Wine making is a simple but toilsome activity. If done properly, any wine maker, whether a professional, an amateur or a hobbyist could produce good quality wine. And since the concept of making wine is simple and easy, it is possible to make and ferment your own wine at the comfort of your own home. Listed Below are the basic steps in making wine which you could apply when fermenting or producing your own homemade wine. Just remember that although it is possible to ferment your own wine at home, there may be laws in your city or state prohibiting such activities or might require homemade wine making licenses. So to be safe, it is better to get that license first before conducting any of these wine making procedures. If there are no restrictions, then let’s start making our homemade wine.
The basic steps in wine making are:
1) Choosing the right grapes to use for the wine - to have good tasting wine, the grapes that you should use must be of high quality.
There are certain species of grapes that are grown specifically for wine making like Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, etc. (If these are not available, you could use other varieties or grapes but the taste will not be the same.)
The grapes you will use must have the right sugar content, you can check this by using a hydrometer.
Discard rotten or spoiled grapes, these will affect the quality of the wine.
Remove the stems as well since this will also affect the taste of the wine.
Make sure that the grapes are free of insects, debris and dirt.
2) Clean the grapes to be used for making the wine - wash the grapes of bird droppings, dust, debris, dirt and pesticides.
3) Extracting the flavors - according to Jack Keller, there are four basic ways of extracting the flavor from grapes all of which start with chopping, slicing or cushing of the grapes, then placed on the primary fermentation vessel.
Cold Marceration - this method of extracting the flavor will require the refrigeration of the fermenting juice after ingredients like sugar , sulfites and pectic enzymes are are added in the mixture.
Hot Water Extraction - this method will require the use of boiling water after adding sugar to the crushed, sliced ot chopped fruit. After adding water, the mixture is stirred to dissolve the sugar.
Direct Heat Extraction - this method requires putting the crushed, sliced or chopped grapes in a cooking pot first instead of the primary fermentation vessel. The pot with the fruits is heated and to avoid scorching of the grapes, water is added. The liquid mixture is stirred to distribute the heat evenly. After a set amount of time, the liquid is then transferred to the primary fermentation vessel until it cools to room temperature.
Fermentation Extraction - all the ingredients are added to the fruit in the primary. This includes sugar, sulfites, the enzymes, etc. The flavor of the grapes is extracted through fermentation.
4) Adding the Ingredients - What you have now in your primary is the must. It is the juice of the grapes that will be fermented and turned into wine. But before fermentation, ingredients like sugar, tannin, pectic enzymes, sulfites and yeast are added. It is during this stage that acid levels are adjusted; so is the the mixture’s sweetness or sugar level.
5) Primary Fermentation - The yeast added to the must requires exposure to oxygen for 48 to 72 hours. This means that during the primary fermentation, the must is done or performed without an airlock.
6) Secondary Fermentation - In this step, the wine is separated from the solids of the must. The liquid part is transfered to a secondary fermentation vessel, normally a carboy. Remember that when transferring to the secondary, the wine should have minial contact with oxygen. Upon transferring to the carboy, the vessel is airlocked. The anaerobic fermentation begins here.
7) Racking - After the secondary fermentation, the wine is then racked. This means that the wine is transferred to another secondary vessel to separate the sine from the lees or solid deposits at the bottom of the secondary. This process is done after at least three weeks. Racking is a repetitive process. As long as there are deposits or solid pearticles forming at the bottom of the secondary, the wine should be racked.
The solid particle forming at the bottom of the secondary are lees. They are dying or dead yeasts. If left for more than 60 days, the wine’s flavor and aroma may be affected.
8 ) Bottling - It is now time to bottle the wines. But make sure that before you bottle the wine, fermentation is already over, there are no more solid deposits at the bottom and the wine is already clear. After bottling, leave the bottles standing upto three days, then after three days, store the bottles lying or on its side at a specified room temperature for six months to one year for aging.
Listed above are the basic steps in wine making. These could be applied or used to any fruit you wish to ferment into wine. Remember that just because these are the basic steps in making homemade wine, it doesn’t mean that you will to follow the directions word per word. The methods and the process may be the same to all fruits but there will be variable changes due to varying characteristics of every fruits.
And always remember to watch and observe the specific gravity of the wine you are making as much as possible to avoid mistakes.
With that in mind go ahead and start making your homemade wines.
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