OH YES ON SO MANY ACCOUNTS,
this is my first with wines, we'll not talk spirits ,lol
I pick 95% of my own fruit, the neighbors I get extra granny smiths and pears,, my problem was as a first batch as you noted I did not use enough berries in my blackberry wine, I should tripled it, my pear, granny smith ad yellow declivous with a touch of sergeants yellow crab apple blend is full of taste and I hope my elderberries an strawberries will be good as well I hope, I have supreme patience , all these were made at the same till in 2014, I'll be bottling the strawberries next, then my elderberries, the elderberries I will put 80% in the root cellar to age 8 more years, as you I have tannes/acid blend but did not use any on my wines, as for clearing I did but finings 2 years ago but did not use any, I racked most over a year, the pear blend almost two years, I have not made any since, but since I didn't get my carboy's wet enough so they did not multiply , and yea as you noted I have several thumb hole jugs in both gallon an 1/2 gallon for top off purposes only:: all right mainly I use for top off, I may be patient but no saint ,,,lol for each size carboy I make 2 gallons extra, easy when not having to pay for fruit, although I did buy a can of sweet cherry to make a 3 gallon carboy and #2 1/2 gallon jugs, last year between trips to the hospital I did plant a couple plum trees and a few cherry trees, and increased my elderberries, although I did have to put a couple hundred pounds of deer burger.. I used chimes, tin pie plates and coyote piss run over sand an hung around, finialy I went with deer burgers, that WORKED WELL FOR EVERYONE BUT THE DEER,:: but the first 4 trees they killed were grafted 3 y/o cherry trees that I gave closes to $60 apiece trees shipping and all. this year if I stay outta the hospital I plan on getting another 7 Italian carboys from 6 an 1/2 down to 5 gallon, I think I'll stick with just 1 3-gal carboy, I know that 38 gallons of different wines may be crazy to start with, but to be honest from what I read on hear I may be the only sane one here,, lol , but I would like to end up with 40 carboys 35 for wine and five for racking,, and of course maybe and 20 gallon jugs an 20 more 1/2 gallon jugs, the main thing I was wondering was about the 10 gallons I aint bottled yet that was the only purpose for adding to that ten gallon, not to use in the future, now that I;ve got 5 carboys empty i'll be starting a pure pear, and yes I used pectin on all my fruits an berries after freezing them, I freeze all my berries and fruits, I thank you for the information an for your time as well sir,
thank you
Richard::
I want strong fruit flavor in my wine, too. I want it very richly fruit-forward, so the flavor is evident on the tongue and front of the mouth. To get that, the best bet is to use all fruit.
Add an absolute minimum, or ideally, zero water. Treat your must as though it is a water desert, being stingy to just add enough to provide fluidity if that is needed with certain fruits that don't produce a lot of liquid on their own.
Use pectic enzyme with every fresh fruit and grape wine you make to draw out the maximum fluid yield. Freeze every batch of fruit solid and thaw it out before making wine. That also draws out more moisture and flavor by bursting cell walls.
Make enough wine that you have a gallon jug fermenting alongside the carboy, and use that to top up. That is easy for me (and I suspect you) because I make 20+ gallons at a time most times now.
Vote as a general rule for letting time settle your wines over using a clearing agent that can sometimes strip flavor away as it works. Use such agents only when a clearing problem seems to arise, never to speed up the process.
Going all grapes or all fruit does increase your costs. In some cases, like commercial blueberries, you have to add some water or the costs would just be way too high. But be a water miser, and buy as much fruit as you can afford in those cases. Even if you have $4-$5 a bottle in the finished wine, the Oh-My-God goodness of it would be worth $15-$30 if bought in a store.
Another useful technique is to make an all-fruit wine in a smaller batch from your berries or fruit, and then blend it with a complimentary grape wine that has been made with a minimum of water. Mmmm...this works very well with blueberry and blackberry.
I rarely have to use acid of any kind to finish wines, because the fruit has been boosted so much. Every once in awhile, but it is not common.