Sangiovese
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- Aug 9, 2013
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Although we have made wine at home several times before, using grapes, apples, blackberries and raspberries, this fall we have decided to TRY to help my wife's 94 year old father duplicate the wine he used to make "back in the day". He is Italian and loved his wine.
All he really recalls is that he used "8 or 9 boxes" of muscats and "3 or 4 boxes of a black grape that was kind of pricey". I think the black grape may have been Sangiovese, hence the user name.
We are assuming that the "boxes" contained about 40 lbs. each. They were made of wood and were approximately 24 x 16 x 8 inches.
We have his original crusher and screw press, plus the pans and strainers he used.
We plan to crush a total (both colors) of about 500# of grapes directly into two 59 gallon used oak barrels. After this "works" for 3-4 days, we will drain out the liquid, press the solids and, hopefully, wind up with a third oak barrel full of new wine plus 8 to 10 gallons extra to "top off" through the bung hole as evaporation occurs. We will use an air lock on the bung and look to bottle wine late next spring.
ANY good faith comments or suggestions or "DON"T DO THAT"'s will be greatly appreciated.
We recently drank "Dad's" last bottle of homemade wine from 1997 and it was very good---it had aged well.
Hope this isn't too long or elementary for this board.
Thanks.
All he really recalls is that he used "8 or 9 boxes" of muscats and "3 or 4 boxes of a black grape that was kind of pricey". I think the black grape may have been Sangiovese, hence the user name.
We are assuming that the "boxes" contained about 40 lbs. each. They were made of wood and were approximately 24 x 16 x 8 inches.
We have his original crusher and screw press, plus the pans and strainers he used.
We plan to crush a total (both colors) of about 500# of grapes directly into two 59 gallon used oak barrels. After this "works" for 3-4 days, we will drain out the liquid, press the solids and, hopefully, wind up with a third oak barrel full of new wine plus 8 to 10 gallons extra to "top off" through the bung hole as evaporation occurs. We will use an air lock on the bung and look to bottle wine late next spring.
ANY good faith comments or suggestions or "DON"T DO THAT"'s will be greatly appreciated.
We recently drank "Dad's" last bottle of homemade wine from 1997 and it was very good---it had aged well.
Hope this isn't too long or elementary for this board.
Thanks.