Thanks for the kind replies, I like them all! I'll go down some of the comments start to finish. I did notice that the wine was better when I bottled it and it seems to have gotten slightly worse, so now I think I am seeing that bottle shock concept. . . . really may need to wait. For the first wine, I stirred the heck out of it with the drill mounted paddle, trying not to introduce too much oxygen. Then a few weeks later, I received the "gas getter". I mounted it to my air compressor and was able to get tons more gas out of the wine. As the very nice man who sells it suggested, I compared it at that point. The wine went from almost undrinkable, to drinkable in 30 minutes of degassing with it. I spoke with him after that and really thought I was on to something "instant gratification" wise. Now after bottling, it seems to be poorer. Some qualities are thin, missing of additives (even though the kit contained oak, commercial wines sometimes smack you with vanilla, oak etc. flavors almost like they added something to it, that its not really there in these kits), bubble gum or something fake tasting. Next, I wanted to make a grape skins kit. Was looking at Winexpert Petit Verdot with Grape Skins because the manufacturer rep on a forum said it was drinkable almost immediately. Some of the comments here make it sound like the grape skins kits will need to age even longer before drinking? Manimals comments are fine, in fact, almost exactly what I was wondering, if it isn't decent at bottling, will it really get that much better with age? But, do I really know what decent is at this point. I'd like to meet up with someone in the Detroit area so we could share some of our kit wines and I could perhaps understand things better/quicker. I don't know too many vitals as Rocky was asking. I wrote down the specific gravity was 0.994 on 11/18/11 after secondary fermentation step measurement per instructions. I must say the wine is beautiful looking and very clear, but perhaps a bit thin. I topped this batch off with water as the kit instructed, but the South African Pinotage was topped off with a similar wine. I did this because I noticed the thin taste. My wife isn't fond of it yet, although she did say after drinking it for a few minutes she got used to it. My father in law said that the alcohol content seemed to be low and he thought if commercial wines were around 12.5 %, then this was about 8%, but what does he know and I took no measurements other that what the kit told me and they all were spot on with the instructions. I've got quite a few bottles left, so I'm going to let them age into Aril (try some then) and then age into June (try one again) and I'll see for myself how much it changes. Assuming it still doesn't get that great at 6 months, I'll wait until year or more at that point. I'm still debating whether I should start another kit or just use the $150 to buy tons of bottles of wine at Trader Joes or another large variety cheap wine shop. Knowing me, I'll probably do both and the bottles from trader joes can be used for my wine. Thanks for the comments so far. If anyone is in Detroit area, I'm on the East Side, let me know or send me a private comment. Thanks again!
Dave