TasunkaWitko
Junior Member
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2016
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From the beautiful Flathead Valley in Montana, not far from Glacier National Park, comes a wonderful local specialty: flathead cherries.
It seems that the entire state waits impatiently for mid-summer, when the sweet, heavenly cherries are picked and distributed far and wide.
At a local grocery today, I encountered these wonderful orbs of love for the first time this year. I instantly snatched up a bunch of them - ignoring the fiscal protests of The Beautiful and Ever-Practical Mrs. Tas - and immediately sought out a recipe when I got home.
I bought abut 6 pounds total, and the recipes that I found seem to average at 4 pounds; this will leave a few extra, possibly for canning or some other project. Here is the recipe that I am going to try, unless someone has a better idea:
The yeast that I have is Montrachet, so we'll see how it works.
As I said above, I'm very open to suggestion here; this recipe closely resembles my other attempts at wine-making (chokecherry and rhubarb), but there are a few differences.
A few questions:
Does 4 pounds of cherries seem like a good amount?
Would the 4 pounds of cherries be measured before or after pitting?
When making the two previous wines mentioned above, I added some golden raisins for "body." should I do that with this recipe, as well?
Suggestions, comments and feedback are always welcome.
Thanks for checking this out. More as it happens, etc. &c....
Ron
It seems that the entire state waits impatiently for mid-summer, when the sweet, heavenly cherries are picked and distributed far and wide.
At a local grocery today, I encountered these wonderful orbs of love for the first time this year. I instantly snatched up a bunch of them - ignoring the fiscal protests of The Beautiful and Ever-Practical Mrs. Tas - and immediately sought out a recipe when I got home.
I bought abut 6 pounds total, and the recipes that I found seem to average at 4 pounds; this will leave a few extra, possibly for canning or some other project. Here is the recipe that I am going to try, unless someone has a better idea:
Cherry Wine
4 pounds cherries
7 pints water
2.25 pounds sugar
1 teaspoon acid blend
1/2 teaspoon pectic enzyme
1 teaspoon yeast nutrient
1 crushed campden tablet
1 package of wine yeast
Starting S.G. - 1.090
Wash, remove stems and leaves, and preferably remove pits (use a pitter, either mechanical or a couple of extra hands from around the house). In any case, be careful not to break the bitter pits.
Using a nylon straining bag mash and squeeze out juice into primary fermenter. keeping all pulp in straining bag, tie top and place in primary.
Stir in all other ingredients except yeast. Cover primary.
After 24 hours, add yeast.
Stir daily, check S.G. and press pulp lightly to aid extraction.
When ferment reaches S.G. 1.030 (about 5 days) strain juice from bag. Siphon wine off sediment into glass jug (secondary). Attach airlock.
When ferment is complete (S.G. has dropped to 1.000 - about 3 weeks) siphon off sediment into a clean secondary. Re-attach airlock.
To aid clearing siphon again in 2 months and again if necessary before bottling.
The yeast that I have is Montrachet, so we'll see how it works.
As I said above, I'm very open to suggestion here; this recipe closely resembles my other attempts at wine-making (chokecherry and rhubarb), but there are a few differences.
A few questions:
Does 4 pounds of cherries seem like a good amount?
Would the 4 pounds of cherries be measured before or after pitting?
When making the two previous wines mentioned above, I added some golden raisins for "body." should I do that with this recipe, as well?
Suggestions, comments and feedback are always welcome.
Thanks for checking this out. More as it happens, etc. &c....
Ron