Scooter68
Fruit "Wine" Maker
Best results would be with 5-7 lbs of blueberries per gallon. 6 is going to give you a very thin taste. While some might suggest adding pure blueberry juice or concentrated Blueberry juice that brings in the potential for the fermentation to restart. Chalk this up to experience and start another batch. (When you get to drink this batch you can say that this wine is "Light on the palate." I had a peach wine like that first time around.) You might look into something like Skeeter Pee or Dragons Blood for a fast drinker - something ready in a month or two.
When looking at recipes for fruit wines be very careful about those that call for less than 5 pounds of almost any fruit. Other than Elderberry and maybe a wild Black Raspberry 5 Plus pounds per gallon is a starting point. The less water you have to add to get up to your target volume the better. You will find some that will say something like 3 or 4 pounds of a fruit and the also include something like Apple Juice or Apple Juice concentrate, Grape Juice or even raisins. That will certainly work, however, (And this is just my personal prejudice kicking in) when I make a fruit wine like Blueberry or Peach or whatever variety I normally go for a Single fruit wine, no mixing with other fruits unless I am truly looking to make a multi-flavor wine like Pineapple-Mango or Peach-Vanilla. By staying with a single fruit you learn the flavor characteristics of THAT fruit without 'additives' or distractions. You can even blend wines (By the glass) after they are finished and aged to try combinations. That saves you the time and effort of a combination that turns out less that as desired.
Wine making has taught me something that I didn't learn in the first 66 year of life - real patience. The more you have the better the results. If you read enough on here you will find stories about folks who made a batch of wine and hated it, almost pitched it out but instead just shelved it. Two or Three years later the decided to see just how bad it really was and were blown away but the change (for the better) in that 'bad batch' after 2-4 years of aging.
And in case no body else said it "Welcome to the Hobby of Home Wine Making."
When looking at recipes for fruit wines be very careful about those that call for less than 5 pounds of almost any fruit. Other than Elderberry and maybe a wild Black Raspberry 5 Plus pounds per gallon is a starting point. The less water you have to add to get up to your target volume the better. You will find some that will say something like 3 or 4 pounds of a fruit and the also include something like Apple Juice or Apple Juice concentrate, Grape Juice or even raisins. That will certainly work, however, (And this is just my personal prejudice kicking in) when I make a fruit wine like Blueberry or Peach or whatever variety I normally go for a Single fruit wine, no mixing with other fruits unless I am truly looking to make a multi-flavor wine like Pineapple-Mango or Peach-Vanilla. By staying with a single fruit you learn the flavor characteristics of THAT fruit without 'additives' or distractions. You can even blend wines (By the glass) after they are finished and aged to try combinations. That saves you the time and effort of a combination that turns out less that as desired.
Wine making has taught me something that I didn't learn in the first 66 year of life - real patience. The more you have the better the results. If you read enough on here you will find stories about folks who made a batch of wine and hated it, almost pitched it out but instead just shelved it. Two or Three years later the decided to see just how bad it really was and were blown away but the change (for the better) in that 'bad batch' after 2-4 years of aging.
And in case no body else said it "Welcome to the Hobby of Home Wine Making."