homer
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2010
- Messages
- 309
- Reaction score
- 3
This weekend went over to Kansas to see some old friends that were making "some wine". The area is sprinkled with many Italians, one of which taught our friend how to make wine. Several of the neighbors split up a load of grapes, I know what you're thinking, a few neighbors a few hundred pounds of grapes, big deal, but their load was an 18 wheeler of Zinfandel grapes from Napa Valley. Our friends were only making about 50 to 70 gallons but the best is yet to come.
They don't know anything about SG readings, they use no yeast (only what stays on the grapes after washing, or just free floating in the air), no sulfates, no Kmeta, no clearing chemicals, no nothing. Five days in the olive barrels, press it, rack it, when it quits bubbling put it in jugs and drink it. The wine may have no real staying power, but like Rick says, you want to look at it or drink it?
I sampled the year old, 2 year old, the first squeezing, the second squeezing and some three year old, would Parker give it a 90 rating, probably not, but old Homer didn't have any problem swilling it down. bk
They don't know anything about SG readings, they use no yeast (only what stays on the grapes after washing, or just free floating in the air), no sulfates, no Kmeta, no clearing chemicals, no nothing. Five days in the olive barrels, press it, rack it, when it quits bubbling put it in jugs and drink it. The wine may have no real staying power, but like Rick says, you want to look at it or drink it?
I sampled the year old, 2 year old, the first squeezing, the second squeezing and some three year old, would Parker give it a 90 rating, probably not, but old Homer didn't have any problem swilling it down. bk