Very new to winemaking, about to start my third batch. First was great for cooking but not to drink. Second batch came out very sweet, very dark and noticeably thick on the tongue, smells unpleasant but tastes great (it's aged 2 years now).
I'm using mustang and muscadine grapes collected from along a country road. I try and make sense of the technicals, but only get further lost in the attempt.
My process is, pick the grapes from the stems. Smash with potato masher and put in a plastic bucket, add boiling water to about 2 inches above the mashed grapes. Cover ad leave untouched for a week. After that, skim off the top, carefully, then pour the rest thru a cloth, squeezing all the juice I can from the fruits. Add 3 pounds sugar for each gallon of liquid, cover with cloth and stir once a day till bubbles stop. Bottle, and crack the tops at least twice a day till there's a few days with no more pressure building up. Rack when I think about it. (This all happens in central Texas, no ac, so temps between 78° and 105°)
I am going to use dark brown sugar this year, right now I have the grapes ready to mash, will do that in the morning. Any advice on what I can do to make it smell better? Both in this new batch, and possibly in the last one I made? And also, using brown sugar, can I simply swap it out in my recipe, or would I need to adjust the quantity?