cooltouch
Junior
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2012
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Okay, I've never made wine before, but I've d/l'd a few simple recipes from the Internet that I feel are good enough to get me started. Once I've got a few bottles under my belt, I'll be more interested in fine-tuning things.
So anyway, what got me started thinking about making wine most recently is the fact that I'd wasted about 10 bucks on a selection of fruit I bought at the local Super Grocery. I bought a couple of pounds of black grapes, a couple of pounds of plums and a couple of pounds of apples. One thing they all had in common was being rather bland, and the grapes skin was so harsh and bitter tasting that, even when I'd find a tasty one, I'd gotten so I couldn't stand the flavor of the skin anymore.
So it occurred to me that, rather than dump out this pile of fruit, why not crush it and make wine from it? Add sugar to it as necessary for flavor and something for the yeast to grow with. Now, I wouldn't doubt that there are purists among you who are horrified at the thought of mixing fruit together in a hodge-podge like this, but hey, I'm willing to give it a shot. What's the worst that could happen? I waste a few more bucks on some yeast and sugar?
Anyway, here's the question: what do you guys use to crush your fruit? And what sort of containers do you crush them in? I'm not quite willing to go scrub my feet and dance in my fruit just yet. I'm hoping I can find another, more appealing method.
I'm thinking my skinny little potato masher probably isn't up for the job. I have a blender and a Cuisinart, but I don't want to blend the stuff, I just want to crush it. And I don't own a juicer, either. I do have a large Kitchen Aid miker -- the heavy-duty one that you crank the bowl up and down with. Kitchen Aid actually makes a fruit and vegetable strainer for the mixer, but man-o-man, for the price they want for it, I could buy enough wine to keep me blotto'd for too long to think about. I was wondering if maybe the dough hook or the beater attachment might work, though. Probably not all that well.
I guess if all else fails, I could use the Cuisinart, liquify the fruit, then strain it through some muslin cloth or similar. That will work for the plums and apples, I suppose, but not the grapes. Too much of a chance of the skin flavor contaminating the juices. So I'll still need a crusher for them.
So, any ideas, suggestions, recommendations? Preferably something that doesn't involve spending more money?
So anyway, what got me started thinking about making wine most recently is the fact that I'd wasted about 10 bucks on a selection of fruit I bought at the local Super Grocery. I bought a couple of pounds of black grapes, a couple of pounds of plums and a couple of pounds of apples. One thing they all had in common was being rather bland, and the grapes skin was so harsh and bitter tasting that, even when I'd find a tasty one, I'd gotten so I couldn't stand the flavor of the skin anymore.
So it occurred to me that, rather than dump out this pile of fruit, why not crush it and make wine from it? Add sugar to it as necessary for flavor and something for the yeast to grow with. Now, I wouldn't doubt that there are purists among you who are horrified at the thought of mixing fruit together in a hodge-podge like this, but hey, I'm willing to give it a shot. What's the worst that could happen? I waste a few more bucks on some yeast and sugar?
Anyway, here's the question: what do you guys use to crush your fruit? And what sort of containers do you crush them in? I'm not quite willing to go scrub my feet and dance in my fruit just yet. I'm hoping I can find another, more appealing method.
I'm thinking my skinny little potato masher probably isn't up for the job. I have a blender and a Cuisinart, but I don't want to blend the stuff, I just want to crush it. And I don't own a juicer, either. I do have a large Kitchen Aid miker -- the heavy-duty one that you crank the bowl up and down with. Kitchen Aid actually makes a fruit and vegetable strainer for the mixer, but man-o-man, for the price they want for it, I could buy enough wine to keep me blotto'd for too long to think about. I was wondering if maybe the dough hook or the beater attachment might work, though. Probably not all that well.
I guess if all else fails, I could use the Cuisinart, liquify the fruit, then strain it through some muslin cloth or similar. That will work for the plums and apples, I suppose, but not the grapes. Too much of a chance of the skin flavor contaminating the juices. So I'll still need a crusher for them.
So, any ideas, suggestions, recommendations? Preferably something that doesn't involve spending more money?