user 38734
Senior Member
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2018
- Messages
- 135
- Reaction score
- 323
I was in a local wine making supply house the other day (Paso Robles) and chatting with the crew (imagine that) when Mega Purple was mentioned, and it got me thinking: Why isn’t this product a home-gamer staple instead of the pariah it seems to be (there I said it).
I am quite sure that some Central Coast commercial wines in the $35 range use MP, if for no other reason than because they are buying the product lol.
I could name numerous examples of PN’s, Grenache’s, Sangio’s , etc. where I am very familiar with both the actual fruit and the wine – and the wine color bears no resemblance to the fruit. Just one data point - We opened a gifted bottle of local Sangio a couple weeks ago from a vineyard / winery I am very familiar with. I know the owner. She hosted my youngest’s wedding. I’ve made wine from her grapes ($2,000/ton), delicious and long-since consumed. Their PN’s and Sangio’s are around $35. The wine was INK. A Sangio. We then opened, side by side, a bottle made from premium Pritchard Hill fruit ($18,000/ton) - a mega extraction, 100 point, $300 bomb shell (also gifted as I believe expensive wines pair well with sheep). There was zero color difference. Mega Purple much? This is but one of many examples I could mention.
And for the home gamers using trucked-from-California “lugs”, “must buckets”, “frozen must buckets”, “juice pails”, etc. – consider this: You’re likely getting fruit from the same 8 to 10 tons per acre vineyards that supply the Gallo’s and Constellations of the world. To those boys, grapes are no different than water is to Coke – just a base ingredient from which to massively process and mass produce a perfectly homogenized product, year after year. If you are using these grapes and then comparing your wines to $25 commercial wines (why oh why) – you’ll need all the help you can get.
Speaking of help – glycerin. Let’s be honest – a lot of home made wines are “harsh”, “hot”, insert your own term. We’ve all been there. The easiest way to smooth out young wine is glycerol, and it is widely used commercially. A silky smooth 2019 for $25? Please. Hello glycerin, nice to see you.
The funny part? Both of these products are 100% natural to wine. Mega Purple is……….grapes. Nothing else. Glycerol is a natural, non-toxic byproduct of………..fermentation. I think it was AJ Massa who posted a picture of wine making additives: enzymes, nutrients, powdered tannins, lalozyme, reduless, etc. - I’m probably getting those wrong but the point is – it was quite the chemistry set.
This isn’t an endorsement of these products – I use virtually nothing in mine (the first part of that sentence is a lie). But - If you’re going to all that trouble, which is great, and you want commercial-style, inky, smooth young wine – why not use the two most effective products, both of which are natural to wine?
I am quite sure that some Central Coast commercial wines in the $35 range use MP, if for no other reason than because they are buying the product lol.
I could name numerous examples of PN’s, Grenache’s, Sangio’s , etc. where I am very familiar with both the actual fruit and the wine – and the wine color bears no resemblance to the fruit. Just one data point - We opened a gifted bottle of local Sangio a couple weeks ago from a vineyard / winery I am very familiar with. I know the owner. She hosted my youngest’s wedding. I’ve made wine from her grapes ($2,000/ton), delicious and long-since consumed. Their PN’s and Sangio’s are around $35. The wine was INK. A Sangio. We then opened, side by side, a bottle made from premium Pritchard Hill fruit ($18,000/ton) - a mega extraction, 100 point, $300 bomb shell (also gifted as I believe expensive wines pair well with sheep). There was zero color difference. Mega Purple much? This is but one of many examples I could mention.
And for the home gamers using trucked-from-California “lugs”, “must buckets”, “frozen must buckets”, “juice pails”, etc. – consider this: You’re likely getting fruit from the same 8 to 10 tons per acre vineyards that supply the Gallo’s and Constellations of the world. To those boys, grapes are no different than water is to Coke – just a base ingredient from which to massively process and mass produce a perfectly homogenized product, year after year. If you are using these grapes and then comparing your wines to $25 commercial wines (why oh why) – you’ll need all the help you can get.
Speaking of help – glycerin. Let’s be honest – a lot of home made wines are “harsh”, “hot”, insert your own term. We’ve all been there. The easiest way to smooth out young wine is glycerol, and it is widely used commercially. A silky smooth 2019 for $25? Please. Hello glycerin, nice to see you.
The funny part? Both of these products are 100% natural to wine. Mega Purple is……….grapes. Nothing else. Glycerol is a natural, non-toxic byproduct of………..fermentation. I think it was AJ Massa who posted a picture of wine making additives: enzymes, nutrients, powdered tannins, lalozyme, reduless, etc. - I’m probably getting those wrong but the point is – it was quite the chemistry set.
This isn’t an endorsement of these products – I use virtually nothing in mine (the first part of that sentence is a lie). But - If you’re going to all that trouble, which is great, and you want commercial-style, inky, smooth young wine – why not use the two most effective products, both of which are natural to wine?