![]() |
Raspberry Wine
Hi,
I've just made some Raspberry wine and almost followed Berry's recipe but chucked in a litre of grape juice. He says it comes out very sweet, but just had a taste and its as dry as dry can be. Already lovely in fact. It had a very fast first fermentation (when the weather was hot) and I was wondering if that had something to do with it. The only other variation was that I used unrefined sugar. I hope I can repeat the experience! Tony |
Raspberry Wine
Tony wrote:
> Hi, > > I've just made some Raspberry wine and almost followed Berry's recipe but > chucked in a litre of grape juice. He says it comes out very sweet, but > just had a taste and its as dry as dry can be. Already lovely in fact. You have to add sugar to it after the fermentation has stopped. Raspberry wine is best if it is a bit sweet. I use to make 2 or 3 batches of it every year. This year I have made one with raspberry/raisin and one raspberry/figs. > It had a very fast first fermentation (when the weather was hot) and I was > wondering if that had something to do with it. The only other variation > was that I used unrefined sugar. Me too. Due to hot weather the fermentation is going fast. Normally I use about 70-90 days before the fermentation is over. This year... maybe down to 50 days. > I hope I can repeat the experience! You should. Wonderfull wine. -- Jørn Dahl-Stamnes http://www.dahl-stamnes.net/dahls/ |
Raspberry Wine
darley wine tasting!
|
Raspberry Wine
blurb
ralc wrote: > darley wine tasting! |
Raspberry Wine
On 8/18/2006 3:01 PM, Jørn Dahl-Stamnes wrote:
[snipped] > Tony wrote: > > >>Hi, >> >>I've just made some Raspberry wine and almost followed Berry's recipe but >>chucked in a litre of grape juice. He says it comes out very sweet, but >>just had a taste and its as dry as dry can be. Already lovely in fact. > > > You have to add sugar to it after the fermentation has stopped. Raspberry > wine is best if it is a bit sweet. > > I use to make 2 or 3 batches of it every year. This year I have made one > with raspberry/raisin and one raspberry/figs. Jørn, I'd love to hear how your fig blend turned out! I make a fig mead each year with fruit from my in-law's trees, but it's such a strong flavor, and a bit unique as well, that I've never thought to blend it with anything else. Could you share your recipe? My yearly fig mead is typically 12 lbs fresh figs and about 8lbs of honey, fermented dry. This is a 5 gallon batch. In recent years I've taken to splitting the batch at bottling and sweetening a portion of it, to better appeal to the sweet mead lovers amongst my friends. Cheers, Ken |
Raspberry Wine
mail box wrote:
> On 8/18/2006 3:01 PM, Jørn Dahl-Stamnes wrote: > [snipped] >> Tony wrote: >> >> >>>Hi, >>> >>>I've just made some Raspberry wine and almost followed Berry's recipe but >>>chucked in a litre of grape juice. He says it comes out very sweet, but >>>just had a taste and its as dry as dry can be. Already lovely in fact. >> >> >> You have to add sugar to it after the fermentation has stopped. Raspberry >> wine is best if it is a bit sweet. >> >> I use to make 2 or 3 batches of it every year. This year I have made one >> with raspberry/raisin and one raspberry/figs. > > Jørn, > > I'd love to hear how your fig blend turned out! I make a fig mead each > year with fruit from my in-law's trees, but it's such a strong flavor, > and a bit unique as well, that I've never thought to blend it with > anything else. Could you share your recipe? > My yearly fig mead is typically 12 lbs fresh figs and about 8lbs of > honey, fermented dry. This is a 5 gallon batch. In recent years I've > taken to splitting the batch at bottling and sweetening a portion of it, > to better appeal to the sweet mead lovers amongst my friends. I have made a rasberry/figs before and it turn out to be a bit 'lighter' both in color and in taste. I have asked other if they can tell what I have added to the rasberry. Some have guessed figs and some can't tell. I got a web-page with recipies, but those are in Norwegian. The rasberry/figs this year is: 6 kg fresh rasberry and 2 kg dried figs. I cut the figs in parts and then I have about 10 liter of boiling water of the rasberry/figs. I let this cool down before adding nutrition, enzymes and yeast. When the first part of the fermentation is over, I remove the rasberry and figs from the must, have it [the must] on a 30 liters glass carboy, add 3 kg sugar and more water. After a while, when the fermentation is reduced, I add 1.5 kg sugar and fill the carboy up with water to it's neck. Normally it takes about 2-3 months before the fermentation is over. But this year we have had a very warm summer, so the fermentation is almost completed after 3 weeks. This will be a dry wine. I use to add about 1/2 kg of sugar after it the clearing, to make it a bit sweet. -- Jørn Dahl-Stamnes http://www.dahl-stamnes.net/dahls/ |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:08 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FoodBanter