I moved into the current house about 13 years ago and planted a "Thomson Seedless" grapevine. It isn't a Thompson grape, nor is it seedless...however it is a thickskinned, seeded, white grape. It's REALLY grape, and really tart flavored. Pressed juice is clear-green, but in the bucket it's golden colored. I made grape jelly out of it one year and it looked like honey in the jars.
I picked enough grapes to produce 2.5 gallons of grape juice, once crushed and squeezed out. Poured into a clean new HDPE (same stuff milk jugs are made from) 5-gallon bucket, added 1/4tsp of potassium metabisulfite and added 1.25 gallon of water and 4lbs 2.5oz of sugar. This reigned in the extreme tartness and it actually tasted like good, somewhat tart, grape juice the next night. Specific Gravity was 1.095 at 73F.
24 hours after the potassium metabisulfite, I added 1 5-gram packet of Red Star Premier Cuvee wine yeast and a half a ripe banana (it works for starting bread yeast, figured it'd work ok here too.)
That was 48 ago, and the fermentation is in full swing in my bucket; with a clean cotton towel covering it. Tonight, the Specific gravity is 1.085 at 70F.
I have 8 64oz beer growlers that I can rack into when it's time to put it under airlock, unfortunately I do not yet have a carboy, nor have I found any 1 gallon glass jugs locally.
My brother-in-law is a beer brewer in the wintertime...I'm just a 25 year old gearhead with a grapevine and an obnoxious pear tree that delivers 10-15 bushels of pears every year. Winemaking seemed like a good way to do something with all the fruit.
So when do I need to get my wine under airlock? I have read of people doing it at 0.995, 1.030, starting under airlock, starting under cloth, ect. Is there a general rule for when the conversion from aerobic to anerobic fermentation should occur?
I picked enough grapes to produce 2.5 gallons of grape juice, once crushed and squeezed out. Poured into a clean new HDPE (same stuff milk jugs are made from) 5-gallon bucket, added 1/4tsp of potassium metabisulfite and added 1.25 gallon of water and 4lbs 2.5oz of sugar. This reigned in the extreme tartness and it actually tasted like good, somewhat tart, grape juice the next night. Specific Gravity was 1.095 at 73F.
24 hours after the potassium metabisulfite, I added 1 5-gram packet of Red Star Premier Cuvee wine yeast and a half a ripe banana (it works for starting bread yeast, figured it'd work ok here too.)
That was 48 ago, and the fermentation is in full swing in my bucket; with a clean cotton towel covering it. Tonight, the Specific gravity is 1.085 at 70F.
I have 8 64oz beer growlers that I can rack into when it's time to put it under airlock, unfortunately I do not yet have a carboy, nor have I found any 1 gallon glass jugs locally.
My brother-in-law is a beer brewer in the wintertime...I'm just a 25 year old gearhead with a grapevine and an obnoxious pear tree that delivers 10-15 bushels of pears every year. Winemaking seemed like a good way to do something with all the fruit.
So when do I need to get my wine under airlock? I have read of people doing it at 0.995, 1.030, starting under airlock, starting under cloth, ect. Is there a general rule for when the conversion from aerobic to anerobic fermentation should occur?
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