jimryan22002
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- Sep 5, 2008
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Hello everyone,
I'm not a wine maker...yet. I am however a fairly experienced beer homebrewer and so I'm familiar with the basics where similar to beer making. I have a friend/colleague whose family has been making wine for several generations. Each year they produce one barrel in November. There process is to crush the grapes and place the material in loosely covered tubs. After 3 days, the material is pressed and the juice is placed into the barrel. During the course of the year, the wine is rack several times to remove sediment. After a year they jug/bottle it. That's it. What struck me is that they allow a wild fermentation to take place for better or worse. This year I'm planning to attend the crush day and they have been nice enough to allow me to collect a few gallons off the crush to make my own batch. As an experiment, I plan to stun the wild flora with Campton tablets and inoculate with a liquid yeast strain.
My question is: what yeast strain should I select? I typically use White Labs or Wyeast brands. They are using Thompson Seedless (aka Sultana) and Alicante Bouschet at a 17 to 3 ratio (# of cases).
Also, any process suggestions would be great (additives?, yeast starter?, feeding?, nutrients?, acid additions?, temperature?). I'd like to keep the process as simple as possible to really see the difference that the yeast will make on the wine compared to the wild fermented batch.
Thanks in advance for the help!
Jim
I'm not a wine maker...yet. I am however a fairly experienced beer homebrewer and so I'm familiar with the basics where similar to beer making. I have a friend/colleague whose family has been making wine for several generations. Each year they produce one barrel in November. There process is to crush the grapes and place the material in loosely covered tubs. After 3 days, the material is pressed and the juice is placed into the barrel. During the course of the year, the wine is rack several times to remove sediment. After a year they jug/bottle it. That's it. What struck me is that they allow a wild fermentation to take place for better or worse. This year I'm planning to attend the crush day and they have been nice enough to allow me to collect a few gallons off the crush to make my own batch. As an experiment, I plan to stun the wild flora with Campton tablets and inoculate with a liquid yeast strain.
My question is: what yeast strain should I select? I typically use White Labs or Wyeast brands. They are using Thompson Seedless (aka Sultana) and Alicante Bouschet at a 17 to 3 ratio (# of cases).
Also, any process suggestions would be great (additives?, yeast starter?, feeding?, nutrients?, acid additions?, temperature?). I'd like to keep the process as simple as possible to really see the difference that the yeast will make on the wine compared to the wild fermented batch.
Thanks in advance for the help!
Jim