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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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greetings! glad your 1st batch was successful... was it a kit or a pail of
juice? 1) Here in the Boston area, we ( my partners in vine) go into the wholesale produce center to brokers who sideline in wine grapes, juices & equipment. 3 or 4 brokers handle the less expensive ( insert your qualitative judgment here,) Lodi/Central Valley grapes & 5 gal pails of varietal juices. 1 guy deals in more upscale grapes from further north. The largest homebrew supplier sells (her opinion) great grapes from Napa ( autumn) & Chilean grapes (spring) both on a preorder/pig in a poke basis. She also has fresh frozen Italian juices. There's quite a few home vintners here, so we have options... maybe you do too? A 35# lug of grapes: $22-$45 depending... I don't buy juice but I think its in the $55 a pail range for CV, and $$$illy for the imported . 2) We don't have guys who offer that service, but I do know that in other states folks offer "enhanced processing options." at point of sale. 3a) Craig's List/ ebay/ etc? Crusher/destemmers aren't cheap but worth the investment if you're a toy-guy in this for the long haul. Maybe there's a rental opportunity out there. We bought most of our toys from an old timer who was retiring from the grapes & switching to juices; he's become a mentor & friend. 3b) Join other forums; post for sharing/rentals. 3c) Pls don't laugh too hard: try going to small produce markets whose staff are Italian, Portuguese, Spanish - winedrinking cultures! I've made some good friends & got pointed in good directions by conversing with these local guys. "They know this guy who wants to get rid of..." Start asking questions...google local groups. I'd bet that a local homebrew group has a closet vintner or 2 you can pump for info. HTH pardon my rambling but I'm home sick, it snowed again last night and Nyquil stingers give one a loquacious glow... regards, bob > wrote in message ... > Greetings, this year I made wine for the first time (with juice) and > it appears to have gone well (so far), thanks in part to the kind > responses to a post here. > I have a dozen year's experience at brewing beer. > > Next year I would like to go with crushed, destemmed grapes (the > proper way). I live in Michigan, which does have a few wineries > selling grapes. There are also area stores where I can get California > grapes. I got a press from a friend. I have been thinking about making > Michigan/California mixes since > > a) the California grapes appear, on average, to produce too strong > wines for my tastes. Michigan grapes, on the other hand, make too acid > wines. I can't remember liking a Michigan bottle, ever > > b) historically I have liked blended wines > > c) Michigan wines will certainly have much higher resveratrol content, > and possibly more other flavor-inducing compunds > > Basically, I would like advice on the following > > 1) how do people in the area (or other cold areas of the country) get > their crushed grapes from the South? Frozen? Is it expensive? > > 2) do you have a local seller who will destem them for you > > 3) anything else I need to consider or try > > Thanks for any response. |
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