garymc
Senior Member
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2011
- Messages
- 964
- Reaction score
- 225
I got about 40 pounds of aronia berries last year and made a 5 gallon batch of wine with them. The berries are very astringent, like persimmons, so I figured it would be a high tannin dry wine. Unfortunately, at the second racking (I really mean the first racking from carboy to carboy after it's transferred from the bucket) I topped it up with 1 quart of Just Tart Cherry juice. I thought that might go well with the aronia. Now, it's a year down the road, and I just bottled the wine. I bottled 15 bottles dry (1.000 specific gravity) and 11 semi-sweet. The dry wine tastes slightly sweet and very much like tart cherry and the semi-sweet tastes more like tart cherry than tart cherry does. I have no aronia other than the color. There is no astringency, no heavy tannin. It's just a very pleasant fruit wine that you can drink like water. Next year I'm going to top with elderberry or not at all.
I planted 3 aronia bushes in 2014, but they haven't had any berries yet. I've decided to try to propagate them if I can. I'll bend some branches down and layer them, and in early March, I'll prune off some limbs and stick them in the ground. Don't laugh, it worked with elderberries.
One odd thing I've noticed about the bushes. They've lost most of their leaves already, but a couple of the branches have flowers on them now in the first week of October. Picture below.
I planted 3 aronia bushes in 2014, but they haven't had any berries yet. I've decided to try to propagate them if I can. I'll bend some branches down and layer them, and in early March, I'll prune off some limbs and stick them in the ground. Don't laugh, it worked with elderberries.
One odd thing I've noticed about the bushes. They've lost most of their leaves already, but a couple of the branches have flowers on them now in the first week of October. Picture below.