Fuzzywuzzy
Junior
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2020
- Messages
- 5
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Hi, all,
I'm a beginning winemaker and first-time poster here. I've brewed beer for years but as far as wine goes, I have only tried a chardonnay kit (not in the bottle yet but so far so good).
I would like to try making a 6-gallon (23L) batch from fresh grapes this fall. My local HBS here in Northern California offers the following varietals in 100# lots:
Merlot (Solano [not Sonoma] Green Valley)
Zin (Amador/Shenandoah Valley)
Syrah (Solano Green Valley)
Petite Sirah (Lodi)
Sangiovese (Solano Green Valley)
Cab Franc (Lodi)
Barbera (Amador/Shenandoah Valley)
Grenache (Davis)
Any thoughts on what to choose? Here are my parameters:
1. "Easy" to make - If any varietal is more forgiving to the winemaker than others, that is a plus.
2. Single varietal - I'm only buying one 100# lot, no blending.
3. Quality - If you have any local knowledge on the above regions and their climatic suitability for the given varietals, I'm all ears.
4. Easy to drink as a young wine - I'm not looking for a tannin bomb that has to age 5+ years before it can be drunk. As little aging as possible would be best.
I'm a beginning winemaker and first-time poster here. I've brewed beer for years but as far as wine goes, I have only tried a chardonnay kit (not in the bottle yet but so far so good).
I would like to try making a 6-gallon (23L) batch from fresh grapes this fall. My local HBS here in Northern California offers the following varietals in 100# lots:
Merlot (Solano [not Sonoma] Green Valley)
Zin (Amador/Shenandoah Valley)
Syrah (Solano Green Valley)
Petite Sirah (Lodi)
Sangiovese (Solano Green Valley)
Cab Franc (Lodi)
Barbera (Amador/Shenandoah Valley)
Grenache (Davis)
Any thoughts on what to choose? Here are my parameters:
1. "Easy" to make - If any varietal is more forgiving to the winemaker than others, that is a plus.
2. Single varietal - I'm only buying one 100# lot, no blending.
3. Quality - If you have any local knowledge on the above regions and their climatic suitability for the given varietals, I'm all ears.
4. Easy to drink as a young wine - I'm not looking for a tannin bomb that has to age 5+ years before it can be drunk. As little aging as possible would be best.