Scooter68
Fruit "Wine" Maker
Air space during the initial fermentation is fine, helps avoid a foam fountain if the yeast and juice really go wild. Just cover the jug with a cloth and tie a string around to keep out fruit flies and other unwanted things.
Skins should provide tannin and harbor wild yeast which can be great for a truly natural ferment. . I think for a first time effort a packet of wine yeast is a safer and more reliable with to get it started. I would just rinse them well and destem them. The typical dry wine yeast packet is enough for 5 gallons of wine so go easy with it. If you are a bread maker then you know about yeast starters, they really help a wine ferment, in my opinion.
That last thing is something I almost forgot, Wine yeast needs nutrient or it can produce some wicked off smells and gasses so if you are going to order your yeast you might invest in a small bottle of Yeast nutrient and a small amount of Potassium Metabisulfate. (K-Meta powder) That last item can be use to sanitize bottles and equipment as well as to treat the wine juice about 24 to 36 hours before you add the yeast. (Helps get rid or stun wild yeast and kill off unwanted bacteria from the wine. So the K-meta powder is very useful. Also used to treat wine while it's aging but I suspect your wine won't get much age on it before it's consumed.
I've yet to make a wine from grapes, All my wines are fruit based, Blueberry, Blackberry, Black Raspberry, Peach, Black Currant, Apple, and Tart Cherry. Peach is most definitely one of my favorites. If you get the urge to try to do some other wines in small quantity, it's a lot of fun and the smell of an active ferment is almost as intoxicating as the wine itself, or fresh bread. Sourcing fruit can be sort of fun since you only need about 5-7 lbs of most of the fruits mentioned to get a gallon of wine. Local fruit stands seem happy to find someone willing to take their overripe fruits and those are the best one for wine.
Better finish my project for the day - re-securing the fencing/netting around my blueberries - local Racoon thinks he's entitled to raid the patch. He's already broken several branches on one of my most productive bushes.
Skins should provide tannin and harbor wild yeast which can be great for a truly natural ferment. . I think for a first time effort a packet of wine yeast is a safer and more reliable with to get it started. I would just rinse them well and destem them. The typical dry wine yeast packet is enough for 5 gallons of wine so go easy with it. If you are a bread maker then you know about yeast starters, they really help a wine ferment, in my opinion.
That last thing is something I almost forgot, Wine yeast needs nutrient or it can produce some wicked off smells and gasses so if you are going to order your yeast you might invest in a small bottle of Yeast nutrient and a small amount of Potassium Metabisulfate. (K-Meta powder) That last item can be use to sanitize bottles and equipment as well as to treat the wine juice about 24 to 36 hours before you add the yeast. (Helps get rid or stun wild yeast and kill off unwanted bacteria from the wine. So the K-meta powder is very useful. Also used to treat wine while it's aging but I suspect your wine won't get much age on it before it's consumed.
I've yet to make a wine from grapes, All my wines are fruit based, Blueberry, Blackberry, Black Raspberry, Peach, Black Currant, Apple, and Tart Cherry. Peach is most definitely one of my favorites. If you get the urge to try to do some other wines in small quantity, it's a lot of fun and the smell of an active ferment is almost as intoxicating as the wine itself, or fresh bread. Sourcing fruit can be sort of fun since you only need about 5-7 lbs of most of the fruits mentioned to get a gallon of wine. Local fruit stands seem happy to find someone willing to take their overripe fruits and those are the best one for wine.
Better finish my project for the day - re-securing the fencing/netting around my blueberries - local Racoon thinks he's entitled to raid the patch. He's already broken several branches on one of my most productive bushes.