All the gear, no Idea.

  • 1 Replies
  • 1776 Views
*

Anguswylie

  • New Member
  • *
  • Location: Woking
  • 14
All the gear, no Idea.
« on: August 28, 2022, 20:22 »
Hi,

I've been reading these pages for years. However, now I've actually got a question.

I've been given a fruit press. and as this year I got a bumper crop of Victoria plumbs I thought I'd make some wine. However. I cant find the answers to two questions.

1. what specific gravity will give me what alcohol content after fermentation. - The instructions say take a reading at the start and then again at the end of fermentation. Fermentation has finished when there are no more bubbles. So what alcohol content will I have ended up with?

2. I don't like sweet wines, so is there a calculation of the beginning specific gravity + and amount of sugar that will create an amount of alcohol with all the sugar used up?

Thanks in advance .

Angus.


*

hasbeans

  • Experienced Member
  • ***
  • Location: Sheffield
  • 306
Re: All the gear, no Idea.
« Reply #1 on: August 29, 2022, 07:04 »
I think you are unlikely to end up with a sweet wine so long as you use a yeast that has high alcohol tolerance and leave it to ferment out.  Commercial wine yeasts like ec-1118 (used in most wine kits) can tolerate up to 18%, so long as you stick to recipe quantities/ratios of additional sugar to fruit then it shouldn't be too sweet.  The main thing to worry about is keeping stuff sterile and temperature, you want to be keeping to between 18-22 degrees in my experience so do most of my brewing in spring and autumn.

Starting gravity should be above 1.070, alcohol content will increase if you go higher than that by adding more sugar but I would stick to a recipe.  Personally, I don't fret about specific gravity to the point that I chucked my hydrometer!  I make a lot of beer and wine at home and find that if the brew stays at the right temperature, you stick to recipes, cleanliness rules and leave it long enough then the alcohol content will be close enough to what the recipe says.  I think most modern recipes will aim for 12%ish.

One other thing, if you don't have a bottling wand then consider buying one or you might end up with most of your wine on you and the floor or full of air.  Neither is a great.  I flippin hate bottling!

 
« Last Edit: August 29, 2022, 08:52 by hasbeans »



xx
good idea

Started by Annie on Homebrew

6 Replies
5134 Views
Last post January 05, 2007, 15:04
by Annie
xx
Rhubarb and raspberry wine - good idea?

Started by New shoot on Homebrew

7 Replies
5754 Views
Last post September 10, 2010, 22:37
by GrannieAnnie
 

Page created in 0.129 seconds with 35 queries.

Powered by SMFPacks Social Login Mod
Powered by SMFPacks SEO Pro Mod |