As the title states I'm a home brewer. I'm confident about sanitation, which I know is key for both wine and beer. I use Star San for brewing and would do the same for winemaking. I have a couple of questions.
I plan on buying a large bucket for primary fermentation, I currently own a 6.5 gal. carboy. Could I use that for secondary fermentation or should I get a 6 gal. carboy? It seems that the winemaking videos I've watched are pretty adamant about reducing headspace.
I've seen that kits are listed as 4 week, 6 week or 8 week. I'm assuming that it's ready to bottle in that time and then you let it age. But what is the difference between the actual kits? I mean, does an 8 week kit have a higher gravity than a 4 week kit? What makes an 8 week kit more expensive than a 4 week kit? I've read that more expensive kits are generally better, and I'm happy to get a better product, but I'd like to understand why it's better.
One of the reasons I want to make wine at home from a kit is to get good quality wine at an affordable price. Since I'm familiar with brewing I felt winemaking was doable. Unlike beer, wine takes longer, especially with aging. Does it make sense to first make a lower cost kit to get some wine going and then get a more expensive kit that needs aging? I don't want to be disappointed by my initial kit. When I'm looking for a budget wine that is "okay" I have tried Black Box Cabernet. It tastes fine but has no character. I'd rather not get the same result from a 4 week kit and just make a kit that needs aging and have some patience.
My taste in wine is generally dry reds with moderate to heavy oaking. Sometimes I like super big wines with a great steak, but generally a nice dry red cab or sangiovese is perfect. I happen to love Coppola's Claret. So my desire to make a dry red may impact the answer about 4 week, 6 week or 8 week kits.
Any advice on kits is appreciated. I tagged this as Winexpert because my local home brew shop can get them and I like to support that shop.
Thanks!
I plan on buying a large bucket for primary fermentation, I currently own a 6.5 gal. carboy. Could I use that for secondary fermentation or should I get a 6 gal. carboy? It seems that the winemaking videos I've watched are pretty adamant about reducing headspace.
I've seen that kits are listed as 4 week, 6 week or 8 week. I'm assuming that it's ready to bottle in that time and then you let it age. But what is the difference between the actual kits? I mean, does an 8 week kit have a higher gravity than a 4 week kit? What makes an 8 week kit more expensive than a 4 week kit? I've read that more expensive kits are generally better, and I'm happy to get a better product, but I'd like to understand why it's better.
One of the reasons I want to make wine at home from a kit is to get good quality wine at an affordable price. Since I'm familiar with brewing I felt winemaking was doable. Unlike beer, wine takes longer, especially with aging. Does it make sense to first make a lower cost kit to get some wine going and then get a more expensive kit that needs aging? I don't want to be disappointed by my initial kit. When I'm looking for a budget wine that is "okay" I have tried Black Box Cabernet. It tastes fine but has no character. I'd rather not get the same result from a 4 week kit and just make a kit that needs aging and have some patience.
My taste in wine is generally dry reds with moderate to heavy oaking. Sometimes I like super big wines with a great steak, but generally a nice dry red cab or sangiovese is perfect. I happen to love Coppola's Claret. So my desire to make a dry red may impact the answer about 4 week, 6 week or 8 week kits.
Any advice on kits is appreciated. I tagged this as Winexpert because my local home brew shop can get them and I like to support that shop.
Thanks!