Hello, I just joined yesterday after looking at posts for a couple of weeks. I have been mainly brewing since 2006 and currently make mostly lagers and IPAs, although my most recent batch was a sour saison. Mainly do 5 gallon temperature controlled (chill and heat) batches. My cousin started making wine and I was impressed with how they came out, and in listening to his process, I figured it was just a bit different than what I was used to.
Did my first kit batch a few months ago and bottled a couple of weeks ago. Master Vintner South Africa Sauvignon Blanc. Only difference with the kit instructions was that my ferment was very slow, about 4 weeks in primary. It was steady, but very slow. I reconstituted with distilled water, omitted the oak, let it sit and clear for an extra month and a half or so, and I filtered it with Buon Vino #2. I am really pleased with how it came out and I'll be starting another batch this weekend of an Italian Pino Grigio. I'm going to swap yeasts to two packs of KV-11116, and ferment around 60F. I have Spike Flex+ fermenters on glycol for beer, so I plan on using that for primary, and a steel brew bucket for secondary. Also use a tilt for remote gravity readings to limit o2 exposure. I'm also trying to be patient with the steps and not rush things. I am really happy with how much less time it takes to do a wine batch versus beer.
Does anyone here serve wine out of corny kegs? Does co2 absorption ruin it? Would it work for a sparkling wine? My wine batch was the first time I bottled anything outside a contest in more than 15 years, but at least it's only a couple of dozen.
When I do lagers, I usually start cool to avoid the production of undesirable yeast compounds and then let it rise to about 68F to clean up any byproducts. Do winemakers do something similar?
I read about sacrificial oak. I omitted the oak because I prefer unoaked whites as does my wife. Am I missing something? She is very sensitive to tasting oak in a wine, so I'd like to not get a bad review!
I like more acidic and floral whites, so soon I'll be learning about adjusting that beyond what the kits say. Does anyone dose acid into a finished wine to experiment?
Finally, any good home wine making podcasts that focuses on the technical side of winemaking?
Thanks for welcoming me!
Joe
Did my first kit batch a few months ago and bottled a couple of weeks ago. Master Vintner South Africa Sauvignon Blanc. Only difference with the kit instructions was that my ferment was very slow, about 4 weeks in primary. It was steady, but very slow. I reconstituted with distilled water, omitted the oak, let it sit and clear for an extra month and a half or so, and I filtered it with Buon Vino #2. I am really pleased with how it came out and I'll be starting another batch this weekend of an Italian Pino Grigio. I'm going to swap yeasts to two packs of KV-11116, and ferment around 60F. I have Spike Flex+ fermenters on glycol for beer, so I plan on using that for primary, and a steel brew bucket for secondary. Also use a tilt for remote gravity readings to limit o2 exposure. I'm also trying to be patient with the steps and not rush things. I am really happy with how much less time it takes to do a wine batch versus beer.
Does anyone here serve wine out of corny kegs? Does co2 absorption ruin it? Would it work for a sparkling wine? My wine batch was the first time I bottled anything outside a contest in more than 15 years, but at least it's only a couple of dozen.
When I do lagers, I usually start cool to avoid the production of undesirable yeast compounds and then let it rise to about 68F to clean up any byproducts. Do winemakers do something similar?
I read about sacrificial oak. I omitted the oak because I prefer unoaked whites as does my wife. Am I missing something? She is very sensitive to tasting oak in a wine, so I'd like to not get a bad review!
I like more acidic and floral whites, so soon I'll be learning about adjusting that beyond what the kits say. Does anyone dose acid into a finished wine to experiment?
Finally, any good home wine making podcasts that focuses on the technical side of winemaking?
Thanks for welcoming me!
Joe