HoppySpadge
New Member
Well, my first wine after about 50 or so beer kits and I am simply amazed at the quality of the final product. Several of my wino friends have had a bottle and the agreement is total - this is one of the best wines that we have had in a long time. To put that into perspective we are mostly £6-8 random bottle supermarket purchasers so we’re not exactly wine buffs, more like your average weekend suburban gluggers. But that being said, we would all rather reach for a bottle of this than take the supermarket bottle lottery that can often yield a very disappointing result.
I used the optional Oak chips that came with the kit, but I can’t really taste the oak, it’s there but very much in the background and nothing like say a Jacob’s Creek oak experience. This is more like a clean Sauvignon Blanc for me, light fruity taste and a hint of earthy oak flavour but it tastes extremely pure and clean, with no unpleasant aftertaste whatsoever, and no negative ‘morning after’ effects either. It really is delightful!
I racked a total of 4 times to be abs sure of clarity, and on the 3rd racking I thought it tasted bitter/sour so I added 10 large heaped teaspoons of sugar diluted in abt 250ml of water. I did this after adding the stabiliser and fermentation did not restart. Otherwise, I followed the instructions to the letter. It sat in various FVs for about 6 weeks before I bottled. I bought a degassing wand to do the job properly and degassed several times over a 5 day period. Clarity is pretty much 100pct. After all my racking and tasting I ended up with 23 bottles from the £38 kit. Still a complete winner financially.
As a n00b to winemaking I have always been sceptical of the quality of wine kits and have seen loads of reviews which conclude with a ‘oh well, I duly necked it anyway...’ . But this? This is a top drawer drink. I’m now pondering what the hell they put into supermarket wine to make them taste so crappy, so often? Preservatives? ‘E something’ flavourings? Dunno, but there’s something pretty poor going on if a homebrew kit can trash them so easily.
Go for it!
Rgds/Hopps
I used the optional Oak chips that came with the kit, but I can’t really taste the oak, it’s there but very much in the background and nothing like say a Jacob’s Creek oak experience. This is more like a clean Sauvignon Blanc for me, light fruity taste and a hint of earthy oak flavour but it tastes extremely pure and clean, with no unpleasant aftertaste whatsoever, and no negative ‘morning after’ effects either. It really is delightful!
I racked a total of 4 times to be abs sure of clarity, and on the 3rd racking I thought it tasted bitter/sour so I added 10 large heaped teaspoons of sugar diluted in abt 250ml of water. I did this after adding the stabiliser and fermentation did not restart. Otherwise, I followed the instructions to the letter. It sat in various FVs for about 6 weeks before I bottled. I bought a degassing wand to do the job properly and degassed several times over a 5 day period. Clarity is pretty much 100pct. After all my racking and tasting I ended up with 23 bottles from the £38 kit. Still a complete winner financially.
As a n00b to winemaking I have always been sceptical of the quality of wine kits and have seen loads of reviews which conclude with a ‘oh well, I duly necked it anyway...’ . But this? This is a top drawer drink. I’m now pondering what the hell they put into supermarket wine to make them taste so crappy, so often? Preservatives? ‘E something’ flavourings? Dunno, but there’s something pretty poor going on if a homebrew kit can trash them so easily.
Go for it!
Rgds/Hopps