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Joe, what's in the little bottle laying down on the kit picture? Is it an extract?
 
THERE WAS 1 TABLESPOON ADDED AT THIS POINT,I WANTED TO BOOST UP THE PH IN THE PRIMARY THEN PLAY OFF OF IT LATER IN THE SECONDARY IF NEEDED.(NOT SHOUTING JUST USING LARGER LETTERS).:db:db:db:db:db:tz:tz:tz:tz:tz:db:db:db:db

WHAT A TEAM!

Joe

how does the tannic acid differ from the wine tannin you used in making your coffee port?

I still have my coffee port sitting while i'm getting next years beers / cider finished. I'm looking forward to getting it bottled for x-mass gifts

thx

cheers
 
Answers

LORI,THAT IS A BOTTLE OF CARAMEL EXTRACT WHICH I MAY OR MAYNOT USE IN THE CARAMEL PORT , THE PORT WILL DEFINE WHAT DIRRECTION I WANT TO TAKE IT OR IT WANTS TO TAKE ME.:u THEN I'll ADJUST TEXTURE AND TASTE TO BALANCE.


PUTTER,NO DIFFERENCE JUST LABELS,OKAY?:u
 
PUTTER,NO DIFFERENCE JUST LABELS,OKAY?:u


Thx Joe

Still dont have my tannin. Have a friend coming up from maine over your thanksgiving weekend and he will bring me some supplies. Just have to decide on what to get.

cheers
 
Coffee and caramel wine forward

THE two wines have a common base so we twinned the process, follow and ask .:u

1 Ingridients.jpg

2 open bag.jpg

3 dump bag in.jpg

4 rinse bag and add to bucket.jpg

5 not quite 3 gal we topped up.jpg

6 bentonite.jpg

7 add tannin.jpg

8 sg reading.jpg

9 ph reading.jpg

11 pitch yeast.jpg
 
Looking good! I ordered a chocolate orange port today so I'll watch and learn. Again. ;)
 
Port wines

THE DIFFERENCE between the two kits base is the same the fpacs and enhancements which we will go over once the base and the fpacs have macerated.:br


we will move this thread by next Thursday so we can finish the AMARONE BOTTLING AND LABELING ..keep watching:hug

WILL POST ON THE CLEANING UP THREAD.:mny
 
Wow!!

Joe and Rocky,

What a thread you all started, education is a wonderful gift!

This tread is amazing, since I'm new to this forum I started reading at page one which is several years ago. I made it to page five then fast forwarded to the last page..... and BANG I'm at today, this is like a time capsule of wine making knowledge. I also noticed Joe has progressed to a camera as a picture is worth a thousand word description. LOL

I must say Joe, you are very impressive within the art / chemistry of wine making you are doing things that I've been somewhat reluctant to try.

I enjoy the wine making process and making things from what nature provides to us. I find myself afraid to add juices and flavors (aka, sauces) my biggest worry is causing the fermentation process to restart after adding the sugar base and ruining the entire batch.

Great thread!!!:b
 
Wineexpert Amarone
*UPDATED*
Here is our kit that we received from Wineexpert. This kit is a Wineexpert Selection Series Amarone. This kit has the following included. (This list is a little different from the usual kit that you receive. This is a top of the line kit.)

The box includes the following:
  • Large bag of juice
  • Grape skin pack (You can actually see that there are grape skins in it!)
  • 2 packs of Lavin RC-212
  • 2 Chaptalisation Packs (bags of sugar)
  • Package #2 (bentonite)
  • Package #3 (Metabisulphite)
  • Package #4 (Sorbate)
  • Package #5 (Chitosan-(Fining Agent)
  • Mesh Straining Bag
  • 3 Packages of European Hungarian Oak
Just for reference, I’m sure everyone knows by now if they have been following the posts, that you will need certain equipment to make this kit. For the newbies, I’m going to put it below so you know what you need:
  • Primary Fermenter (minimum 30 Litres/7.9 US gallons capacity)
  • Long stirring spoon (Plastic or stainless steel)
  • Measuring cup
  • Hydrometer and test jar
  • Thermometer
  • Wine thief
  • Siphon rod and hose
  • Carboy (6 US gallon capacity)
  • Bung and Air lock
  • Solid Bung (if you are bulk aging)
  • Unscented winemaking detergent for cleaning (we recommend Onestep or any other oxygenating cleaner, including Kmet....JUST NOT BLEACH!)
  • Metabisulphite Powder for sanitizing
  • 30 wine bottles, thirty corks , thirty seals
  • Corking machine (there are various types, we use an italian floor corker.)
The Process:
  • As always, sanitize anything that comes in contact with the wine. Including yourself. J
  • Add half gallon of warm water to the primary fermenting bucket with the bentonite packet and stir until dissolved.
  • Add the large juice package. (Be careful, it’s heavy!) Rinse this out with a little bit of spring water to make sure you get it all.
  • Next, we added the smaller “grape skin packet”. It’s lumpy so you also want to rinse the bag out w/ water also, to get all the grape skins.
  • Now, we take the SG reading. We’re at 1.10.
  • Next, we added the smaller “grape skin packet”. It’s lumpy so you also want to rinse the bag out w/ water also, to get all the grape skins.
  • Now, here comes all that Hungarian oak! We are adding 3 packets of Hungarian powdered oak (wow!).
  • Here comes the fun part. YEAST! 2 packets of RC-212 yeast. Cover with a towel and wait 5-7 days, gently punching down the grape skins.
Secondary Fermentation:
Now that we fermented dry (SG reading is 1.010), now it’s time to rack it.
Notice the grape skins on top? This is the cap that formed from the grape skin packet that was provided in the Wineexpert Amarone Kit, along with the addition of California Raisins (that I added to add more body).
We racked this down to a carboy but it is pretty gassy. I’m going to let this settle out for a few days and degas some on its own. Over the weekend, I will force-gas it (If I have to) by giving it a good old-fashioned stir. Once I feel that it’s de-gassed enough, I will stabilize it with the potassium sorbate packet, K-Met Packet, and packet of Chitosan (clearing agent).
UPDATE:
We finished bottling our super-awesome, Winexpert Selection International Amarone Kit. We are quite happy with the results. Our end result is a dark, inky-color, rich, full bodied, wine. It has a spicy-earthy, sour cherry aroma, dried fruit, bitter almond, from the huge volume of tannins.

For a kit wine that started just 2 1/2 months ago, the results are quite impressive. (We started this kit on August 22, 2013. We bottled tonight, 10/24/2013. After doing this kit, we would def. recommend this one for any true Italian red-wine drinker.

We would like to thank Winexpert for giving us the opportunity to present one of their finest wine kits they have available. We would definitely recommend this kit to the novice and experienced winemakers alike as it truly is exceptional.

We are looking forward to our next tutorial now that this one is complete. Please give us feedback and recommendations of what type of wine you would like to learn how to make.


Amarone Box.jpg

Box Contents.jpg

1b bentonite.jpg

2 add juice.jpg

3 rinse bag.jpg

4 stir.jpg

5 grape bag.jpg

6 rinse grape bag.jpg

7 SG.jpg

8 Oak.jpg
 
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More pictures:

As always, thanks for following us.

Love,
Joe and Kate :)

9 yeast.jpg

10 yeast on top.jpg

11 makes 6 gals.jpg

dextrose pics (1).jpg

1 amarone straining raisins.jpg

2 amarone racking 2.jpg

3 amarone racking.jpg

Amarone gas bubbles.jpg

Amarone final pic (2).jpg
 
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nice....what is the difference between that Selection and the Selection International?
Both are 18L kits with grape skins.
 
Joe & Kate,

Thank you for a wonderful experience and passing of great knowledge. We're drinking it already. I don't think this wine will make it through the holidays......
 
Brilliant! Joe thanks so very much! I truly appreciate all your hard work. Thanks again!!!!!!!!!
 
I would love to have you do a wine into port thread! One of my fav ports is a Malbec port! I would love to see your magic on this!
 
Tannins and the secondary

Yes there were, I believe we put 2 tablespoons in the secondary, also I proceeded to put one more to make it according to my taste in my taste profile this thing gave it a more earthy taste. Once this wine is aged a little more it will be outstanding like RC goodin and stated, he might not have none left by Christmas tasty this is these tying kits are expensive but there will worth the money the Vigo concentrate to varietals overwhelming concentrate side the balance of the parental and grape oak along with the tannins makes a measurable difference in the overall performance of kit and its response to time, definitely a winner.:mny
 
Looks like you also added raisins, was that in secondary?
 
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