enigmaticpea
Junior
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2018
- Messages
- 23
- Reaction score
- 8
Hello! I'm very new to wine/alcohol making (intentionally, at least), but not new to fermentation! In fact, I've been wild-fermenting fruit for a while now. I recently thought to apply my wild ferment starter (something like how a ginger bug is, but with fruit), as the beginning to a wine making project.
My understanding for a basic wine making is this:
Primary ferment:
Fruit/solids + sugar, + filtered water + yeast, covered with clean breathable material for oxygen exposure
Ferment for a week or so.
Once your bubbles begin to taper off:
Secondary ferment:
Rack into another sterile container
Apply airlock
*Allow 1-2 months for ferment to complete, then rack into aging container
Aging:
Allow to ferment in dark place for 4-6 months, racking wine off sediment every 3 or so months or as needed.
Test if fermentation has finished by SG readings during each rack. At 1.000 or 0.999, fermentation is complete.
After getting the right reading, wait a bit longer (1 or 2 months) before bottling for safety.
Bottle and cork. Store for at least 1 year before trying a bottle.
Is this correct? I'm fermenting my fruit starter now and that'll be done in a bit, just making sure I have it right before I start. Not sure about the * step.
I decided to try this with my starter because 1, I'm tired of making jam from all my leftover fruit, and 2, I don't want to order wine yeast online. Also I don't want to spend money. Haha. Getting some wine out of this would be nice too.
The fruit starter would be good, I think, due to the fact that, when it's "done", I strain off the raging bubbling syrup it produces and have a mass of fruit full of strong and healthy yeasts. I don't have to worry about whether or not my ferment will start or whether my indoor temp is okay. For my OG reading, I'm thinking of mixing my sugar and water in the pail and then adding the fruit mass, giving it a good stir, and measuring right then. That way it hasn't gotten to the new sugar yet and I'll have as close to an accurate OG I can get with a ferment already started.
Is there a certain SG I should be going for before starting the secondary ferment stage? Have you ever made a wild yeast wine? Does any of this sound familiar? Lol. I decided to make an account here because this site keeps popping up in my search results and everyone's uploaded images are too small to see without membership..
I'm also considering using my wild ferment to make some bread, but that might be an experiment for later.
Thanks for reading!
P. S.
The makeshift rig is that, if I can't get an airlock in time for my secondary ferment, I might try to make one myself...
My understanding for a basic wine making is this:
Primary ferment:
Fruit/solids + sugar, + filtered water + yeast, covered with clean breathable material for oxygen exposure
Ferment for a week or so.
Once your bubbles begin to taper off:
Secondary ferment:
Rack into another sterile container
Apply airlock
*Allow 1-2 months for ferment to complete, then rack into aging container
Aging:
Allow to ferment in dark place for 4-6 months, racking wine off sediment every 3 or so months or as needed.
Test if fermentation has finished by SG readings during each rack. At 1.000 or 0.999, fermentation is complete.
After getting the right reading, wait a bit longer (1 or 2 months) before bottling for safety.
Bottle and cork. Store for at least 1 year before trying a bottle.
Is this correct? I'm fermenting my fruit starter now and that'll be done in a bit, just making sure I have it right before I start. Not sure about the * step.
I decided to try this with my starter because 1, I'm tired of making jam from all my leftover fruit, and 2, I don't want to order wine yeast online. Also I don't want to spend money. Haha. Getting some wine out of this would be nice too.
The fruit starter would be good, I think, due to the fact that, when it's "done", I strain off the raging bubbling syrup it produces and have a mass of fruit full of strong and healthy yeasts. I don't have to worry about whether or not my ferment will start or whether my indoor temp is okay. For my OG reading, I'm thinking of mixing my sugar and water in the pail and then adding the fruit mass, giving it a good stir, and measuring right then. That way it hasn't gotten to the new sugar yet and I'll have as close to an accurate OG I can get with a ferment already started.
Is there a certain SG I should be going for before starting the secondary ferment stage? Have you ever made a wild yeast wine? Does any of this sound familiar? Lol. I decided to make an account here because this site keeps popping up in my search results and everyone's uploaded images are too small to see without membership..
I'm also considering using my wild ferment to make some bread, but that might be an experiment for later.
Thanks for reading!
P. S.
The makeshift rig is that, if I can't get an airlock in time for my secondary ferment, I might try to make one myself...