critterhunter
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- Joined
- Oct 29, 2010
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I'm on my first wine making attempt- 6.5 gallons of pear wine. Having only one carboy at this time I don't want to dottle around for months not being able to make another batch. Already 5 weeks out the stuff tastes fine to me. Sure, it isn't as clear as a commercial wine yet, but it's plenty clear enough for me. Is clearity really all that important to taste, as I've been told it doesn't really matter?
What I'm asking is this- How fast can I bottle the stuff and how fast can I drink it? Also, can the aging process (bulk aging) in the carboy be done in the bottle instead, because I'd rather free this jug up for another batch.
While I'm at it, are there any particular wines that get done faster than others? I'm really wanting to push this stuff into the bottling process (& drinking process) as fast as possible. How much does the wine's taste improve if it's bulk aged in the jug rather than just bottling it and drinking it in say a couple of months. I'd like to keep my turn around time from fermenting to drinking at about two months. Sure, there will be some bottles that are left to age but that's not to say I don't want to drink some ASAP.
What I'm asking is this- How fast can I bottle the stuff and how fast can I drink it? Also, can the aging process (bulk aging) in the carboy be done in the bottle instead, because I'd rather free this jug up for another batch.
While I'm at it, are there any particular wines that get done faster than others? I'm really wanting to push this stuff into the bottling process (& drinking process) as fast as possible. How much does the wine's taste improve if it's bulk aged in the jug rather than just bottling it and drinking it in say a couple of months. I'd like to keep my turn around time from fermenting to drinking at about two months. Sure, there will be some bottles that are left to age but that's not to say I don't want to drink some ASAP.