Health & Medical Food & Drink

Simple Wine Making Instructions

If you have never made your own wine, you are going to need some simple wine making instructions to get you going.
Whether you are going to make wine from freshly pressed grapes or from a commercially prepared concentrate, the process is basically the same.
The essential elements needed for wine Apart from grapes, you need water, sugar (some of which will come from the grapes) and yeast to make wine.
Basically what happens is that the sugar and yeast react to one another and they start to ferment.
The same thing happens when you brew beer or when you prepare the dough for baking bread.
A wine making recipe will tell you how much of each ingredient to add, depending on the type of grapes or grape concentrate you are using.
The wine making process The first step in the wine making process will depend on whether you are using grapes or a concentrate.
If you are using grapes then these will need to be crushed.
Then you will need to activate the wine yeast in a bottle of tepid water.
Once all the ingredients have been mixed together in a suitable container, they should be left to bubble and ferment.
The instructions in the recipe will specify for how long.
They will also state when the wine should be racked, which entails siphoning the wine out of the fermentation bucket into a clean container, so that the sediment that has sunk to the bottom is left behind.
The racking process is quite simple, although you have to be careful not to disturb the sediment, otherwise the wine will become cloudy and you'll have to keep on racking it.
Bottling your wine While good instructions will explain exactly when and how to bottle your homemade wine, it isn't always possible for them to determine exact timing.
This is because conditions will be different for you and for me and for anyone else who is making and bottling their own wine.
An invaluable rule of thumb is to only bottle your wine when it is really clear.
When it's in the bottle it will continue fermenting gently and the taste will continue to develop.
A final tip.
Fill the bottle as much as possible, because any air left between the wine and the cork can change the color of the wine.


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