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So, do you want to know
HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN
WINE? Come to Fall
Bright, The Winemakers
Shoppe!
We are located on the
east side of Keuka Lake,
10110 Hyatt Hill,
Dundee, NY 14837.
We have a Dundee mailing
address and a Wayne
location. Our location
is 9 miles north of
Hammondsport, NY and 13
miles south of Penn
Yan. Hyatt Hill
turns east off of Rt
54. Our shop is an
old grape packinghouse,
which is surrounded by
vineyards.
Shipping supplies but
not fruit to USA, we
have year round hours
and a secure online
shopping site right here
with our e-Book, May
Your Wines Fall Bright
You may view this
online at
www.101winemaking.com.
Call us at
607-292-3995.
Start
with quality
fruit! Fall Bright
is where great wines
begin. Tom
Mitchell has been
striving to grow quality
grapes with attention in
the vineyard from
pruning to
harvest. While you
are waiting for the
grape harvest, how about
making wine from the
many fruits available
throughout the summer,
like strawberries,
elderberries and
peaches. Let us
help you with your fruit
wines! Approach
fruit wine making with a
basic understanding of
important factors in
winemaking: sugar and
acid content of the
juice, quality of fruit
and yeast choice.
For
instance, in the many
different varieties of
grapes (30) that we
handle, we see readings
in acid and sugars vary
widely. The same
will be true of say -
strawberries, depending
on variety and
ripeness. Without
knowing the percentage
of sugar and the
resulting acid in the
fresh fruit/water
combination, how can one
rely on a
"recipe" to
add sugar and
acid?
In
general winemaking we
adjust acids up or down
according to an acid
(test kit) reading to
around .7or.75(%) TA
(total acidity).
For best results, take
an acid reading on your
recipe mix of fruit and
water, adjust
accordingly, slowly, and
retest. One of our
favorite winemakers adds
half of what acid he
calculates he needs and
retest.
Sugar
is easy to test before
fermenting using a
hydrometer. This
is an inexpensive but
necessary tool. If
you add too much sugar,
the yeast will ferment
until the wine is too
high in alcohol and too
toxic to support yeast
life. This wine is
hot to taste and could
still be too
sweet. A normal
reading for initial
sugar in winemaking is
around 21-23% or
Brix. Once you
have your sugar reading
it is easy to calculate
an increase. We
use corn sugar, as it is
a simple sugar, readily
available to the
yeast and it
dissolves
instantly.
Sucrose, if used, should
be heated in your juice,
as the acid and heat
convert it to simple
sugars. If using
honey instead of sugar,
boil and skim to remove
impurities.
Use our sugar chart sugar
chart or easy
math in www.101winemaking.com to
calculate the correct
amount of sugar to
adjust to 21-23
percent. Three (3)
cups of corn sugar is
approximately 1 pound
and 2 1/4 cups of cane
sugar is about 1
pound. These
simple tests with proper
adjustments will save
you some strange
experiences. Keep
notes!
All
of your recipes should
recommend the use of
pectic enzyme.
This enzyme aids in the
release of juices during
pressing by breaking
down pectin,
which can also
cause a haze.
Cover any mashed fruits
with clear plastic while
sitting on pectic enzyme
to reduce browning from
air exposure
(oxidation).
Use
quality fruit! If
you are not using
premium fruit, you will
not make premium
wines! If your
peaches have brown spots
on them, your wine will
taste oxidized from the
start as the brown spots
are oxidized fruit!
We
recommend the use of
campden tablets (sodium
or
potassium metabisulfite)
or potassium
metabisulfite (in a pure
powder form). These
additives are
antioxidant and
antibacterial
agents. Oxidation
in wine results in
browning and off
flavor. As an
antibacterial
agent, they prevent
vinegar.
Yeast
nutrient is necessary to
balance the fruit
nutrients for the use of
wine yeast. We
encourage the use of
Enovit, which is a yeast
nutrient with added
vitamins, etc.
Yeast recommendations
for fruity wine finishes
are Red Star's
Cotes des Blanc or
Lalvin D-47 or
71B-1112. These
are slow steady
fermenters retaining
fruit taste and aromas.
Many old time recipes
call for champagne
yeast, as it was readily
available years
ago. It will
ferment to a higher
alcohol and retain less
of the fruit
aromas.
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