Does anyone have a very detailed resource to point me to for the process and all the steps of making wine with fresh grapes? Never attempted it before.
Thanks,
Keaton
Thank you so much John T! This is alot of what I was looking for. To answer your questions: 1: I plan to start off with just a gallon of red. Do not know what varital yet or where to get the juice. 2: No i do not have a destemmer/crusher. and 3: No I do not have a press; although I know i can rent one from our local wine supply for $10 a day. I plan to make one when i have the time and some sort of blue prints on it.
I am asking this question because I will be planting four grape vines in the backyard and would love to make wine out of them. There are 2 Black Spanish grapes (Lenior) and 2 'Favorite' which is supposed to be close to the Black Spanish but better quality fruit. I am just wanting to practice with some fresh grapes before these are ready to produce fruit so that I know what I am doing when it comes to making wine out of fresh grapes!
Again thank you for the valuable information,
Keaton
Ok so "punching down" is like the daily stirring of my fruit musts then and cheesecloth used kind of like a coffee filter. correct? I know i sound dumb but i'm making sure i have this down in my notes correctly lol
Thanks
Keaton
Punching down:
As you may know, red wine gets its color and some of its flavor from the red grape skins.
Red wine is almost always crushed and then fermented with the grape skin. As fermentation progresses, and CO2 gas is produced, the skins tend to "deflate" and will float on top of the wine (forming a raft or "Cap"). Since the goal is to have the fermenting juice in contact with the skins, most winemakers "punch down" the cap (or mix the skins back into the wine). This is normally done 2 or 3 times during the first week (more or less. it is a matter of opinion) of fermentation.
The idea of the cheese cloth is to use it to strain out the skins. You can also wrap the strained skins in the cheese cloth and "twist" is into a tight packet (allowing a minimum pressure to extract as much of the juice as possible).
Pretty much what we did with our Muscadines. Since we were splitting the grapes / juice 3 ways we crushed then pressed and split the skins 3 ways. We all femented on skins. I place skins in bag after a week and sqeezed the juice out. Worked well, tossing into a press would have likely worked better, but I didn't have one.
so i could load up the grapes in a mesh bag like i would my fruit wines and press them in side of of my primary bucket then wouldn't have to worry about punching down because it would already be in the must inside the bag? or crush grapes in another bucket and use the mesh bag kind of like a strainer to hold the skins inside and the juice to run freely into the bottom of the primary as i pour the juice/skins into the bag that's sitting over my primary fermenter then tie it up and let it soak in the primary with juice like fruit wine is done? Just a couple of ideas to run past y'all...
First off Keaton as soon as you plant the vines, their previous age goes out the window. The only thing that matters is their relative size and thriftiness or vigor. The first year they are considered first leaf, next-second leaf and so on. What John is saying is that you won't get much crop before a minimum third leaf.
The cheesecloth is a way to deal with the grapes without a press. Cheesecloth is a type of loose knit cloth. Even easier is to just buy a brew bag made special for beer and wines. After you crush the grapes, loosely strain the must through a collander and the cheesecloth. Let the juice flow out and let the skins and seeds stay in the bag. Ferment all of it in a primary bucket for small batches. Place the bag with skins in it and a couple times a day, submerge the bag into the juice (becoming wine). After the week to 10 days when he says to press, take the bag out and let it drain through the collander again-keeping it in the bag. Squeeze the bag gently to remove as much wine from the skins as you can- that is what the press does. For small batches this works OK. You can also squeeze the bag gently once or twice a day while it is fermenting the first week.
Good luck with it.
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