Met a couple on the 4th of July that brought over a homemade bottle of blueberry wine to the party. Got to talking and this is what they told me about their recipe and procedure.
Ingredients list
9lb frozen wild blueberries
12.5lb sugar
Water
1 packet Red Star Premier Classique
1 packet Red Star Premier Cuvée
Procedure
Dump all berries into 6 gallon carboy and wait till next day.
Dissolve all sugar in boiling water, dump onto berries, fill carboy just below the shoulder and wait until next day.
Dump both packets of yeast in, swirl and attach airlock.
Swirl daily during fermentation.
After 6 months to one year, rack into bottles.
Now that is as simple as I could imagine a wine making procedure to be. No hydrometer, no pH-ing, no extra additives, no yeast food, no racking, no topping off carboy after fermentation completes, no removing fruit or yeast, no degassing. It’s like the least involved process of making wine ever.
The couple said that they have made this wine using this procedure five times and they get the same result every time.
Now for my thoughts of the wine. It was very sweet like a dessert wine and had a dark rich color. The flavor was full rich blueberry. It was a little carbonated. I liked it very much as I prefer a medium to sweet wine. As far as alcohol content, either it was on the weaker side or all of that flavor and sugar masked it very well. I did’t get to have enough of it to figure out the alc. content on my own.
Id like to hear y’all’s comments on some things like the two different yeasts, not topping off, leaving on the lees for one year etc…seems like most of the procedure is what an average wine maker would never do but yet the wine turns out great every time.
Ingredients list
9lb frozen wild blueberries
12.5lb sugar
Water
1 packet Red Star Premier Classique
1 packet Red Star Premier Cuvée
Procedure
Dump all berries into 6 gallon carboy and wait till next day.
Dissolve all sugar in boiling water, dump onto berries, fill carboy just below the shoulder and wait until next day.
Dump both packets of yeast in, swirl and attach airlock.
Swirl daily during fermentation.
After 6 months to one year, rack into bottles.
Now that is as simple as I could imagine a wine making procedure to be. No hydrometer, no pH-ing, no extra additives, no yeast food, no racking, no topping off carboy after fermentation completes, no removing fruit or yeast, no degassing. It’s like the least involved process of making wine ever.
The couple said that they have made this wine using this procedure five times and they get the same result every time.
Now for my thoughts of the wine. It was very sweet like a dessert wine and had a dark rich color. The flavor was full rich blueberry. It was a little carbonated. I liked it very much as I prefer a medium to sweet wine. As far as alcohol content, either it was on the weaker side or all of that flavor and sugar masked it very well. I did’t get to have enough of it to figure out the alc. content on my own.
Id like to hear y’all’s comments on some things like the two different yeasts, not topping off, leaving on the lees for one year etc…seems like most of the procedure is what an average wine maker would never do but yet the wine turns out great every time.