xhalmers_860
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- Joined
- Sep 13, 2011
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Hey all,
I have done a few batches in the last 2 years of eldeberry, blackberry, eldeflower, plum wines and meads, and really like the idea of only using native ingredients and trying to recreate old recipes (there are plenty of acidic fruits around to not need lemon for example)
I realise that you need sugars to make anything like normal grape wine, but do you really need to use refined sugar or huge amounts of honey? I don't mind making a weak alchohol content, or 'something not quite, but almost, totally unlike wine' if it means not having to buy in sugar. As long as its drinkable.
4 questions then:
1 Could the sugars come from grains as with all-grain beer brewing?
2 What is the minimum amount of sugar you could add to say, blackberries, to get them to the (minimum?) of 7%?
3 Would adding less water to the juice obtained from fruit mean less sugar needed, even if it severely reduces the wine yield?
4 Is this wine or beer?
I have all but ruled out boiling down 10 gallons of birch sap as a habit, though I may give it a go in the spring for a special batch.
I have done a few batches in the last 2 years of eldeberry, blackberry, eldeflower, plum wines and meads, and really like the idea of only using native ingredients and trying to recreate old recipes (there are plenty of acidic fruits around to not need lemon for example)
I realise that you need sugars to make anything like normal grape wine, but do you really need to use refined sugar or huge amounts of honey? I don't mind making a weak alchohol content, or 'something not quite, but almost, totally unlike wine' if it means not having to buy in sugar. As long as its drinkable.
4 questions then:
1 Could the sugars come from grains as with all-grain beer brewing?
2 What is the minimum amount of sugar you could add to say, blackberries, to get them to the (minimum?) of 7%?
3 Would adding less water to the juice obtained from fruit mean less sugar needed, even if it severely reduces the wine yield?
4 Is this wine or beer?
I have all but ruled out boiling down 10 gallons of birch sap as a habit, though I may give it a go in the spring for a special batch.