I started this journey when I stumbled onto a video that promised an easy recipe for a wine from store bought juice that would be drinkable in two weeks. Wow, that beat the heck out of the three months I was waiting to drink my homebrew beer. So, I ran out and purchased one jug of Ocean Spray Cranberry juice and one of Cran-Rasberry, and some yeast from Amazon. I blended the juice about 3:1 to make a gallon, pitched the yeast and "set the timer" for two weeks. Then set out to edumacate myself a little. In nine months or so, I'll know if it worked. Two weeks- yeah, right.
Now three months later, with help from this group, I have that gallon batch plus two more bulk aging. The second is from Ocean Spray Cran-Pomegranate. The third is a Welch's White Grape and Cherry from a Jack Keller recipe. If I was still in college, I'd go ahead and drink them now. But, alas, I can wait. I bet my story is not that unique.
I am about to start yet another one gallon batch made from Coloma Merlot Concentrate. I intend to oak age using French toasted oak. Being new to this, I am looking for quidance in regards to how much oak, when to add it, and how long to expose the wine to it. I'm sure it's a matter of taste - but I need a starting point.
Secondly, I am running out of vessels. Can/should I do the primary fermentation of this one gallon batch in a two gallon fermentation bucket with an air lock? Then rack into a glass carboy. By the second racking, I should have a free carboy again. I guess I'm worried about the headspace in the bucket.
Sorry for the long winded build up to my questions. I appreciate any thoughts.
Now three months later, with help from this group, I have that gallon batch plus two more bulk aging. The second is from Ocean Spray Cran-Pomegranate. The third is a Welch's White Grape and Cherry from a Jack Keller recipe. If I was still in college, I'd go ahead and drink them now. But, alas, I can wait. I bet my story is not that unique.
I am about to start yet another one gallon batch made from Coloma Merlot Concentrate. I intend to oak age using French toasted oak. Being new to this, I am looking for quidance in regards to how much oak, when to add it, and how long to expose the wine to it. I'm sure it's a matter of taste - but I need a starting point.
Secondly, I am running out of vessels. Can/should I do the primary fermentation of this one gallon batch in a two gallon fermentation bucket with an air lock? Then rack into a glass carboy. By the second racking, I should have a free carboy again. I guess I'm worried about the headspace in the bucket.
Sorry for the long winded build up to my questions. I appreciate any thoughts.