No, I didn’t make the apricot wine yet.Did you ever make the apricot wine?
I pitted the fruit and froze till I had time and to break up the cell structure, the pectin in apricot is a mess so I did not blend or otherwise mush it up. Pectin enzyme helps, I did 3x recommended pectase. , , I grew my fruit (16 pounds) so used 1 to 1 but the recipe above from Steven 1 fruit to 3 water would be similar to my final batch. The primary ferment was strained by scooping into a nylon bag and pressing. To create extra liquid I “washed” the pulp with a gallon of water added to the carboy (5 gallon) and “washed” a second time using enough of this to top off the carboy. Ran my ferment in a 50F fridge to help keep flavors.Can you explain the crushing process please. After I take out the pits would it be ready to put the 9 lbs of apricot in the straining bag. I'm hoping to use ripe apricots. Would it be necessary to use some water to liquefy apricots or pass them through the blender for a short time before putting them in the straining bag. I don't want to use water.
I pitted the fruit and froze till I had time and to break up the cell structure, the pectin in apricot is a mess so I did not blend or otherwise mush it up. Pectin enzyme helps, I did 3x recommended pectase. , , I grew my fruit (16 pounds) so used 1 to 1 but the recipe above from Steven 1 fruit to 3 water would be similar to my final batch. The primary ferment was strained by scooping into a nylon bag and pressing. To create extra liquid I “washed” the pulp with a gallon of water added to the carboy (5 gallon) and “washed” a second time using enough of this to top off the carboy. Ran my ferment in a 50F fridge to help keep flavors.
At 1 year was still cloudy, bottled anyway. Turned out well since friends get the clear top of the bottle and I finish the bottom where the pectin is.
Note. . Apricot will continue to ripen and soften after picked if at room temp, are they still fresh?
Dry enzyme has a good shelf life, cool enzyme has a good shelf life. Heat and moisture reduce shelf life (usually means drying in factory production)My pectic enzyme in the fridge is very old which I don't know if it'll work.
I have 2 liquid pectic enzymes (blue in color). They smell nice. The carboy size is 2.11 gallon (8 liter).Dry enzyme has a good shelf life, cool enzyme has a good shelf life. Heat and moisture reduce shelf life (usually means drying in factory production)
The first time I said “oh sugar” about clearing pectin haze was with a plum and I added the extra 2 doses at third racking. ie you can add more if you aren’t happy how fast it cleared.
Looking at post #1 your goal is 7 liters. My yield with stone fruits is normal, , , based on carboy size 3 gallon batch? ? (11.4 liter) , , , it just takes forever to clear well enough to do a blue ribbon in a contest.
* liquid enzymes are put together with a protein stabilizer (usually bovine serum albumen). The liquid enzymes I have used, lost 5 to 10 percent of activity per year at refrigerator temperature. I would use it up and add extra for the normal loss.I have 2 liquid pectic enzymes (blue in color). They smell nice. The carboy size is 2.11 gallon (8 liter).
* am always looking for wierd size carboys when racking, where did you find 8 liters?
I would target 8.75 kg of fruit/ water in the primary and 8 liters in the water bottle once you do the air lock
* 4 kg apricot, (guess this is .48 kg natural sugar and 2 liters of liquid)
* For estimating the batch I used 8.75 kg of fruit, water,and sugar. The density is higher than 1.0 specific gravity therefore you will wind up with close to 8 liters volume. , , , , Practically speaking I don’t add all the water at the beginning. I guess what the sugar target is based on actual fruit measurements and top off the carboy with water. Last year I did two batches where I estimated lees loss on first racking plus second racking and formulated for high alcohol on the first racking which let me always top off the carboy with water, , , trying to make the process easier.You say 8.75 kg of fruit will make 8 liters in the bottle. But why 4 kg of apricots will make less liters?
The over all answer is it works and tastes good.I thank you all for the very helpful information. I used ripe 4 kg apricot, 2 litters of water and added white sugar until the SG increases to 1.070. I pitted the fruit and froze them for a while. I followed the steps as close as I could , I tried as hard as to get the liquid out of the fruit, I filled up the 8 litter glass carboy. I made my yeast starter. On the second day of the primary fermentation the SG dropped to 1.030, and I increased it up to 1.050 once again. I had a super strong fermentation and it continues in this way after I increased the SG. Is it ok if I interfere the fermentation with adding sugar?
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