Can anyone please explain the point system between the different medals ?
I understand the UC Davis 20 point system - I just don't understand how the metals were distributed by the average point system.
So this begs the question. Why did you make it even tougher to get a Gold medal?
UC Davis is 17-20. Your requirements were 18-20. Almost impossible for an amateur winemaker to attain which explains why there were exactly ZERO Gold medals awarded!![]()
So this begs the question. Why did you make it even tougher to get a Gold medal?
UC Davis is 17-20. Your requirements were 18-20. Almost impossible for an amateur winemaker to attain which explains why there were exactly ZERO Gold medals awarded!![]()
These were the ranges we set. Yes, no gold medals were awarded, but that may be because @IBGLOWIN did not submit an entry?![]()
Yea, yea.....
Meant to. I seem to be saying that a lot since my dad passed away back in August. I go into the winery intending to do some work, look around for a minute or two, turn around, turn off the lights and and close the door.
Did not get any grapes this year and it was all I could do to not let my own grapes go to the birds. I did end up crushing them and turning them into a "memorial wine" of sorts.
I have not bottled my 2014's, still sitting in stoppered carboys. Have a carboy of white wine that needs to be bottled still sitting in a carboy, have like 3 white wine RQ kits that are sitting around still in their boxes.
Some day I will come out of my funk I guess. Good thing wine only gets better with age.....
MY two. Thank You guys very much.
Rodnboro, muscadine and pecan????? Please tell more about this!
I thought only Walnuts and Almonds were safe for winemaking due to the oils going rancid before the wine is ready.
I attended the Savannah Food and Wine Festival the last two years and there was a vendor that had a pecan flavored whiskey that was great. Now I'm not a whiskey drinker, but I was wondering what it would be like for a wine to be flavored with pecan. I'm from the south where muscadines and pecans are the staples down here, so I wanted to experiment combining these flavors. I experimented with a batch of my 2015 White Muscadine by flavoring it with Brewers Best Pecan Flavoring. I just made a 3 gallon regular White Muscadine and flavored 2 gallons of it with Brewers Best Pecan Flavoring. I back sweetened one to 1.005 and one to 1.015, and left one plain. In my opinion, the sweeter one was the best and that was the one I sent for the competition. I have 8 gallons of this years white muscadine that I will experiment with more. It adds a unique flavor that I'm enjoying so far.
@barbiek , I think it was 41 total entries.I wish to thank all of you who entered this year’s competition. We had 41 entries over a wide spectrum of types and styles.
I used Brewers Best Pecan wine flavoring as an experiment. I really liked the result.