I think it’s a great idea for giving the hobby a try. Many will start with kits or juice buckets and work their way up to grapes. But grapes don’t have to be on a pedestal. Can keep it incredibly simple like the old timers used to do (still do) and just refine your process as you progress.
Would only be a couple gallons worth from the vine so no need for fancy equipment. 100lbs of grapes makes about 10gal of crush->6-7gal finished wine. Just Guessing 100 clusters you’ll get a coupke gallons of crush. Can be as involved as you want it to be. Or as simple:
1. crush ‘em
2. Ferment and stir 3x daily
3. 7-10 days later separate off solids into glass vessel and hand squeeze skins
4. Few days later Rack off the sludge into another clean vessel. (Or if 1 jug just rack into a bucket, clean the sediment and go back into it)
5. Let it clear and degas naturally. Just make sure at this point there’s no air space.
6. Bottle hopefully by may and drink next summer
You can literally just mash em up with a 2x4 in a bucket and allow it to ferment from the natural yeast present on the skins. Stir it up a few X a day (“punchdowns”) and about a week later it’ll be dry. Separate the free liquid and you can hand squeeze the skins in a mesh bag or something. Put in properly sized container so there’s no air space and the sediment will fall out to the bottom. “Rack” it off the sediment to a clean jug and then give a few months for the co2 to disipate and let the wine clear. You can bottle and drink once it’s clear and no more co2. The longer you wait the better it gets.
There’s a million things that can be done to improve it along the way but all requires more equipment more research etc. Things like acid testing & adjusting, sugar addition up front to target a preferred abv, commercial yeast, fermentation nutrients, fermentation tannins, oak adjuncts for aging, sulphite management, malolactic fermentation etc etc etc.
wines pretty resilient so between the co2 generated, the wines natural acids, eliminating headspace while aging, and of course the abv— you’ll be plenty protected for an early drinking wine. Any Additional precautions like sulphide or acid management will only help your cause.
* I often read here about 1st timers challenging themselves by trying to learn & do everything all in one shot. But It’s alot of testing, and gear, and $, and info to retain. With none of it is familiar yet.
Cool part about the hobby no 2 winemakers have the same exact process. and short of ruining the wine there’s kinda no ‘wrong way’ —sorta.
IMO That guide to red winemaking-aka
your BIBLE & this forum are worth their weight in gold. I lean on both heavily.