Hey guys, I have been brewing beer for about a year, and over this past summer I had a access to a bunch of fruit from a berry patch. I decided to put my beer equipment to good use, and find a nobler use of strawberries than pie. I made 5 gallons of strawberry wine, I found the recipe on Jack Keller's site, and here it is as follows. I did freeze the strawberries for storage before I made the wine.
Frozen Strawberry Wine
* 3 lbs. frozen strawberries
* 1 11-oz. can Welch's 100% White Grape Juice Frozen Concentrate
* 1 lb 14 oz. light brown sugar
* 2 tsp. citric acid
* 1/4 tsp. grape tannin
* water to make 1 gallon
* 1 tsp. yeast nutrient
* 1 sachet Red Star Côte des Blancs wine yeast
Thaw strawberries and grape juice concentrate. Dissolve sugar in 5 pints water and bring to boil. Strain juice or syrup from fruit and save liquid. Put thawed fruit in nylon straining bag in primary and crush fruit with hands. Pour boiling water over fruit, cover primary, and set aside to cool. When cooled to 80-85° F., add grape juice concentrate, tannin, acid, yeast nutrient, reserved juice or syrup, and 1 pint water. Stir well to blend ingredients. Add activated yeast, cover and stir daily. Do not further crush, mash or squeeze bag of strawberry pulp. Remove bag on 7th day and allow to drip drain, saving drippings. Return drippings to primary and transfer to secondary fermentation vessel. Top up to one gallon if required, attach airlock and set aside. After 45 days, rack into secondary containing 1 Campden tablet dissolved in a little wine and reattach airlock. Rack again after additional 60 days. Stabilize wine when clear and rack after additional 45 days. Bottle and age at least 6 months.
I also made a peach banana wine at the same time, that I bottled tonight, and it tastes amazing. For my schedule for the strawberry wine however, the wine should be ready to bottle as of today, but I tried a small sample and it wasn't very good. I am not the best at describing tastes, but I will try.
Smell- Faintly of strawberries, with a slightly unpleasant yeast finish.
Taste-Has an immediate sour taste, and somewhat bitter, but not like vinegar. Tastes like tannins or a cheap cooking wine, sherry comes to mind. There is a strawberry taste in the finish, but the taste is subtle to the acrid upfront sour. The sour is not strong like a lemon, but very noticeable.
I am just a little worried that there may be a contamination, either with microbes or O2. I followed all of the instructions very carefully, and did not forget the campden tablets. I also have some pictures, of the glass I poured and the carboy used. The last picture I shown a flashlight behind the carboy. I know it still has to age and condition for an additional 6 months, but tasting this compared to the peach wine has just made me worry. The wine also darkened during the first racking in the secondary.
http://img836.imageshack.us/i/94185857.jpg/
http://img805.imageshack.us/i/91125608.jpg/
http://img256.imageshack.us/i/92757781.jpg/
http://img607.imageshack.us/i/74172971.jpg/
Frozen Strawberry Wine
* 3 lbs. frozen strawberries
* 1 11-oz. can Welch's 100% White Grape Juice Frozen Concentrate
* 1 lb 14 oz. light brown sugar
* 2 tsp. citric acid
* 1/4 tsp. grape tannin
* water to make 1 gallon
* 1 tsp. yeast nutrient
* 1 sachet Red Star Côte des Blancs wine yeast
Thaw strawberries and grape juice concentrate. Dissolve sugar in 5 pints water and bring to boil. Strain juice or syrup from fruit and save liquid. Put thawed fruit in nylon straining bag in primary and crush fruit with hands. Pour boiling water over fruit, cover primary, and set aside to cool. When cooled to 80-85° F., add grape juice concentrate, tannin, acid, yeast nutrient, reserved juice or syrup, and 1 pint water. Stir well to blend ingredients. Add activated yeast, cover and stir daily. Do not further crush, mash or squeeze bag of strawberry pulp. Remove bag on 7th day and allow to drip drain, saving drippings. Return drippings to primary and transfer to secondary fermentation vessel. Top up to one gallon if required, attach airlock and set aside. After 45 days, rack into secondary containing 1 Campden tablet dissolved in a little wine and reattach airlock. Rack again after additional 60 days. Stabilize wine when clear and rack after additional 45 days. Bottle and age at least 6 months.
I also made a peach banana wine at the same time, that I bottled tonight, and it tastes amazing. For my schedule for the strawberry wine however, the wine should be ready to bottle as of today, but I tried a small sample and it wasn't very good. I am not the best at describing tastes, but I will try.
Smell- Faintly of strawberries, with a slightly unpleasant yeast finish.
Taste-Has an immediate sour taste, and somewhat bitter, but not like vinegar. Tastes like tannins or a cheap cooking wine, sherry comes to mind. There is a strawberry taste in the finish, but the taste is subtle to the acrid upfront sour. The sour is not strong like a lemon, but very noticeable.
I am just a little worried that there may be a contamination, either with microbes or O2. I followed all of the instructions very carefully, and did not forget the campden tablets. I also have some pictures, of the glass I poured and the carboy used. The last picture I shown a flashlight behind the carboy. I know it still has to age and condition for an additional 6 months, but tasting this compared to the peach wine has just made me worry. The wine also darkened during the first racking in the secondary.
http://img836.imageshack.us/i/94185857.jpg/
http://img805.imageshack.us/i/91125608.jpg/
http://img256.imageshack.us/i/92757781.jpg/
http://img607.imageshack.us/i/74172971.jpg/