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EQUIPMENT NEEDED
(for 1 gallon of wine)
- 2 to 3 gallon plastic Primary Fermenter with cover
(While stoneware crocks and barrels are romantic they
frequently harbor wine spoilage bacteria and cannot be
cleaned)
- Thermometer
- Hydrometer & Test Jar
- Acid Test Kit
- Racking Tube and Hose
- Glass Secondary Fermenter
- Fermentation locks and drilled stoppers to fit
secondary fermenter
- A good book on winemaking
INGREDIENTS
NEEDED
(for 1 gallon of wine)
- 2 to 4 lbs of fruit
- 1 Campden Tablet
- 1 Gallon of Water
- 1 tsp Yeast Nutrient
- 1/2 tsp Pectic Enzyme
- 1/4 tsp Grape Tannin (red & black fruits don't
require additional tannin, nor does Pear)
- 1 pkg Wine Yeast
- Citric Acid - Starting Acid Balance .50%-.60%
- Sugar - Starting Specific Gravity 1.085
- Stabilizer (if sweetening the wine at bottling)
All equipment must be cleaned and sanitized before using.
Clean equipment with a good detergent (not soap). We carry
many excellent cleansers. Sterilize with sulfite solution (3
TBS of Sodium Metabisulfite in a gallon of water) and rinse
well with hop tap water.
Fruit should be cut up or crushed but not pureed. Remove the
stones of large fruit such as peaches, apricots, or plums.
Placing the fruit in a straining bag makes the later removal
of the pulp much easier.
Place fruit in primary and sprinkle with 1 cup of sugar
(this helps to extract juice). Add one crushed campden
tablet per gallon, cover with a plastic sheet or bag, and
leave 24 hours in a cool place.
After 24 hours, add the water to the fruit and sugar already
in the primary fermenter. Stir well to dissolve the sugar.
Check the Specific Gravity and add enough sugar to the fruit
to bring the Starting Specific Gravity up to the point
indicated. As a rule of thumb, one cup of sugar will raise
the SpG (specific Gravity) of one gallon by .020. Make sure
the sugar is dissolved each time before re-checking the
gravity.
Determine Total Acid using an Acid Test Kit and add Citric
Acid ( if necessary) to bring the Total Acid to the
suggested level. (1 teaspoon of citric acid added to one
gallon will increase the acid level by .15%.) For grapes,
use Tartaric Acid in place of the Citric Acid.
Add the Yeast Nutrient, Pectic Enzyme, and Grape Tannin (if
needed) to the primary fermenter and mix.
Warm or cool the must (the fruit juice mixture) to 70 - 75
degrees F and add the wine yeast. Cover the fermenter and
keep it at 70 -75 degrees F.
Stir the top half of the must twice daily. In four to five
days, ( when the Specific Gravity is 1.020), strain out the
pulp and siphon the young wine into a glass container and
attach a fermentation lock filled half filled with water. At
this point it is advisable to leave your secondary about 2/3
full. The wine will still be active could overflow if the
secondary is full. Place the additional wine into an smaller
glass container (a wine bottle) and attach a fermentation
lock half filled with water. Use this wine at the next stage
for topping-up.
When fermentation is complete (approximately 3 weeks) the
Specific Gravity will be .990-.995. Rack the wine off the
sediment and add one Campden Tablet per gallon. From here on
make sure your secondary is completely full (topped-up) to
prevent unwanted oxidation. Attach a half-filled
fermentation lock. Rack again in three months. After 3
months (if the wine is clear) it may be bottled but most
wines will benefit from longer aging.
This recipe is for one gallon of wine. It may be multiplied
as many times as you wish. The only item you do not need to
multiply is the YEAST. One package is sufficient for up to
five gallons of wine.
This recipe will produce a dry wine. If you want a sweeter
wine, the wine may be sweetened to taste when bottling. Use
sugar syrup or sweetened fruit juice with 1/2 tsp of
Stabilizer Crystals per gallon to prevent renewed
fermentation. More fruit flavor may be developed by
increasing the amount of fruit but the wine will take longer
to mature.
Basic Wine Making Information supplied by
the HWBTA |