shrink the recipe 4 fold and you should get 6+ gallons. slice the bananas and cut the dried figs in half. The sherry was stunning. I oaked it and let it bake in my attic from spring to fall to give it a caramel smell and flavour. I topped it up with demerara rum to get the alcohol up to 20%. I rated it 10/10.My gawd! thats a huge batch. How much was the end result (aka can I scale this down to a single 5-6 gallon initial fermentation).
@winemaker81 thanks for this! I'm getting the impression the few video's I linked originally are at least reasonable, but I should never expect to just follow a recipe to the T.
While I've got all the hardware I need minus a few quality of life things like a bottle tree (months away from needing this) I will be heading to my local supplier this weekend for all of the additives like k-meta and of course yeast etc etc.
Love what you are saying about the yeast doing the work. I jumped on the typical covid hobby of sourdough baking, which gives me at least some understanding of what you're talking about. Also did some great tours while in Belgium discussing old beer brewing methods (the "magic" spoon hung on the wall to stir the wart while meanwhile it was collecting ambient yeast before they even knew what yeast was).
In the meantime, I will continue processing my tons of plums, collecting all the starter packets I could possibly need, and will likely give a basic batch a start this weekend based off all the information gathered here. Will report back with starting SG etc once done and go from there.
Nice thing about freezing my harvest is I can also run a number of small batches back to back rather than simultaneously and learn a lot of lessons (hopefully not hard ones) fairly quickly
I got 2nd prize on a prune plum rose that used 7 lbs pitted plums, 3 lb of cane sugar and 1 Imperial gallon of water with pectic enzyme and nutrient. It was really tasty.
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