My Vanilla Red is bulk aging in glass now. I started with a Fontana Pinot Noir kit, scaled to 5 gallons. It has a nice, medium body, juicy blackberry notes (from primary), and a distinctive vanilla finish (from secondary), which I know is a deviation from a genuine pinot noir, but damn, it's good. Well, actually, it's quite vanilla forward. I think I will go with half a vanilla bean next time; but I really love this as is.
I am not interested in becoming a wine aficionado--I can buy any respectable varietal at the local HEB, if I feel like drinking a "true" merlot, or chardonnay, or whatnot. What I really want to do is to make some off-the-beaten-path wines that I can't buy anywhere else. Therefore, I suspect I should probably forego naming my blends after their varietal bases (e.g. "Vanilla Red" instead of "Vanilla Pinot Noir." Don't want to anger the Wine Gods.
I just unearthed a jar of DDDB slurry from my outside fridge. What would you think of me starting a cheap white kit (Pinot Gris) on that slurry? It wouldn't be a Pinot Gris at that point, obviously, but an offbeat blush.
Am I going to tear the fabric of space-time by this experiment? Is this the mark of a rank and clueless noob (guilty!)? IDK, it sounds really delicious to me--a cherry-berry blush, but not too sweet. I've read here that the white kits aren't great on their own anyway.
Insight or recommendation are most welcome!
edited to add: the Pinot Gris is a $45 Fontana kit