Bottling three carboys today:
Left - Rhubarb Strawberry from Mrs. Crushday’s garden, middle - Dragon's Blood and, right - pear wine from the neighbor’s trees.
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Fruit prep: Cored and cut into chunks but not pealed. I froze the chunks until I was ready to use them. I fermented them with a little water and sugar added to get the gravity to a level I wanted. After fermentation was complete, I drained and strained everything. I was expecting to press but honestly the fruit broke down so much it was like apple sauce toward the end. Separating the juice took FOREVER! But, I was patient.I've tried pear before, and it was a disaster. Many people have told me that it makes a great wine, but I'm missing something.
Do you juice with a steam juicer or press or do you ferment on the fruit itself? Do you peal the skin or ferment/juice with the skin on? Do you leave the pear core or do you cut that out?
That's a goo point and if one is supposed to avoid over exposing a wine to O2 then letting hang and drip for even 30 mins seems like a poor idea. I do squeeze the fruit bags and use a stainless steel strainer but I try to work quickly and get it bottled up. Like others do I take that last super cloudy wine from the strainer and chill it for a day or two and that normally aids in getting the majority of the gunk to drop out.cmason1957, i always wondered why many recipes say to let the bag of fruit drip dry and not to squeeze.
i'm calling foul,,, your not gettern that to run thru your pump ,nore into your bottles,We enjoyed grilled shrimp with green chili sauce; corn on the cob (butter, basil); regular broccoli (lemon, butter, capers, garlic); beet salad (red onions, balsamic vinegar); grilled fennel; and a side salad.
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OK, how do you measure the gravity? At the time you have sugars trapped in the pears, so how do you know what your real sugar content is?Fruit prep: Cored and cut into chunks but not pealed. I froze the chunks until I was ready to use them. I fermented them with a little water and sugar added to get the gravity to a level I wanted. After fermentation was complete, I drained and strained everything. I was expecting to press but honestly the fruit broke down so much it was like apple sauce toward the end. Separating the juice took FOREVER! But, I was patient.
i'm calling foul,,, your not gettern that to run thru your pump ,nore into your bottles,
you cant fool me, i've already been fooled,,
Dawg
Add pectic enzyme at least 12 hrs before then push a sieve into the must and allow juice to collect inside the sieve. Dip out the juice into a hydrometer column to measure with a hydrometer.OK, how do you measure the gravity? At the time you have sugars trapped in the pears, so how do you know what your real sugar content is?
Did you ferment the whole fruit? I’m going to start a batch here shortly.I did essentially the same. Froze pears, but just cut them into chunks, didn't worry about coring. LOTSSSSS of pectic enzyme, little water, sugar to get gravity where I wanted (and probably some acid added), tannins. Everything into a large fermenting bag, squeezed gently by hand to remove liquids, but not much gunk. Then more pectic enzyme after fermentation to aid in the clearing.
Did you ferment the whole fruit? I’m going to start a batch here shortly.
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