johnfosteruk
New Member
I can't remember if it was on this forum, but I've done a search and can't find the exact recipe I used so I thought I'd share it here as I've just bottled and had a sneaky sample and I rather like it.
Ingredients
1lb raisins
2lb raisins
6 teabags (I used Taylors Yorkshire but any will do)
1 peppermint teabag
1tbsp Lime juice
Yeast and nutrient (the first one I used was a Gervin GV5, I've another batch on the go using Youngs super wine yeast compound)
Method
Simmer your raisins for 30 mins and strain/press, While this is happening, stew your tea. Then dissolve your sugar, make up to fill a 1 gal DJ and add everything else. Pitch your yeast and let it go.
I started at 1.09 and stopped the ferment at 1.002 which makes 12% ish and it's quite lovely and tasty. I'm not a wine connoisseur so I can only describe what I am tasting in crude terms and not very coherently at all. It's mellow & fruity, considering how low the FG was it's surprisingly sweet and it's also creamy and full bodied like a chardonnay. It cleared beautifully and tastes great.
Give it a bash if you like simple to make wines that require little attention (2 rackings then bottling is all) but taste nice and complex.
Ingredients
1lb raisins
2lb raisins
6 teabags (I used Taylors Yorkshire but any will do)
1 peppermint teabag
1tbsp Lime juice
Yeast and nutrient (the first one I used was a Gervin GV5, I've another batch on the go using Youngs super wine yeast compound)
Method
Simmer your raisins for 30 mins and strain/press, While this is happening, stew your tea. Then dissolve your sugar, make up to fill a 1 gal DJ and add everything else. Pitch your yeast and let it go.
I started at 1.09 and stopped the ferment at 1.002 which makes 12% ish and it's quite lovely and tasty. I'm not a wine connoisseur so I can only describe what I am tasting in crude terms and not very coherently at all. It's mellow & fruity, considering how low the FG was it's surprisingly sweet and it's also creamy and full bodied like a chardonnay. It cleared beautifully and tastes great.
Give it a bash if you like simple to make wines that require little attention (2 rackings then bottling is all) but taste nice and complex.