Boatboy24
No longer a newbie, but still clueless.
That Rose looks pretty nice, AJ. I don't know about adding Malic, but you could always add Tartaric too. I like my Rose a little lower than where yours is right now. More like a 3.4 or 3.3.
Yeah I am super happy with how it’s looking too. Will def try tartaric out. Going to do some bench trials soon on it. If I had malic acid I’d trial some of that too. Might order some. Or maybe even acid blend. Read recently pre AF adjustments - tartaric. But Post AF acid blend can be utilized too. Totally forgetting the reasoning behind it thoThat Rose looks pretty nice, AJ. I don't know about adding Malic, but you could always add Tartaric too. I like my Rose a little lower than where yours is right now. More like a 3.4 or 3.3.
Eh. Just thinking out loud. Figured I took malic out. Why not put it back in? Tartaric and acid blend trials hopefully treat me right. Not opposed to anything. Need to wait to see what test shows before anything.Adding malic back in? I wouldn't. How does it taste now?
How about adding lysozyme to both and mix together?
And speaking of Rose-I'm picking Barbera on Sunday for the express purpose of making Rose. Looking for 250-300 pounds and going big. That could yield about 6 cases in the end. With really good grapes this year, if I'm careful, it could be good. I'll update my 2020 thread.
Nice update @Ajmassa . I like Rose for the same reasons that wineries do. It's easy and ready early. Chill and drink. No pretense.
That’s a great idea! I didn’t even think to do that for the color. And the malic, yeah consensus seems that it’s not the best idea lol. Glad I have you guys to keep me straight!I wouldn't add malic either. Tartaric, maybe. And I would certainly try adding some red wine in more for color than anything else.
It actually tastes pretty darn good. If it wasn’t for that extra jug tasting better I’d probably not mess with it. But in direct comparison it it’s evident it’s lacking something. Just like when we bought the Cherokee. We test drove the Jeep 1st. Then a Honda CRV. ———should have never taken out the Jeep 1st!Adding malic back in? I wouldn't. How does it taste now?
but you could always add Tartaric too.
I wouldn't add malic either. Tartaric, maybe.
Gorgeous and a helluva improvise! Jealous of all the talent around here! The homemade dough and pizza, pizza ovens, all the bread makers, gourmet cooking, cheese makers, DIY’s out the wazoo etc etc.I made an acid adjustment with tartaric today.
Of course, this was just for my mango salsa. My mango was overripe, and so tasted a little flat. A few pinches of tartaric cured that problem! I have taken to keeping my jar of tartaric in the kitchen instead of the wine room!
It actually tastes pretty darn good. If it wasn’t for that extra jug tasting better I’d probably not mess with it. But in direct comparison it it’s evident it’s lacking something. Just like when we bought the Cherokee. We test drove the Jeep 1st. Then a Honda CRV. ———should have never taken out the Jeep 1st!
I made an acid adjustment with tartaric today.
Of course, this was just for my mango salsa. My mango was overripe, and so tasted a little flat. A few pinches of tartaric cured that problem! I have taken to keeping my jar of tartaric in the kitchen instead of the wine room!
What, no citric lying around?
Gorgeous and a helluva improvise! Jealous of all the talent around here! The homemade dough and pizza, pizza ovens, all the bread makers, gourmet cooking, cheese makers, DIY’s out the wazoo etc etc.
I just meant that when we went to the place we were set on the CRV. But also were eying up the Jeep Cherokee. Cherokee was a bit more expensive. A bit bigger. A bit worse mpg. Took it out 1st. Handled better. Had more bells n whistles. More luxury type interior. the CRV really was great in its own right, but we left in the Jeep.I don't understand. You bought a Jeep or a CRV? But very glad your wine passes the "tastes good" test!
On a side note, my parents, now in their 80s have had a series of CRVs since like 1995. These are great trouble free cars. Sadly, their current one, is likely their last.
I know man. My notes are horribly unorganized. I write mostly everything down- but just log it as I do it. My copybooks are timelines. Not wine specific. And once bottled that’s it. No more notes. Does it say the blend? 50/50?Great thread! I'm inspired to try something like this myself next fall.
Looking back through our wine log, I see that we made something we called "zincatel", a mixture of muscat and zinfandel, back in 1988. Frustratingly, our notes are rather incomplete, so I have no idea how well it came out!
I know man. My notes are horribly unorganized. I write mostly everything down- but just log it as I do it. My copybooks are timelines. Not wine specific. And once bottled that’s it. No more notes. Does it say the blend? 50/50?
It was 42 lbs of muscat, 72 lbs zinfandel. I don't know how that proportion was decided upon (maybe upon the advice of the guy we bought our wine press from?). We also did a batch with 120 lbs with just zinfandel, and a couple of "false wines."
That was our first year making wine. We were already making beer, and also mead, and had thought vaguely of someday making wine. It all came together one day when our housemate reached for the classified ads, saying "I wonder if anyone's selling a wine press." And that's how we got a wine press, a crusher, a bunch of carboys, a 15 gallon demijohn, and couple cases of bottles at a price that was almost too good to be true.
Good luck with your Barbera pick today!
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