e-wine
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At the start of 4th, my wife and I picked about twenty pounds of mustang grapes. We had planned to use the grapes for the madeira but twenty pounds seemed a bit light given that we would only use the inside of the grape, no skins. This would have kept the madeira as a "white" and would have kept the "wild" flavor Jack Keller describes for a red mustang wine from overpowering the fig and banana. So we are now using the mustang grapes to make a sweet red wine with the recipe given on Keller's web site. If you ask my wife, Jack's assessment of the acid content is spot on. Both of us noticed some burning between our fingers from handling and de-stemming the grapes although she was bothered to a much greater degree than I was. We completed everything and had the pectic enzyme and yeast nutrient ready by 10:00 last night. We added yeast this morning and are waiting for signs of fermentation. We used a started for the yeast which is the first time we've done this.
Some interesting points of this "adventure" were:
The mustang grape vine was very heavily loaded and would have been a gift had it not been for two things. First, this "volunteer" vine sprouted up in the middle of a friend's cactus garden. This limited where we could step but, realistically, cactus is predictable and you can work around them to some degree. Also sharing space in this cactus garden were two rather large wasp nest. My wife "found" the first one when she dropped a cane clipping into her bucket. The wasp nest was on the underside of a leaf on that cane and the former occupants were furiously combing the airspace around us. Break time. We never actually saw the other nest but we knew the relative location based on the nest emptying several times when we moved the wrong cane.
After we finished picking the grapes, de-stemming, cleaning and were waiting for the mixture to cool, I mentioned to Barb that the wine would not be ready for a least a year, preferably two. Barb could not believe it. She was use to the sweet potato wine which she will drink even before it finishes clearing. "You mean I did all this for 10 bottles of wine that I will not know if it is any good until two years from now? Now you know why I prefer to just buy the wine!" Now I'm still waiting for Barb to cool. I guess I had better start a batch of sweet potato wine soon.
Basic recipe:
10 pound of Mustang grapes
2 pounds sugar
1/2 gallon of water
1 tsp Pectic enzyme
1 tsp yeast nutrient
Monstrachet yeast
We have two batches going using this same recipe.
e-wine
Some interesting points of this "adventure" were:
The mustang grape vine was very heavily loaded and would have been a gift had it not been for two things. First, this "volunteer" vine sprouted up in the middle of a friend's cactus garden. This limited where we could step but, realistically, cactus is predictable and you can work around them to some degree. Also sharing space in this cactus garden were two rather large wasp nest. My wife "found" the first one when she dropped a cane clipping into her bucket. The wasp nest was on the underside of a leaf on that cane and the former occupants were furiously combing the airspace around us. Break time. We never actually saw the other nest but we knew the relative location based on the nest emptying several times when we moved the wrong cane.
After we finished picking the grapes, de-stemming, cleaning and were waiting for the mixture to cool, I mentioned to Barb that the wine would not be ready for a least a year, preferably two. Barb could not believe it. She was use to the sweet potato wine which she will drink even before it finishes clearing. "You mean I did all this for 10 bottles of wine that I will not know if it is any good until two years from now? Now you know why I prefer to just buy the wine!" Now I'm still waiting for Barb to cool. I guess I had better start a batch of sweet potato wine soon.
Basic recipe:
10 pound of Mustang grapes
2 pounds sugar
1/2 gallon of water
1 tsp Pectic enzyme
1 tsp yeast nutrient
Monstrachet yeast
We have two batches going using this same recipe.
e-wine
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