Home Wine Making – How To Make Your Own Wine

December 20th, 2009 -- Posted in make your own wine | No Comments »

So – you have decided that you want to try your hand to make your own wine. This article will describe the basic steps and some of the pitfalls to avoid to make sure your first batch turns out good enough to drink.

First things first – how much do you want to make?

I recommend at least 5 gallons. Why? Because beginning home wine makers just cannot wait to taste what they have made. In addition, 5 gallons is only 25 bottles. So you’ll get the batch finished, and then you will try a bottle or 2 or 3. Then you’ll wait a week and try a few more bottles. Sooner than later, it will all be gone before it has a chance to age and get really good.

If you just want to do something quick and simple, you could do a gallon in a plastic milk jug. The drawback is, once you have tasted it a few times – it’s all gone and you’ll have to start over.

With 5 gallons – you just might be tempted to let a few of the remaining bottles age. Believe it or not, the biggest mistake beginning winemakers make is not letting their wine age in the bottle. The difference in taste is, to put it mildly, AMAZING.

The next step is to decide which type of juice you want to ferment. Grape juice, cranberry juice, muscadine, and cherry are all good starter choices. The first 3 should produce a rather normal tasting wine while cherries usually will give you a sweeter wine. Of course, you can always add sugar to sweeten your wine after it is stabilized and has stopped fermenting.

The next step is to completely sterilize all of the containers and equipment you will be using. Some people use extremely hot water, others recommend using a sanitizer. I like the sanitizer because you do not have to scald yourself with the hot water. The sanitizing solution should be poured over everything and should make contact with all surfaces. Then you just rinse everything off with hot water.

Put your juice in your 5 gallon bucket – that’s the next step. BUT – it’s not time to put your yeast in yet.

We first want to sterilize our “must” or our juice. You can do this with 4 Campden Tablets. These are sulfite tablets that will get rid of any type of bacteria that could be present in the juice. Crush the tablets and then dissolve them in some warm water and then pour them in your juice or “must”. Let this sit overnight while the sulfites do their work.

24 hours later, you are ready to sprinkle in or “pitch” your yeast.

The type of yeast you decide to use is really a question that is beyond the scope of this article. However, I’ll say that there are hundreds of different yeast strains for literally thousands of different uses. For our first batch, we can just use the bakers yeast that you can easily find at the grocery store. Later, and after some research, you will probably want to use one of the specialized strains.

Now – wait 7 days and watch. you will want to cover your bucket with a cloth towel or even put on a lid with an airlock in place. The wine will be perfectly safe during the fermentation stage because it will give off lots of Carbon Dioxide. The Co2 will protect your wine from the oxygen in the air.

Once the 7 days has passed, siphon off the wine from the bucket into another bucket or into a glass “carboy”. These can be found online or at your local wineshop. When you are doing the siphoning, you will want to get as little of the gunk on the bottom of the bucket as possible. This gunk is called “lees” and is made up of dead yeast. Wine that sits on top of the dead yeast sometimes can develop an “off” flavor.

Once your wine has been transferred into what is called your “secondary fermenter”, then you will want to put an airlock in place and just let it sit for about a month. There’s a song about this part – “The Waiting is the Hardest Part”. It’s true. Every budding home winemaker just cannot wait to taste the stuff – but – don’t do it. It surely won’t hurt you but during this month it is still fermenting. The wine isn’t finished yet. Be Patient.

After the month is up, you will want to transfer it back to your bucket, again making sure that you leave the gunk on the bottom. The process of transferring the wine from one vessel to another is called “racking”. Why? That’s something I am going to research for another article.

You are just about there. Theres only one thing left to do and that is to add a “stablizer” to your wine. A stabilizer inhibits yeast reproduction. In essence, it stops yeast from doing it’s thing. Part of what happens during yeast growth and reproduction is that it releases Co2 gas. If that is happening after you bottle the wine, you will get popped corks or exploded bottles or both. So – put in the stabilizer, stir the wine well, and then return it to your Secondary Carboy fermentation vessel. Be sure and clean out the secondary and sterilize it before you do.

Now, all you have to do at this point is wait until the wine clears. Gravity is your friend here. Of course, it won’t hurt a bit to bottle cloudy wine. But if you wait another month, it should be crystal clear. The clearing process is another subject that you can find a great deal of information on in other guides and books and I suggest you read up on this subject when you get a chance.

Bottling time! All you have to do is make sure your bottles are clean and sanitized and just siphon the wine into the bottles. Corking the bottles can be a little difficult and i highly recommend you get some king of corker. Again, these are available online or at your local wine shop.

Now – BE PATIENT and let the wine sit in the bottle for 6 to 9 months. The longer the wine ages, the better it will taste – I guarantee it. Happy winemaking!

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Types Of Wine Making Grapes

November 11th, 2009 -- Posted in make your own wine | No Comments »

Are you questioning which grapes you can use when doing home wine making? Is the sole grape you can think about is the accord grape the juice is formed from? Are you completely in the dark as to what other grapes make good wines? Let’s take a look at some of the kinds of grapes that may be used for this enterprise. The Auxerrois grape gives you a neutral wine that’s soft and fruity. The Cabernet Sauvignon grapes are tiny, troublesome, and red while growing on the grapevines, and these are used to make the Cabernet Sauvignon wines.

Also, these grapes naturally contain tannin, which helps force a pleasant tasting red wine.

These grapes make a wine which has a fruity taste as in peaches or melons and some can have an oak-type flavour. These are intensely straightforward to grow so far as white grapes though . The Grenache grape typically is utilized to make the rose wine. This grape is the two grape grown across the world. The wine that comes from employing this grape is fruity, sweet and with a little bit of tannin. The Merlot grape is one that ripens early in the season and provides flavours such as honey, cherry, and possibly mint. It contains a lower quantity of tannin compared to the red cousins it has. Merlot grapes are grown in Australia, France, Italy, Washington state, California state, and in Manhattan, Manhattan. Muscadine grapes are a part of the Muscadinia grape, which branches off the standard grapes called vinifera that the majority are mindful of. This grape is generally grown in Mexico and the southeastern US. They can grow in areas the many grapes can’t because they’re so hearty. These grapes are typically used for home wine making.

Another favored grape is the Zinfandel, which is generally grown in the state of California. The wines from these grapes can be spicy or fruity, it depends on age. The Zinfandel grape creates both White Zinfandel ( skins are off ) and the Red Zinfandel ( skins are left on ). The Pinot Noir grapes ripen earlier and are softer than the Cabernet grapes. They’re frequently used underwater wine, and minus their skins in Bubbly .

The Pinot Noir wines are made in California, Australia, Italy, Oregon, Germany, and naturally Burgundy.

These are only a few of the grapes that you can come across to make wine from. If you don’t need the mess of working with the entire grape, you will find places which will sell you the juice from the grapes.

But the most authentic way to do home wine making is to use the entire grape.

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Home Wine Making

November 6th, 2009 -- Posted in make your own wine | No Comments »

How does one know when it is too cold for home wine making? This is one of the relevant questions that you need to ask, and answer properly, in order to make your own brew.

Some of us have been drinking wine for a few years and some have been drinking wine for more then fifty years.

Possibilities are that you have potentially asked yourself at one time or another : “Could I be successful at home wine making? Would it taste great? How do I do this?” The solution to your question is certainly “YES.” You can make a great tumbler of wine all by yourself, and will not have to give up your real job either. In other words, given the proper instructions for home wine making, it won’t take up a lot of time or money.

Now a day’s learning to make your own wine has changed into a very fashionable hobby. This doesn’t mean that winemaking is straightforward. What I’ve found is that the process in learning the way to brew your own wine can be amusing, entertaining and awfully rewarding.

Home wine making generally can be broken down into 5 steps:. I’ve been taught that wine making involves a number of choices.

When I first started off I wasted a lot of cash and time. I had issues with saving yeast from batch to batch, fermentation, temperature control and a ton more. I was really annoyed at times but was out to succeed. I learned tons from all of my disasters however. I also learned plenty from reading books, joining a winemaking club and reading varied mags. When I started off I just learned the basics and got to it, so my winemaking experience has been a random attempt. To be truthful, I’m wishing I had somebody to help me out through the method, and thats what I have decided to do I want to give back and help you to learn the details of home wine making.

So save yourself a ton of time, money, and grief…get yourself a solid manual to go by for home wine making by an expert to bypass the potentially huge learning curve!

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