Well, I'd guess it's mostly about the lack of variation of Apple stock......
Without a lot of digging, I wouldn't know whether that's a "west country" style or a "Kentish" style (west country is mainly bitter sharp apples, whereas Kentish is a mix of sharp and sweet apples).
Maybe you could do some small scale batches. Straight sharp and sweet (cooking and eating apples) would likely be available, then maybe extra tannin and fermenting dry could get you there ?
Maybe have a look around and see if you can find any Normandy cider to try. After all, if you just used as many different varieties of Apple as you can find, including crabs and ornamental ones, you could likely achieve something more European in style than the stuff that's aimed at the perceived "American" taste ?
Just my tuppence worth..........
It's made with "bittersweet" apples, so it looks like a mix of both (still got the sweets in there for the Americans palate). We have a source of some feral apple and pear trees, and the pear trees are so tannic that just one small bite left the astringent tannic flavors in your mouth for 10 or 15 minutes. I could also add some quince, those are darn near PURE tannins too, they leave the same astringent tannic flavor in your mouth, but only for 5 minutes or so. They maybe my best option, and the flavor from them is exquisite and floral once the tannic bite is toned down a lot
I've sampled a few good crisp, dry ciders produced by orchards or wineries here in MI - there may be some good stuff coming out of smaller places out your way since eastern Washington is such a huge apple producer.
I would have to hit up a local cider mill at the right time of year, and still have to add more adjuncts and other high tannin fruits at my disposal. But a great idea!!
This is exactly why my husband started our small (12-tree) orchard. Nine of the trees were selected for their cider qualities, not their edibility. We're only three years in, so the trees haven't produced a lot yet, but last year's random batch of apples made a tastier (and drier) brew than your standard Woodchuck. Now it's up to me to master the art of blending them to find our own perfect brew.
The things I do for love...
Wish we had room for some trees like that, my partner even used to own a small organic orchard up Derby Canyon in his younger days, plus I have friends in the AG department at Wenatchee Valley College, so if we but had the space... I wish you luck and many fruitful years with your babies, I mean trees... ;D
I picked and pressed the feral apples in the nearby city park and they made a really good batch of sparkling cider, I just pithced in some rehydrated K1V-1116 and it took it nice and dry. All I can tell you about the apples is that some of them are yellow, some of them are red and only one tree had clean enough apples to eat off the tree, I had to cut the worst of the creepy-crawlies out of the rest. I'm probably going to end up doing a 1-gal batch using my new juicer to see how it compares to the more traditional-shred-and-press jobbie in taste. Mine stood up quite well to the (local-ish) Thornill Cider my friend brought by. Different flavour from different apples, of course, but equally clean, clear, enjoyable taste.
I had a chance to compare Strongbow (which I like) next to Alexander Keiths's Cider last year, and I could tell the difference just from the ingredients. Strongbow: apples. Keith's: water, apples and natural flavour. I don't think either of them were sweetened but I definitely preferred the strongbow, had a more honest apple taste. I'd imagine the typical American stuff you don't like has been sweetened like a cooler instead of left dry like a cider's supposed to be. Check the ingredients (or do the even list ingredients in the 'states?) and I'm betting you'll find this one you like contains apples and the ones you don't contain other things...
We have a lot of feral apple trees my partner has been gleaning for the last 30+ years, last year we harvested enough to make ~5 gallons of apple sauce, and I still had enough to juice about 3 gallons of cider for ourselves (~2 gallons were fermented). Most of the commercial stuff down here is: water, apples, natural and artificial flavors, (sometimes) glucose/fructose (AKA: corn syrup), caramel coloring, carbon dioxide, malic acid, K-Sorbate, K-Benzoate, sulfites, etc... The best one so far (other than Crispin) is Angry Orchard, none of the others really stand out to me...