wine newbee
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- Joined
- Sep 12, 2019
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It's been a while; I hope all's good for you folks in wine-land.
My 1st batch of wine, 2 years ago, was with muscadines. I didn't want the usual super-sweet stuff, but ended up with a super-dry batch. "Not bad" for a first try, the old hands told me. But (I'm sure) not great either.
My second batch (another muscadine variety) was a little less dry, but still not sweet enough to catch any fruit flavors.
I just sampled my 3rd effort -- paw paw wine -- yesterday. Hmmmm ... just as dry as the other batches, and no paw paw taste at all. All I could pick up was alcohol.
SO -- what do I do with this year's grapes, so I can have a muscadine wine with some sweetness and flavor, but not cloying sugariness? I'd prefer not to "back-sweeten", as some suggested. I think I'd maybe compromise sanitization if I went that route.
I was told by somebody I should use enough sugar so that the alcohol level in fermentation would go to ~15-16%, killing the yeast and stopping sugar use by the yeast.
OK: how do I plan for that? I mean, what's the calculation? If I have 22 lb if grapes, and am using the Lalvin 71B (I was told that was the way to go with muscadines), how much sugar would I use? How much water, for that matter?
You can tell I'm still a little foggy with all of this.
Thanks much for any feedback .....
Mitch
My 1st batch of wine, 2 years ago, was with muscadines. I didn't want the usual super-sweet stuff, but ended up with a super-dry batch. "Not bad" for a first try, the old hands told me. But (I'm sure) not great either.
My second batch (another muscadine variety) was a little less dry, but still not sweet enough to catch any fruit flavors.
I just sampled my 3rd effort -- paw paw wine -- yesterday. Hmmmm ... just as dry as the other batches, and no paw paw taste at all. All I could pick up was alcohol.
SO -- what do I do with this year's grapes, so I can have a muscadine wine with some sweetness and flavor, but not cloying sugariness? I'd prefer not to "back-sweeten", as some suggested. I think I'd maybe compromise sanitization if I went that route.
I was told by somebody I should use enough sugar so that the alcohol level in fermentation would go to ~15-16%, killing the yeast and stopping sugar use by the yeast.
OK: how do I plan for that? I mean, what's the calculation? If I have 22 lb if grapes, and am using the Lalvin 71B (I was told that was the way to go with muscadines), how much sugar would I use? How much water, for that matter?
You can tell I'm still a little foggy with all of this.
Thanks much for any feedback .....
Mitch
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