bkisel
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- Jun 29, 2013
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For the 3+ years I've been making wine I've been doing every process up to bulk aging in my kitchen/dining area. I'll rack for bulk aging and carry the carboy down to thew basement for bulk aging, bottling and bottle aging. This has been true both at my old home in CT and now my new home in PA.
Several negatives I can think of doing it as I am is that... I take up a corner of the kitchen, maybe every other month or more, for several weeks. Visitors get to see the clutter of the "sausage" being made. I risk some spillage and splashing of wine in a living area of the home. A big risk comes when a full carboy is carried from the kitchen down the stairs into the basement. [I'm in my 72nd year and in good shape but still don't take pleasure in the task.]
The negatives of not doing the fermentation, etc. in the basement is not having ready access to a sink and drain and more temperature control issues. My basement's ambient temperature runs up to about 66F in the summer and it has been as low as 58F in the winter. The kitchen/dinning area run about 10F warmer.
I do have a brew belt and an accurate long probe thermometer; a good temperature for primary fermentation can be monitored and maintained in the basement but once I move to secondary, with what I have now, I'd be flying blind with regards secondary, stabilization, clearing and degassing temperatures.
Anyone else dealing with the issue of operating out of more than one area of the house? Is it something you've just learned to accept or have you been thinking of ways to consolidate your wine making operations into one area?
Several negatives I can think of doing it as I am is that... I take up a corner of the kitchen, maybe every other month or more, for several weeks. Visitors get to see the clutter of the "sausage" being made. I risk some spillage and splashing of wine in a living area of the home. A big risk comes when a full carboy is carried from the kitchen down the stairs into the basement. [I'm in my 72nd year and in good shape but still don't take pleasure in the task.]
The negatives of not doing the fermentation, etc. in the basement is not having ready access to a sink and drain and more temperature control issues. My basement's ambient temperature runs up to about 66F in the summer and it has been as low as 58F in the winter. The kitchen/dinning area run about 10F warmer.
I do have a brew belt and an accurate long probe thermometer; a good temperature for primary fermentation can be monitored and maintained in the basement but once I move to secondary, with what I have now, I'd be flying blind with regards secondary, stabilization, clearing and degassing temperatures.
Anyone else dealing with the issue of operating out of more than one area of the house? Is it something you've just learned to accept or have you been thinking of ways to consolidate your wine making operations into one area?