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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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My wife bought me a couple of Catawba grape plants. I will be making a
trellis, etc., but I have a question about using them in wine. The Catawba wine I've bought in stores always has 49% of some other grape in the wine, and 51% Catawba. Why is this? From what I've read, it does make good wine, jelly, jam, etc. Can I make a decent wine from this or do I need to mix it with another grape like Niagara or something else? Thanks!!! |
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![]() Stone Hill Winery in Missouri makes an excellent Catawba blend. http://www.stonehillwinery.com/winesGrapes/pink.aspx It tastes pretty much like a white Zinfandel. It is mostly Catawba, but they don't state the percentage. Catawba is less foxy than Concord or Niagara. Perhaps with blending and sweetness, all negative aspects of that trait can be eliminated. Stephen On Jun 29, 7:34 pm, Donald > wrote: > My wife bought me a couple of Catawba grape plants. I will be making a > trellis, etc., but I have a question about using them in wine. > > The Catawba wine I've bought in stores always has 49% of some other > grape in the wine, and 51% Catawba. > > Why is this? > > From what I've read, it does make good wine, jelly, jam, etc. > > Can I make a decent wine from this or do I need to mix it with another > grape like Niagara or something else? > > Thanks!!! |
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On Jul 1, 9:58*pm, shbailey > wrote:
> Stone Hill Winery in Missouri makes an excellent Catawba blend.http://www..stonehillwinery.com/winesGrapes/pink.aspx > It tastes pretty much like a white Zinfandel. *It is mostly Catawba, > but they don't state the percentage. *Catawba is less foxy than > Concord or Niagara. *Perhaps with blending and sweetness, all negative > aspects of that trait can be eliminated. > > Stephen > > On Jun 29, 7:34 pm, Donald > wrote: > > > > > My wife bought me a couple of Catawba grape plants. I will be making a > > trellis, etc., but I have a question about using them in wine. > > > The Catawba wine I've bought in stores always has 49% of some other > > grape in the wine, and 51% Catawba. > > > Why is this? > > > From what I've read, it does make good wine, jelly, jam, etc. > > > Can I make a decent wine from this or do I need to mix it with another > > grape like Niagara or something else? > > > Thanks!!!- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - I've been making 100% Catawba wine for over 10 years. It has it's own particular rose type aroma and flavor. Catawba;s history is very exciting for an American grape. It was crossed with Bacho in the middle 17th Century. It won a blue ribbon at Paris, France World's Fair in 1900. There are two distinct methods of fermenting this pink grape. The blue ribbon recipe basically creates a fairly dry white by fermenting only the juice and the other method is to ferment on the skins to build an amber color sweet wine. Both are good and I would recommend you try them before deciding to blend. |
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On Tue, 14 Jul 2009 08:19:06 -0700 (PDT), Strongarm
> wrote: >I've been making 100% Catawba wine for over 10 years. It has it's own >particular rose type aroma and flavor. Catawba;s history is very >exciting for an American grape. It was crossed with Bacho in the >middle 17th Century. It won a blue ribbon at Paris, France World's >Fair in 1900. There are two distinct methods of fermenting this pink >grape. The blue ribbon recipe basically creates a fairly dry white by >fermenting only the juice and the other method is to ferment on the >skins to build an amber color sweet wine. Both are good and I would >recommend you try them before deciding to blend. Sounds like it would make a nice wine by itself. I'll try it on the skins first. Any idea how many years it would be before I would get a modest harvest, say 5 or 6 pounds, to make a gallon of wine? These vines are each maybe 3 feet tall, first year plantings. |
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