – it was a wake-up call to spread risks by diversifying. The cider business has allowed Bill to pursue his passion and has also presented other opportunities for the farm.’
Growth, resilience, diversification … but Bill determinedly stays hands-on. ‘I love working with the trees, harvesting, pruning and making cider. The orchard is a magical place for me and has been ever since I was a kid – woodpeckers in winter, skylarks in spring, the bees and the beautiful blossom … I never want to lose that connection with nature.’

https://cranbornechasecider.co.uk

Bill and Simon Meaden Cranborne Cider. All images: Courtenay Hitchcock The BV

Quickfire questions for Bill:
Books by your bedside?
I’ve got a classic Mini – after cider, the classic Mini is my passion – so there’s a lot of Mini magazines.
And lots of orchard management and apple varieties guides … Also books by Liz Copas and Nick Poole – they set up the Dorset Apple Tree Analysis Project (DATA) to create a true Dorset cider from Dorset cider apple varieties. They searched out the remnants of traditional orchards across Dorset to save our old varieties.
My inspiration!
I grow some of those rare varieties in my own orchards.

Who would you like to drink cider with?
Some of the characters we’ve named our cider after: General Pitt Rivers – to understand more about the Rushmore Estate orchards he planted. And Isaac Gulliver, Dorset’s most famous
smuggler. I’m sure he’d love to know a cider has been named after him.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

More like this
Related

Voice of the showground

Tracie Beardsley meets the Dorset man who is the...

Bud, bloom, berry … repeat

As boys they picked blueberries on a Dorset farm...

In the company of bees

From CPR on the kitchen floor to spinning honey...

Big bad wolf proof

Tracie Beardsley meets sustainable builder Phil Christopher, championing a...