If I used 4.5 lbs* of blackberries, how much sugar should I cut out?
*Will have to buy frozen berries in 12 oz packs. Six 12 oz packs is 4.5 lbs. I'd rather up the berries to 4.5 than reduce them to 3.75.
Question re: nutrients. When do you add the nutrients?
I'm using the Blackberry wine (heavy body) & the Blackberry wine (medium body - dry) from the jackkeller.net site. After last years failure (made quite a few mistakes), I've been reading and studying like crazy to prepare for the bumper crop of blackberries I have this year. thought I had it all down until I read this while ordering more nutrient: Use one teaspoon per gallon of must. Add to must (wine) 24 hours before adding yeast to provide the yeast with a healthy environment with much needed vitamins and nutrients.
Apparently I need to learn a bit more. I just followed the recipe and added the nutrient WITH the yeast. Have I already ruined the wine before I even got started?![]()
No, that's fine. You can add the nutrient at any time. It's just easiest to mix up the must all at one time (including the campden/sulfites) and add the yeast 24 hours later.
Thanks Yooper! If I may ask another question....
I noticed in one of your posts you oaked one of your blackberry wines. I was thinking of trying it with the 5 gallon batch I started a few days ago. Thinking I'd try using these: Oak Infusion Spirals - 2 pack - American or French Oak - Treats 6 Gallons from http://www.homebrewit.com/wine-making-oak-alternatives.
Of course, I'd have to research "oaking" wines. Totally new concept for me.
Could I please have your insight on this? Good product? Bad product? For the novice?
Thanks!
Oh, yes, those are very nice spirals! I prefer the fullness (and less harshness) of the French oak, but the American is ok with some age.
I'm cheap, and often use chips or cubes but if I wanted something really special, the spirals are great. I've used them in expensive wine kits, and loved the results.
Oh, yes, those are very nice spirals! I prefer the fullness (and less harshness) of the French oak, but the American is ok with some age.
I'm cheap, and often use chips or cubes but if I wanted something really special, the spirals are great. I've used them in expensive wine kits, and loved the results.
Yooper, I have my French Oak chips, and have read so many different thoughts on the subject that I wanted to know when you add them and for how long....assuming you add them to blackberry wine (because I can't seem to find the post where I thought I had read that you do).
A fellow firefighter at my station gave me a bunch of blackberries yesterday and asked me to make wine out of it. I mostly make beer, but have dabbled in making crappy wine out of juice that I find on sale. My question is about the water... Is this mostly for mouthfeel? If I were to juice more berries, do I even need the water at all? Will it just make a "thicker" product?
Also, are you just using table sugar? Corn? Whatever?
hi can I use half blackberry half plum?
Yooper,
My wife processed about 16 quarts of blackberries by adding a couple quarts of water and cooking them down on the stove. I told her to not go over 150 and keep it there for 10 or 15 minutes. It resulted in a couple gallons of juice.
I decided to try making wine as an afterthought so I have a couple questions:
Is the way we made the juice ok for wine?
How much water should I add to the juice?
Just add sugar to the desired OG?
Thanks!
What is the difference between k1v116 and 71b-1122 that you could describe? Have you found a yeast you like better? Do you have a nutrient preference? Have you used dextrose instead of table sugar and if so is there a difference? Thank you for your time.
I am making a one gal batch of this, followed recipe exactly and used D47 yeast. I am on day 4 of primary, tomorrow is racking to secondary day. Today when stirring, its starting to get pretty sulfury, anything to worry about? Should I take any remedial action when I rack tomorrow?
Thanks!