I make fruit wine (also mead and cider), but I have never made grape wine. Reading posts on this forum about making grape wine, it seems that the usual procedure is to ferment first and then press. There is a good summary by @NorCal in this thread: Homemade vs. Commercial and what I am doing to close the gap. The procedure seems to be crush, ferment, then press. Whereas when making hard cider, it is crush, press, then ferment.
Does anyone press country wine after primary fermentation? When I first started making wine, the recipes I found online said to remove the fruit bag after a few days and hang it to drip, but not to squeeze it because it would make the wine difficult to clear. Not wanting to waste so much wine, I promptly ignored that advice and squeezed the pulp bag as hard as I could. Now that I am making larger batches, the pulp bags are too large to effectively squeeze by hand. Putting my fruit in several smaller bags is an option, but I wonder if using a fruit press at the end of primary fermentation would be better.
One hesitation that I have about doing that is the risk of contamination. I would need to sanitize the parts of the press carefully. But it seems that pressing after primary fermentation is a regular thing for making grape wine. Have you done this for fruit wines as well?
Does anyone press country wine after primary fermentation? When I first started making wine, the recipes I found online said to remove the fruit bag after a few days and hang it to drip, but not to squeeze it because it would make the wine difficult to clear. Not wanting to waste so much wine, I promptly ignored that advice and squeezed the pulp bag as hard as I could. Now that I am making larger batches, the pulp bags are too large to effectively squeeze by hand. Putting my fruit in several smaller bags is an option, but I wonder if using a fruit press at the end of primary fermentation would be better.
One hesitation that I have about doing that is the risk of contamination. I would need to sanitize the parts of the press carefully. But it seems that pressing after primary fermentation is a regular thing for making grape wine. Have you done this for fruit wines as well?