BernardSmith
Senior Member
Just because I could and I wanted to I started a gallon of wine from table grapes I purchased from my local supermarket. I had found about 4 recipes from a book published at the turn of the 20th Century written by a home wine maker of country wines and the author, Peggy Hutchinson, suggested that the table grapes she used made very drinkable wines
Bought about 8 lbs of grapes and crushed each one by hand, added about 2 lbs of sugar , some tannin and some tartaric acid and after 3 days macerating and no apparent action by indigenous yeast I felt forced to add some yeast (Premiere Classique). The wine has been sitting on the skins for 2 weeks and the only color I was able to extract is a rose'.
Just pressed (by hand), after blending the fruit a few days ago (no seeds) to extract all the juice I could. Have racked the "wine" into a carboy and it is still bubbling away with gravity today is 1.025 (after two weeks) but the flavor is not so much awful as flavorless. Not surprising but still very disappointing.
What I may do is blend this "wine" with some mead and make a pyment but what I wanted to do was to see what kind of wine my great grandparents occasionally made in their tenement in Glasgow. If the table grapes we have here in upstate NY are anything like the table grapes they were able to buy in Scotland I gotta say their wine could not have been all that wonderful.
Bought about 8 lbs of grapes and crushed each one by hand, added about 2 lbs of sugar , some tannin and some tartaric acid and after 3 days macerating and no apparent action by indigenous yeast I felt forced to add some yeast (Premiere Classique). The wine has been sitting on the skins for 2 weeks and the only color I was able to extract is a rose'.
Just pressed (by hand), after blending the fruit a few days ago (no seeds) to extract all the juice I could. Have racked the "wine" into a carboy and it is still bubbling away with gravity today is 1.025 (after two weeks) but the flavor is not so much awful as flavorless. Not surprising but still very disappointing.
What I may do is blend this "wine" with some mead and make a pyment but what I wanted to do was to see what kind of wine my great grandparents occasionally made in their tenement in Glasgow. If the table grapes we have here in upstate NY are anything like the table grapes they were able to buy in Scotland I gotta say their wine could not have been all that wonderful.