I like to brew wine; It's only a hobby but I'm obsessed!
This is the place to be if you want to see what another brewer is up to or want some encouragement to start or diversify. I've posted heaps of recipes (clicky) and 2 wine-making vids (here for wine made from cartons of juice blog / youtube, and here for Blackberry wine on the pulp blog / youtube).
If you're new here then do explore, take this link for tips about where to find what you're interested in.


Sunday, 27 February 2011

Recipe: Pomegranate Quickie Wine

It's a few days since I got my second brew of the year started. Busy times means I'm not brewing as frequently as I had hoped, but what is lacking there is being made up for in volume. So I'm still on target for brewing 50+ gallons of wine this year. The lastest one is 4 gallons of Pomegranate Quickie Wine, started 23rd Feb, yeast pitched 24th. It was going to be 3 gallons, but I found the grape juice was on it's best before date, so had to use the lot, which meant 5 litres. There was only 3 litres of Pomegranate juice, but I reckon the wine is still worth making. The recipe and method follow.

Recipe: 4 gallons

3 Litres Pomegranate Juice (Pomegreat, OG 1041)
3 Litres White Grape Juice (Tesco, pressed, 1072)
2 Litres Red Grape Juice (Tesco, pressed, 1073)
2.3 Kg Sugar
2 TSpoons Tartaric Acid
2 TSpoons Citric Acid
2 TSpoons Nutrient (Brupak, Nutrivin)
3 TSpoons Pectolase
3 Campden Tablets
Yeast, Gervin, GV1

OG 1075, FG 994. so 11%ABV

Method

Bring about a gallon of water to the boil with the sugar in it to dissolve.
Meanwhile, pour all the juices into a fermenting bin (measure their gravity first, it's useful info for future brews). Rinse each carton out with a little water and add to the fermenting bin.
Dissolve the acids, nutrient, pectolase and campden in a little water and then add to the fermenting bin.
Add the sugar solution and make the volume up to almost 4 gallons with cold water. Cover tightly and leave overnight.

Next day measure the gravity and make up the volume to 4 gallons with water (and sugar if you have a higher gravity as your target). Measure the gravity again. Mine was 1075, I didn't add any more sugar, just water. Now stir it vigorously and splashily for a few minutes to get some air dissolved. The yeast needs the oxygen to bud (breed) and hence form a healthy colony. When you've done this sprinkle your yeast on top, cover tightly and leave overnight.

Check your brew next day, it should be fermenting, a foamy head will tell you, or fizzing. If it isn't obvious at day one, as was the case with mine, then don't panic. Give it another sloshy stir and then cover it up and check again the next day. Mine was going great on day 2.

From here on you know the routine, stir daily for a few days. After about a week transfer to secondary fermenting vessels, usually demi-johns, and fit airlocks. Leave it undisturbed until it finishes fermenting, most likely 2-3 weeks, evidenced by no more bubbles flowing through your airlocks. You may want to check the gravity at this point. It it's low and stays steady for a few days then it's finished. Then wait for it to clear, should be showing good signs of that within a couple of weeks. If you're impatient then add finings. It should then be clear within a week. Rack off the sediment, degas, add stabiliser and campden. Refit airlock and forget about it for a few weeks. It'll then be ready to bottle and drink. However it will be worth waiting a further month. At that point it probably won't get noticeably better with more time. It's a table wine, light and meant to be drunk young.

Update 23.5.2011

Needed finings to hurry along the clearing, but was ready  to drink in mid-late May, some 3 months from starting.

So it's  a very pale pink. crisp, refreshing, sharpish and clean. The ABV worked out to be 11%. It's fruity, but light and the nearest I can get to nailing a flavour is raspberry which comes quickly. I don't think it would do any harm for this to be 10.5%ABV rather than 11.0%, so that would perhaps be my aim for next time, just a bit less sugar.

Overall verdict, cracker of a wine for something that is so easy to make, so quick to finish, and at around 30p per bottle there is just no complaining. It's table wine quality but if you gave this to your mates (especially the women as men tend to have an irrational aversion to rosé) they wouldn't believe this was your version of plonk. Its perfect for those hot summer days, BBQ's, picnics and sitting in the park etc.

Sunday, 13 February 2011

Bottling & Racking

ah, it's satisfying squeezing wine-making into a busy day. Today I managed to do just that and even take some piccies. So let's start with racking ...

The 2 gallons of Muscat wine cleared some time ago (compare to the pea souper in the last pic of them 2nd image there), the finings doing their job in days, but then me taking a little longer than usual to rack the wine off the sediment. The taste is quite stunning, very grapey and in character with the fruit variety that was pressed, especially the skins. However it's very acidic and I think that a glass or two would be a challenge for any stomach. This means I'll be venturing into new territory and looking into reducing acidity. I believe this is essentially adding chalk, but research is needed. Alternatively it may be a case of balancing the acidity by adding sugar, back-sweetening is the vintner's term for this. There is also a 3rd option, blending with a wine that has low acidity. The 3rd option is not so appealing even tho I've done it before, because I like the character of the wine and feel blending will cause this to be lost.


The picture shows the 2 gallons of Muscat, white wine. The dark DJ is the other wine I racked tonight. The Vieux Chateau Du Roi. It threw a pretty huge sediment. The sneak taste i got when racking was delicious, but that is the last time I'll taste it until the back end of the year.

Onwards then, for there was more activity. I bottled 3 gallons of wine too. 1 gallon each of Blueberry & Cranberry, Tanglefoot (note it's not the latest one), and Elderflower. I know what to expect of each and I'm happy with each. Tho the Tanglefoot is something of a rarity as it's a favourite. It's delicious, again.

 
So here is a piccie of the assorted bottles, soon to have neck sleeves fitted and laid down (if corked), or drunk if fitted with screw caps. At the front Blueberry & Cranberry, back Tanglefoot, in the middle Elderflower.

Tuesday, 8 February 2011

Update and Stuff

So the Green Tea & Ginger wine is coming along just fine. On the 1st, yikes that's a whole week ago - sorry -, I moved the wine to secondary. Normally I would have taken out all the solids at this stage, but I only took the tea out. Can't explain it, just felt like leaving the sultanas and ginger and zest in. Sunday, some 5 days later, I took out the rest of the solids.

In between making it up as i went along we had dinner with mates. 3 bottles of wine came to the table. Orange & Elderflower, Blackberry & Elderberry and also Blueberry & Cranberry. They were drunk in that order and then having drunk 3 wines it was easy to get some cool feedback by asking which one worked.
Orange & Elderflower was a hit with one mate, and a close second best with the other
The Blackberry & Elderberry was a slight favourite with one and a clear 2nd best with the other.
As for me I liked the Blackberry & Elderberry best.

I got a bit lucky serving up the least favourite wine first then! Because it went down fine, and truth be told it is a perfectly good table wine. It was very pleasing that the "good stuff" was appreciated most tho.
 

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