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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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I'm new to winemaking. So far, I've made
two kits, one red (merlot) one white (piesporter). I made the red first, and it's just been sitting in a carboy for about three months since the last racking. Then I made a batch of white, decided to bottle it fairly quickly after the kit procedures were over, and it actually turned out to be reasonable, I've been using it as drinking wine while I wait for the red and make other kits. Next was an attempt at making just pure alchohol and make my own liquors from this. I mixed the alchohol in the same plastic pail that I had done both the red and the white wine in (for the initial week of fermentation). I did make sure to clean the plastic bucket thoroughly after each batch....but for some reason....now that I'm racking off what should be just straight alchohol....it tastes like very diluted white wine. I'm wondering if maybe it would be smart to have separate plastic pails for white, red, and straight alchohol? Or perhaps it's normal for this alchohol mix to have a slightly sweet taste? Other then the degassing, fining steps that I went through with the wines, I treated the alchohol mixture in the same way as the wine kits. One week of fermentation, rack into a carboy, let it sit there for 3 weeks with an airlock in place. Today I racked it off, just to get rid of the junk at the bottom and prepare to rack it off later into gallon jugs. The alchohol mixture was 23 liters of water, 11 lbs of sugar and the yeast and chemical mix that came with the kit. Thank you in advance for any ideas you might have. Ian |
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After reading your post I am presuming that you have been using a kit
advertised to produce liqueurs etc from a kit. In perfect fermenting conditions they are reputed to produce a clear, colourless liquid at about 20% abv ( they usually refer to it as 40% proof to confuse the issue). it is several years ago since I had a couple of tries at one of these kits and then gave up dissatisfied by the results. 1. It is very important to maintain a strict temperature control regime, as recommended by the kit instructions, to achieve the high abv. The yeasts, aided by a package of chemicals to enhance their action, ferment VERY quickly. Unless you are fortunate you will not achieve 20% abv. 2. The package of fining materials will have contained some activated charcoal which is there to strip off any "winey" tastes -- but it still tastes as you said! 3. You then have various flavour additives to produce your "gin", "whisky" etc. I personally found the results to be very poor and not worth the effort at all. I made 2 kits at the time. The second one was done to see if I had made some mistakes in the first one! But I finished up throwing in some cheap bottles of Vodka to bring the abv up to a more acceptable level ---- and that was a mistake as well -- I should have just drunk the vodka! The flavour additives must contain some sort of "chilli" chemical which imitates the "alcohol burn" the mouth experience when drinking neat spirits. I have never tried these kits since that time but what I do do is make my own liqueurs using a basic cheap vodka at 37.5 or 40 % abv, using flavouring additives with sugar and glycerines to make a very acceptable liqueur. And I mature them as well for about a year before using them. The results I get are definitely worth the effort and quite as good, with higher abv, as commercial liqueurs. My most successful are "Crème de Menthe" and an orange flavoured liqueur produced largely with the zest from oranges. One thing I have found out is the high alcohol level ( at 40% abv ) leeches out the flavours from vegetable bases very quickly. Many many years ago I was introduced, by the Royal Navy, to chilli gin and chilli sherry for flavouring soups and casseroles. Making chilli gin is easy and swift and is ready to use in about a week or less but the sherry ( at a much lower abv) takes several months to achieve a good flavour. I have best results form immersing dried herbs and spices rather than fresh ones but I keep on experimenting. I would recommend that you try this route rather than the high alcohol kit route for satisfaction Trevor A Panther In South Yorkshire, England Remove "PSANTISPAM" from my address line to reply. All outgoing mail is scanned by Norton Anti Virus for your protection too! "shiden_Kai" > wrote in message news:zCgTb.360454$JQ1.194141@pd7tw1no... > I'm new to winemaking. So far, I've made > two kits, one red (merlot) one white (piesporter). <snip><snip> > Next was an attempt at making just pure > alchohol and make my own liquors from > this. I mixed the alchohol in the same plastic > <snip><snip> |
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![]() "Pinky" wrote > After reading your post I am presuming that you have been using a kit > advertised to produce liqueurs etc from a kit. In perfect fermenting > conditions they are reputed to produce a clear, colourless liquid at about > 20% abv ( they usually refer to it as 40% proof to confuse the issue). > it is several years ago since I had a couple of tries at one of these kits > and then gave up dissatisfied by the results. Correct, it is a kit of sorts. You have the small bottles of concentrate, which eventually get mixed with about 750 mils of the alchohol and the appropriate amount of glycerine. Oh well, I guess I'll just give it a shot and see what happens. I thought that I had made some mistake, or the white wine taste was leeching back out of the plastic pail (which doesn't make a whole lot of sense I guess) It was a nice gesture on the wife and kids part....(gave it to me as a Christmas present). Thank you for your informative reply. Ian |
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