The usual tweaks for me: Yeast swap, adding oak, tannin on the front and/or back end, and an EM. As with any dry wine, skip the sorbate. I like to skip the clarifiers and let it age in bulk for 6-12 months.
I've seen a lot of people skipping clarifiers. Do you notice a tangible difference in taste or is there another reason for it?The usual tweaks for me: Yeast swap, adding oak, tannin on the front and/or back end, and an EM. As with any dry wine, skip the sorbate. I like to skip the clarifiers and let it age in bulk for 6-12 months.
There is a thought that the clarifiers strip some of the body / color from the wine. I don't know if it is noticeable but if bulk aging for 12 month they are not needed.I've seen a lot of people skipping clarifiers. Do you notice a tangible difference in taste or is there another reason for it?
Tell me why you could not use the EC1112 along with a good one like RC 212 together in the expensive kits. That way you would be assured of complete fermentation and the good effects of the other yeast.
Tell me why you could not use the EC1112 along with a good one like RC 212 together in the expensive kits. That way you would be assured of complete fermentation and the good effects of the other yeast.
On some of my other kits, I've started with a more suitable yeast and when it looked like fermentation might have stopped at the wrong SG, I added 1118.Tell me why you could not use the EC1112 along with a good one like RC 212 together in the expensive kits. That way you would be assured of complete fermentation and the good effects of the other yeast.
Johnd,
Is there anything I can add in place of pressed skins? This is my first premium kit so it will be my first set of skins.
I'm assuming you're early in the winemaking addiction since this is your first premium kit, and it's good that you wan to make great wine, we all do. When you're ready, go to wine from grapes, you can make better wine if you can get good grapes and don't make any major mistakes. It's also a lot easier to jack up a batch and have nothing to show for it, so learn the process and read a lot.
From great grapes you can make great wine, mediocre wine, or terrible wine. From mediocre grapes you can make mediocre wine or terrible wine. Don't buy terrible grapes.
Kits are cool, they take all of the grape finding / sugar and acid adjusting challenges out of the equation, and you can make nice stuff that'll amaze and astound your family and friends (unless they're wine snobs) with relative ease, and it's repeatable, have fun!
Yeah I got started from a kit I got for Christmas and I love it.
Honestly, I want to move into frozen must or purchasing whole grapes within the next couple years but I'm afraid that the learning curve is too high for the cost, especially right now. Will kits and tweaking them help me go to that next level?
I like kits because the cheap ones have been predictable and pretty damn good so far. But I already know there's so much more.
Sure, the premiums are better kits over time, and doing kits will move both your knowledge and confidence up the curve. You could do frozen buckets pretty easily with little to no additional expense, other than the raw materials.
Frozen must is already crushed and destemmed, and bought from the right supplier, you can get the pH, TA, and YAN from them, selecting a good must with balance and making no adjustments. Press using the “butt bucket method” and you’re in pretty good shape. My first foray was similar. Once you’re firmly addicted, you can get all the toys.
How addicted is firmly addicted? I've got 4 carboys. Is 10 the magic number?
That means I have to buy one a month until the end of the year... Challenge accepted.At least 12, so you can bulk age at least a year, and bottle one per month.
Butt bucket press = one bucket with spigot + another with holes drilled in the bottom and sides nested inside + another plain bucket nested inside the second. Grape skins for pressing go into the holy bucket, plain bucket on top of the skins, sit your butt on the top bucket. Wine forced through the holes into the bottom bucket, out the spigot and into your catching container.
When you’re firmly addicted, you’ll know.
Excellent, action photos!!!!!!
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