I usually make 5 gallons in a 6 gallon carboy and make an extra gallon for toping up for secondary. This way I end up with just about 6 gallons and don't need to top up to much. But using the raisins will help fill that extra space.
I really recommend sourcing some bulk wine, or making some wine just for topping/blending. I have 3 gallons of Viognier that I plan on topping my banana wine with once I get to that point. I have found this to be a very nice topping wine, I'm sure others would suffice as well.
I have both pinot grigio and moscato that I can use to top up. I am wondering, however, since the recipe at this stage calls for adding water to 1 gallon, how much water I should add before filling the rest of the jug with wine. Should I add water to 3/4 of a gallon and then fill the rest with either the pinot grigio or moscato? I don't want to top up entirely with wine and skip the water because that might cause the wine to be too strong, if it is supposed to be diluted to a normal concentration at this point.
First of all, thank you Yooper for supplying us with this recipe and for continuing support for everyone who has made it and had questions.
I have just completed clean up from making this. It is my first wine. Since I was about to make the jump into AG brewing I figured I would make a jump into wine as well.
I followed Yooper's recipe as originally posted. 3 gallons. Bananas were black....very soft, almost splitting open. Smelled amazing and they tasted wicked ripe! Only place I messed up was when I took the bag of banana slice out of the simmer I went right to cleaning up some of the mess, forgot about the sugar in the primarys (3 Rossi jugs). Had to reheat just to make sure I could dissolve all the sugar.
OG came in high...1.130. I diluted down to 1.110 and stopped there because I was running out of head space and had no more jugs to use as primary. So we will see how it looks/turns out.
Quick question for those with more knowledge, I used a Red Star Montrachet dry yeast and with an OG that high I Will end up with a sweeter wine correct? Is it going to help dry it out when I top up in the future? If it doesn't should I pitch some champagne yeast in the future to lower it or just leave it sweet so that it isn't wicked hot for years?
If you just made this a couple of days ago I'd set it and forget it for a while, check on it for foam overs but otherwise I wouldn't be too worried about the smells you're getting a few days in.
Can someone say again why to use the peels?
More flavor and aromatics.