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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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Several winemaking books suggest using sugar syrup at a concentration
of 1 lb sugar per 2 UK pints of total volume (800 g/litre) to feed the must for strong wines. Suppose I let the solution boil for a minute or two, then use boiled water to make up the exact volume, and store it in sanitized beer bottles with sanitized reusable caps (I use Betadine/Iodophor to sanitize). How long is it safe (from infection in brewing/winemaking terms) to keep it for re-use after opening it, pouring out some solution, and recapping it? -- Usenet is a cesspool, a dung heap. [Patrick A. Townson] |
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hi! I've kept simple syrups stored in tupperware (scant sanitization) for
months in the 'fridge without problem. I've also kept a batch of syrup for over a year by periodically adding H2O & re-boiling it w/o any apparent cooties. HTH. regards, bob "Adam Funk" > wrote in message ... > Several winemaking books suggest using sugar syrup at a concentration > of 1 lb sugar per 2 UK pints of total volume (800 g/litre) to feed the > must for strong wines. > > Suppose I let the solution boil for a minute or two, then use boiled > water to make up the exact volume, and store it in sanitized beer > bottles with sanitized reusable caps (I use Betadine/Iodophor to > sanitize). > > How long is it safe (from infection in brewing/winemaking terms) to > keep it for re-use after opening it, pouring out some solution, and > recapping it? > > > -- > Usenet is a cesspool, a dung heap. [Patrick A. Townson] |
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On 2008-10-09, bobdrob wrote:
> hi! I've kept simple syrups stored in tupperware (scant sanitization) for > months in the 'fridge without problem. I've also kept a batch of syrup for > over a year by periodically adding H2O & re-boiling it w/o any apparent > cooties. HTH. regards, bob Thanks! Out of curiosity, why are you adding water to the syrup later? Doesn't that make it hard to know how much sugar you're adding to the wine? -- This sig no verb. |
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I teach culinary arts in a vocational school- we make a gallon+ of syrup at
a time for baking applications etc. & I don't use it in my wines. I'm offering personal experience regarding the longevity of sugar syrup storage. We add water to the reboil to replace the liquid boiled away & keep our syrup from becoming too sweet (tastewise) for our pastry work. Some of my students are REALLY GOOD at boiling stuff down... Since you would be measuring SG with a hydrometer, you can add less by volume of the denser syrup to your wine & still acheive the same desired SG. I'd use the left over syrup to sweeten cocktails, iced beverages, etc, and make a new batch as necessary. cheers! "Adam Funk" > wrote in message ... > On 2008-10-09, bobdrob wrote: > >> hi! I've kept simple syrups stored in tupperware (scant sanitization) >> for >> months in the 'fridge without problem. I've also kept a batch of syrup >> for >> over a year by periodically adding H2O & re-boiling it w/o any apparent >> cooties. HTH. regards, bob > > Thanks! > > Out of curiosity, why are you adding water to the syrup later? > Doesn't that make it hard to know how much sugar you're adding to the > wine? > > > -- > This sig no verb. |
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On 2008-10-11, bobdrob wrote:
> I teach culinary arts in a vocational school- we make a gallon+ of syrup at > a time for baking applications etc. & I don't use it in my wines. Aha. > I'm offering personal experience regarding the longevity of sugar > syrup storage. We add water to the reboil to replace the liquid > boiled away & keep our syrup from becoming too sweet (tastewise) for > our pastry work. Some of my students are REALLY GOOD at boiling > stuff down... Since you would be measuring SG with a hydrometer, you > can add less by volume of the denser syrup to your wine & still > acheive the same desired SG. I'd use the left over syrup to sweeten > cocktails, iced beverages, etc, and make a new batch as necessary. > cheers! OK, thanks for the advice. I think I'll stick to the more controlled approach. -- This sig no verb. |
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