Nope, your label looks great! It's going to be appealing on the bottle.I know they are kind of boring looking compared to some of the amazing labels I have seen here
Good choiceMy friends have also added their votes for Berrylicious so that what I am going with I think
On another thread there's a Deathberry that's elderberry, blackberry, cherry.Those are great! My one friend keeps remarking how blood like this berry blend looks so I half pondered a little vampiric branding
EASY I LOVE THAT BLEND try TO DIE FOR,,, lolOn another thread there's a Deathberry that's elderberry, blackberry, cherry.
@Cherry Puffling, you may decide you like the mixed berry enough to make it multiple times. If so, make a list of the names you like and use different ones for each subsequent batch.
Last year I made the Winexpert Island Mist Exotic Fruits kit for my niece and her friend. It's far too sweet to my taste to be a dinner wine -- but it's a delicious punch-type drink. [My preference is bone-dry reds, but I'll drink whatever anyone is pouring.]
I've thought of taking a black raspberry or cherry concentrate and adding fresh pineapple, papaya, and mango. I've also considered buying 36 lbs / 16 kg of mixed fruit and adding the pineapple, papaya, and mango. Either way, I may snag the names suggested ...
I chaptalized my niece's wine to 11.1%, and it's great for what it is. Possibly a bit dangerous, as it tastes more like a fruit punch than wine, so it's easier to over indulge. I wouldn't go below 10% ABV, as it reduces shelf life -- although if you'll use the batch up within a year, don't worry about it.Today I'm thinking of adding 2 lbs of mixed frozen fruit (thawed) to the fermenter and maybe a frozen (thawed) can or two of Apple/Raspberry concentrate to the must....adding slowly and taking SG readings. I don't want to take the ABV too high (shooting between 9-10%) which any higher I think will unbalance it too much. Maybe shoot for a SG of 1.070. I'm also thinking of taking an idea from the 'Tweeking cheap kits" of adding some grapefruit rind for some additional citrus bite. That said, I may tone it down and not tweak it too much. Decisions....decisions.
__________________________________________________I chaptalized my niece's wine to 11.1%, and it's great for what it is. Possibly a bit dangerous, as it tastes more like a fruit punch than wine, so it's easier to over indulge. I wouldn't go below 10% ABV, as it reduces shelf life -- although if you'll use the batch up within a year, don't worry about it.
Raspberry concentrate will be the easiest to use. Note that it's going to alter the pineapple, papaya, mango flavor -- this is not a bad thing; I'm mentioning it so you can decide if that's what you want.
What fruit would you add? Adding grapefruit zest sounds good.
I made an Apple / Riesling that was 11.7%, lasted 7 years when the last bottles were consumed. I'd feel comfortable pushing a fun wine to 13% ABV as the fruit and sugar will balance it, but IMO 11% is a better target. This is not only about balance -- these wines don't taste like a table wine and as I mentioned, it's easy to over indulge.Thanks for the response, Bryan. I am glad you mentioned taking this to 11% ABV and sticking with raspberry concentrate. Those are good suggestions, both on longevity and experience. That said, I now feel comfortable in chaptalizing upwards of 11%.
Hmmmm ... ya got me thinking. I'm looking to purchase a Vintners Best Black Raspberry or Cherry to use as a base. I'm aware that Vintners Harvest is not pure juice; it will contain apple & pear juice, but I'm ok with that for my intended product. My thought was to purchase fresh papaya, pineapple, and mango (available year round in my area), ensure they're ripe -- peel, grind, and freeze. Once I have everything I need (thinking 6-9 lbs of fruit for flavoring), defrost everything and rock.For the fruit: Pineapple, strawberries, mango, and peaches. Dole has a blend that sounds like it would do nicely.
Yeah...I'm a nerd XD
Hmmmm ... ya got me thinking. I'm looking to purchase a Vintners Best Black Raspberry or Cherry to use as a base. I'm aware that Vintners Harvest is not pure juice; it will contain apple & pear juice, but I'm ok with that for my intended product. My thought was to purchase fresh papaya, pineapple, and mango (available year round in my area), ensure they're ripe -- peel, grind, and freeze. Once I have everything I need (thinking 6-9 lbs of fruit for flavoring), defrost everything and rock.
Nope, not a nerd.
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