Tips for Making Wine with Grapes
Sep 15th, 2010 by admin

Tips for Making Wine with Grapes

As you contemplate the prospect of making your next batch of wine you will need to decide whether you want to use fruit, such as grapes, or packaged fruit juices. Packaged juices are known as concentrates and can be easily purchased online as well as in home brewing stores. There are many advantages to using concentrates, including the fact that they come with easy to follow directions and usually all of the extra ingredients you may need. Many novice winemakers feel that concentrates are a great introduction to the process of winemaking. There are also advantages to using fruit rather than concentrates; however. The main advantage to using fruit is that you have more control over the process, and thus the results, when you use fruits.

For the most part, the process of making wine from fruit is similar to making it using concentrates. There are a few differences; however, and those differences are critical.

Before you begin, you will need to make sure that you have plenty of fruit. It is not uncommon for many novice winemakers to think they have a sufficient amount of fruit when in fact they do not. You will need at least 70 pounds of grapes in order to produce six gallons of wine. This is the equivalent of about two bushels. The one exception to this is if you are using wild grapes such as Muscadine. In that case you will only need about 25 pounds of grapes due to the fact that wild grapes tend to have a stronger flavor as well as more acid.

Since you will be dealing with a large amount of grapes, you will need to make sure that you have sufficient facilities to deal with them properly. Before you are able to use them to make wine, you will need to remove the stems as well as crush the grapes. Later, the grapes will then need to be pressed after they have had a few days to ferment.

You can easily remove the stems as well as crush the grapes by hand. For small batches of grapes, you can use something as simple as a potato masher to crush the grapes; just make sure it has been cleaned and sanitized first. If you are dealing with larger amounts of grapes it may be worth it to go ahead and invest in a grape crusher as this will speed the process along.

As previously mentioned, after the grapes have fermented for a few days, you will need to press the pulp in order to extract as much juice as possible. In the event you are making white whine, the grapes will need to be pressed directly after they have been crushed but before the first fermentation.

When working with fruit rather than concentrate you will also need to have a hydrometer on hand in order to assist you in controlling the sugar level. As you may recall, this essential in determining the alcohol level in the final wine so it is a step that must not be overlooked.

An acid test kit may also be helpful in controlling and monitoring the levels of acid that are present in your wine when you are using fruit rather than concentrate. When the acid level in the wine is too high, the resulting wine will typically have a taste that is too sour or sharp. If there is not enough acid; however, the wine may taste somewhat flat. An acid test kit will provide you with accurate readings and help you to determine whether you need to add water or acid blend for balance.

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Discover the Secrets To making Great Wine: Successful Wine Making

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Simple Apple Wine Recipe
Jun 27th, 2010 by admin

Apple wine in a glass

Apple wine is an excellent choice to start with in making homemade fruit wines. Apples come in so many different varieties and flavors that with a little experimentation outcomes can be amazing.

While this Recipe calls for the simplest starting - frozen apple juice, you can substitute - your favorite apple juice brand, and, of course, you can press or have pressed the apples of your choice (recommended).

Your wine mix is merely 2 containers of frozen apple juice (thawed) and 4 cups of sugar, more or less to taste, with about 2-1/2 quarts of water.

As with most easy wine recipes, you boil the sugar in about a quart of the water until it is dissolved, and add this to the apple juice.

Next add about 6 teaspoons of acid blend, a campden tablet (a sulphur-based product that is used primarily in wine, cider and beer making to kill certain bacteria and to inhibit the growth of most wild yeast), a quarter teaspoon of grape tannin, a half teaspoon of pectic enzyme, and a package of wine yeast.

You then prepare it as you would any other wine.

Apple juice is a great starting base for other fruit wines. You can experiment with it by mixing the apple juice with other fruit juices.

Half apple juice and half grape juice is good; cherry or blackberry juice also works well. Try different fruits that are in season...

You can also adjust this Simple Apple Wine Recipe by eliminating the apple altogether and using half grape juice and half grapefruit juice, etc. to get you going into many other fruit wines.

For the most palatable fruit wine, generally speaking, when using mixed fruits is to strike a balance. ir the best homemade wine you don't want to use all tart fruits or all sweet fruits.

A simple trick to to choosing fruit combination is to think of the colors of the fruit, and use two from different colors. For instance, grape and apple, banana and cherry, and so on. These types of mixtures usually make the best fruit wine recipes for homemade wines.

For more about cooking with apples, check out: Apple-recipes.org


Star apple Wine

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