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| Winemaking (rec.crafts.winemaking) Discussion of the process, recipes, tips, techniques and general exchange of lore on the process, methods and history of wine making. Includes traditional grape wines, sparkling wines & champagnes. |
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Wonderful thread, you all.
To add to Ray's comment - AND it's nice to know the commercial view point, so we can expound your rationale compared to theirs for our fruit wines dates. What interesting conversations I've learned reading this newsgroup. thanks! signed DAve, dated 2005 (when I started making wines) haha. Ray Calvert wrote: "Dar V" wrote in message ... Joe, It has been a very interesting discussion, and I've learned something new. I understand the concept from the commercial point of view, but for the home winemaker who makes something other than grape wine, it should be up to the individual. In other words, do what is best for you so that you drink your wine/mead at the right time when it tastes the best. Darlene ;o) Exactly, home wine makers do not need to be bound by the commercial wineries. They can set their own standards within reason. You just need to understand why commercial wineries do it they way they do. Some years you have a good quality harvest and the next year the grapes may be of poorer quality. If the poor quality grapes, or concentrate, were held over to the next year and then made it a good year and labeled with the good year date it would throw everything out of kilter. You could no longer tell by the year which was a good wine. For them, the year must indicate when the grapes were picked. As a home winemakers, you may be trying to show off our your wine making abilities rather that the quality of the grape and it may be more important to you to indicated when the wine was started. Then you could put both dates on the label. Ray |
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