Basic Winemaking Process
This is the basic process by which I make wine, and is the process I recommend for anyone who may follow in My footsteps. It is simple, and very compatible with the low-tech Gorean/Tuchuk winemaking equipment. The process works well with jsut about any fermentable fruit (I first used it with Ka-La-Na, with very good success). Many thanks to Winemaking.com (of all places LOL) for the information presented here (with suitable editing appropriate to our Home).
Whether you participate in the actual process or not, the first step after picking (or, um, 'acquiring' in the proper Tuchuk fashion) the fruit, is to crush them into a mass of pulp called
must. There are numerous methods of doing this; the traditional way is in a huge vat by barefoot slaves with very very clean feet
.
The next step is to
press the must. There is a small press in the Vintner's Wagon for this purpose. At this stage, most (NOT ALL!) of the stems are removed to control the amount of
tannins in the juice. The extracted juice is then poured into a vat.
(Tannins are a bitter byproduct of fruit skins and stems, especially grapes, but they greatly assist in clarifying the wine. More info in the next post) Step three is the settling and
racking process. During this stage the sediment separates from the juice and settles to the bottom of the vat. Over a period of time the juice is
racked, or transferred, usually by siphon, into different vats and allowed to settle further.
(I rack four times, one day between rackings, before going on to the next step)
Step four is the actual fermentation process, where the juice becomes wine. Special
yeasts are added to the juice, to convert the natural sugars in the juice to alcohol. Once the yeast dies, it is cleared out of the wine by adding a
fixer (usually bentonite), which clings to the yeasties and then settles down to the bottom of the container. When the wine is racked, the sediment at the bottom of the vat (or other container, I used carboys for the first few batches) remains behind, resulting in an unencumbered wine, ready to age or bottle.
Finally, the wine is ready to Bottle.
Sterilization at this step is critical! Siphon the wine from the vat or carboy into the bottles; I am working on a filter funnel thingy so that any remaining sediment can be filtered out, and so that the remaining bacteria in the wine do not become active. At this stage the wine is drinkable, thus I often sample the wine at this point to determine its quality.
---Arlon