BernardSmith
Senior Member
Saw something on Youtube about cultivating your own yeast and I thought I would give this a try. I have some preservative-free raisins and I added a couple of tablespoons of them to about 500 ml of spring water and let them macerate for about 3 days in my kitchen in a mason jar. Each time I passed the jar I agitated it and after the 3 days I noticed a) the raisins floating and b) bubbles rising in the jar. I strained the liquid and squeezed the raisins into a bottle and fed the contents some sugar (about 2 tablespoons over 48 hours and the yeast was clearly very active. The smell was fine and so I am about to pitch the bottle into a gallon of heather wine must I made this afternoon (1 oz of heather tips boiled in 1 gallon of spring water to which I added 2 lbs of sugar
If this takes off and results a wine that finishes dry at around 11% I will know that I have a strong indigenous yeast. If the wine quits at a significantly lower ABV I will need to do some work to encourage the growth of cells with more robust characteristics and if the wine tastes pleasant I will have an interesting source of indigenous yeast to toy with.
If this takes off and results a wine that finishes dry at around 11% I will know that I have a strong indigenous yeast. If the wine quits at a significantly lower ABV I will need to do some work to encourage the growth of cells with more robust characteristics and if the wine tastes pleasant I will have an interesting source of indigenous yeast to toy with.