Here's a choke cherry recipe for example.
2.5 lbs choke cherries
1/2 pint grape concentrate or 1 lb raisins
7 pints water
2 1/2 lb sugar
1/2 tsp acid blend
1/2 tsp pectic enzyme
1 tsp nutrient
1 campden
yeast.
You could start with a gallon of Gramma's Choke Cherry.
The raisins are added to compensate for the lack of body of choke cherries compared to grapes. Just to make the wine feel more substantial.
Water to get your 1 gallon total volume. Not needed if you choose to use straight juice. This is where you need to have a general goal and experiment. More juice will make a stronger base for your wine. Do you like a little flavour, or a lot? Taste your must. 1 member here will make a pie with the flavour ideas he has to see if he likes the mix, then use that for a wine base.
Sugar to reach desired ABV. This recipe calls for 1.090-1.095 which is a potential alcohol of 12-12.5% ABV, but will likely yield more like 13+% because of the immeasurable sugars added in the raisins. You will need to measure your base gravity and calculate required sugar volume, or add in smaller amounts and take readings.
Acid blend is just to adjust the acidity to blend out the wine. You could use a lemon and include the rind instead to impart different flavors.
Pectic enzymes helps break down the fruit pulp and extract tannin. Different fruit recipes might require you add it.
nutrient will ensure a healthy ferment
Campden will sterilize the must so the yeast you add is the one driving the fermentation.
This is just an example, and a breakdown of why you are adding the specific ingredients. You can pick a single recipe, blend 2 or 3 depending on what you want to make. For example, one calls for citric acid, the other lemon. One has oranges or another flavour you would like to add.
You can make it as simple or fun as you want. Follow a recipe and ignore all outside factors. Or make whatever you want based on what you have, blend flavours, mix ingredients. Wine making is base on the personality of the winemaker. You decide the risk vs creativity, as well as just what you want to make. You might look at this explanation and a recipe and know exactly how you want to play with it. You might also want to stay as close to the original as possible. That's where you have to run with it.
Anyone want to verify my last 2 posts, here.
@winemaker81? This is a lot to share for my experience. Anything to add or correct me on? I don't want to lead anyone astray!