Brandon M
Winemaking Newbie since 2022
I think I just made some persimmon jello.
I'm trying my first batch of wild persimmon wine. This is maybe my eighth or so winemaking attempt so far, all fairly small batches, and most have been reasonably successful. So I'm not TOTALLY a newbie - but close.
I mashed all the extremely-ripe fruit (about 2/3 of a gallon) yesterday and left it all in the bucket (with seeds and skins), added just a couple cups of water, plus campden, 1/2 tsp yeast nutrient, about double the normal dose of pectic enzyme (1-1/2 tsp), acid blend for 3.8pH (about 1/2 tsp), and a couple cups of table sugar, and let it sanitize for 24 hours.
Today I removed the towel from the bucket and found... jello? It was so thick I could scoop up literally heaps with a spoon - like, heaps three inches above the spoon. Not a hint of pure liquid anywhere. Impossible to get an SG even with the refractometer. (And despite the campden, it had a bit of fermentation foam around the edges.)
I went ahead and strained out the seeds and skins, added about 3 more cups of more water, and (for the refractometer) strained a couple drops of clear liquid with a coffee filter to find 35 Brix (yep, thirty five; this stuff will be hot AND sweet I guess). It tasted pleasant, no off odors, just a hint of astringency. So rather than risk it spoiling by waiting another day, I pitched the yeast (Red Star Premier Blanc, 1/2 packet, 13-15% ABV tolerance). The attached image is of the must after all this.
There's already a bit of foaming a couple hours later.
Any advice about the thickness (and anything else, really) would be appreciated. I'm always hesitant to add too much water. Do I need to dilute it more anyway? What are the downsides if I do?
I'm trying my first batch of wild persimmon wine. This is maybe my eighth or so winemaking attempt so far, all fairly small batches, and most have been reasonably successful. So I'm not TOTALLY a newbie - but close.
I mashed all the extremely-ripe fruit (about 2/3 of a gallon) yesterday and left it all in the bucket (with seeds and skins), added just a couple cups of water, plus campden, 1/2 tsp yeast nutrient, about double the normal dose of pectic enzyme (1-1/2 tsp), acid blend for 3.8pH (about 1/2 tsp), and a couple cups of table sugar, and let it sanitize for 24 hours.
Today I removed the towel from the bucket and found... jello? It was so thick I could scoop up literally heaps with a spoon - like, heaps three inches above the spoon. Not a hint of pure liquid anywhere. Impossible to get an SG even with the refractometer. (And despite the campden, it had a bit of fermentation foam around the edges.)
I went ahead and strained out the seeds and skins, added about 3 more cups of more water, and (for the refractometer) strained a couple drops of clear liquid with a coffee filter to find 35 Brix (yep, thirty five; this stuff will be hot AND sweet I guess). It tasted pleasant, no off odors, just a hint of astringency. So rather than risk it spoiling by waiting another day, I pitched the yeast (Red Star Premier Blanc, 1/2 packet, 13-15% ABV tolerance). The attached image is of the must after all this.
There's already a bit of foaming a couple hours later.
Any advice about the thickness (and anything else, really) would be appreciated. I'm always hesitant to add too much water. Do I need to dilute it more anyway? What are the downsides if I do?