Here is my recipe for a true South Louisiana Muscadine wine. I use Ison, Darlene and Sweet Jenny for mine.
I would say this is a country wine as there a only a few things to measure and the ingredients do not have to be exact to get a good wine.
Start with 20-30 lbs of crushed muscadine. Just Ison for the red and Darlene and Sweet Jenny for the white.
Place in fermenter with your sulfite for 24hrs. No need to check SG at this point.
After 24hr add yeast. I use Lalvin EC-1118.
Ferment on the skins for 4 days.
After 4 days press fruit to recover juice.
Add 2 gallons of fermenting juice to a carboy, add 12 lbs sugar and water to get get 5 gallons. This will get a SG around 1.120 -1.125.
Adjust for a TA of .43% with acid blend if needed.
Now just ferment as normal.
This will give you a sweet wine with a final SG of around 1.015-1.02. The flavor will be great but it will not have that nasty musty smell most commercial muscadine wine have.
Before anyone chimes in with the SG being to high, I realize this. It turns out a just right for me without the need to back sweeten. I have never had trouble with my fermentations. The people in my area love it this way for drinking at "the camp" and by the bonfires.
I would say this is a country wine as there a only a few things to measure and the ingredients do not have to be exact to get a good wine.
Start with 20-30 lbs of crushed muscadine. Just Ison for the red and Darlene and Sweet Jenny for the white.
Place in fermenter with your sulfite for 24hrs. No need to check SG at this point.
After 24hr add yeast. I use Lalvin EC-1118.
Ferment on the skins for 4 days.
After 4 days press fruit to recover juice.
Add 2 gallons of fermenting juice to a carboy, add 12 lbs sugar and water to get get 5 gallons. This will get a SG around 1.120 -1.125.
Adjust for a TA of .43% with acid blend if needed.
Now just ferment as normal.
This will give you a sweet wine with a final SG of around 1.015-1.02. The flavor will be great but it will not have that nasty musty smell most commercial muscadine wine have.
Before anyone chimes in with the SG being to high, I realize this. It turns out a just right for me without the need to back sweeten. I have never had trouble with my fermentations. The people in my area love it this way for drinking at "the camp" and by the bonfires.