FlamingoEmporium
Senior Member
Drone with a small chainsaw ?Can you reach them with an extended polesaw? Maybe an air rifle?
Drone with a small chainsaw ?Can you reach them with an extended polesaw? Maybe an air rifle?
Just the leaves for the walnut.I’m looking forward to reading your experiences. I’m sure I could find 1 or 2 of them oaks over here if I looked hard but the only 2 in abundance here are pedunculate and sessile. I have no idea how they will compare.
Did you use just leaves or did you add anything else?
I’m curious as my favourite commercial country wine is “Cairn o’mhor autumn oak leaf”. The blurb says they add orange, lemon and sultanas to the tea and blend a “splash” of elderflower before bottling.
I estimate the lowest branches are 25-30 feet up. Loaded with black walnuts. When I collect them from the ground I usually stop at 3 5-gallon buckets.Can you reach them with an extended polesaw? Maybe an air rifle?
Oh my God I want one!!!!
I used only the leaves, and I started it on 6/19/21, only because a neighbor just cut the tree down. It might be different with younger leaves.Did you use just leaves or did you add anything else?
I’m curious as my favourite commercial country wine is “Cairn o’mhor autumn oak leaf”. The blurb says they add orange, lemon and sultanas to the tea and blend a “splash” of elderflower before bottling.
The black walnut and vine wine from cuttings are my two big surprises so far this year. To get something so tasty and complex from such simple ingredients amazes me.I am glad to hear the experiment turned out in a success. I am interested in trying it next year.
Dave, any chance of posting the link to the combo Berry and Belt recipe?Racked the two black walnut wines a couple days ago.
On the left, combo Berry and Belt recipe.
Nothing special about the aroma. The flavor? My first thought was burgundy! It's complex, layers, and delicious. Bone dry down to SG .986 and I would drink it like it is. Pleasantly surprised, something so tasty from 60 black walnut leaves. I will make this again next year.
On the right, Keller's recipe.
It used demerara sugar and honey, neither of which I used before, so this was an experiment.
Smells like either Kahlua or Frangelico...more Frangelico I think. First flavor is molasses followed by honey. It's tasty, I'll probably back sweeten later, but it seems like a molasses wine. Not what I was going for. Wouldn't make it again.
We'll see how they taste in a couple months.
View attachment 92156
The recipes are almost identical except Belt adds raisins.Dave, any chance of posting the link to the combo Berry and Belt recipe?
Thanks
First flavor is molasses. That I think is the main drawback with using Brown sugars in wine!Racked the two black walnut wines a couple days ago.
On the left, combo Berry and Belt recipe.
Nothing special about the aroma. The flavor? My first thought was burgundy! It's complex, layers, and delicious. Bone dry down to SG .986 and I would drink it like it is. Pleasantly surprised, something so tasty from 60 black walnut leaves. I will make this again next year.
On the right, Keller's recipe.
It used demerara sugar and honey, neither of which I used before, so this was an experiment.
Smells like either Kahlua or Frangelico...more Frangelico I think. First flavor is molasses followed by honey. It's tasty, I'll probably back sweeten later, but it seems like a molasses wine. Not what I was going for. Wouldn't make it again.
We'll see how they taste in a couple months.
View attachment 92156
It was a good experience.First flavor is molasses. That I think is the main drawback with using Brown sugars in wine!
You're welcome. I enjoy sharing my "unusual" wines.Thanks for your time Dave. I have at least one of CJJ Berry's books but thought you were referring to a specific recipe -my bad. Additional research on this site indicated that you were combining several recipes.
I have logged your methodology in my notes and will make a test run next spring when the young leaves emerge. We have many black walnut trees on our property and they're still in full leaf now but you and others indicate that the young leaves have more flavor so I'll wait until spring. Thanks for documenting your experiment so well. Hoping mine turns out as well.
Got the old "winemaker's itch" and may have to try a 1 gal run with the old leaves - it'a a long time until spring! Walnuts here in NC are one of the last trees to leaf in spring. One question if you please, which yeast did you use? I'm becoming interested in natural fermentation but don't think I would try it on a first attempt recipe.You're welcome. I enjoy sharing my "unusual" wines.
From my readings you can make a leaf wine any time but they will be very different. Younger leaves are supposed to be better so that's what I'll stick with.
I was tempted to do an oak leaf wine also, even picked out the tree, but collecting a gallon of leaves didn't appeal to me.
Good luck if you do it next year!!
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