Thought this might be interesting/helpful especially for new wine makers.
I recently bottled my second raspberry wine and the differences are truly amazing. The most obvious difference is color.
The bottle on the right is the very last bottle of my very first wine. (I don't think I'll ever open it. It has historical importance. )
I used 3.5 lbs of raspberries for a gallon. After making a wonderful jam that's all I had left. Raspberry aroma with my nose in the glass. Flavor was identifiable as raspberry, similar to some commercial brands. As my first wine I was happy and considered it a great success.
The bottle on the left had 5.5 lbs of raspberries/gallon. Raspberry aroma was noticeable with the glass a foot away from my nose! And the flavor was knock-your-socks-off! In fact, one could almost imagine that raspberry flavoring was added, that's how intense it is. Without question, one of my favorites and I wish all my wines were such a success. Fortunately for me it was one of my rare larger batches, 3 gallons.
I recently bottled my second raspberry wine and the differences are truly amazing. The most obvious difference is color.
The bottle on the right is the very last bottle of my very first wine. (I don't think I'll ever open it. It has historical importance. )
I used 3.5 lbs of raspberries for a gallon. After making a wonderful jam that's all I had left. Raspberry aroma with my nose in the glass. Flavor was identifiable as raspberry, similar to some commercial brands. As my first wine I was happy and considered it a great success.
The bottle on the left had 5.5 lbs of raspberries/gallon. Raspberry aroma was noticeable with the glass a foot away from my nose! And the flavor was knock-your-socks-off! In fact, one could almost imagine that raspberry flavoring was added, that's how intense it is. Without question, one of my favorites and I wish all my wines were such a success. Fortunately for me it was one of my rare larger batches, 3 gallons.