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Dave Allyn 26-06-2003 06:56 AM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
An old friend of mine (my father's really) used to make homemade wine
all the time in the basement. He had several large wine casks he
used, and lots of people actually were after his wine alot. he never
sold it, just gave it away. He has since died. My question is this:
How do you make wine? I know there are kits out there, and I have
looked at them, but they all seem to have a powder you add to the mix,
and you have to keep ordering the powder from them. does anyone have
a good recipe?

another friend of mine always said you could make wine out of almost
any fruit, and he used apples, peaches, pears, whatever he could find.


I know this is OT, but I didn't really want to have another NG to
keep up on, and hoped you guys might be able to help out....

thanks again...


email: daveallyn at bwsys dot net
please respond in this NG so others
can share your wisdom as well!

JohnDKestell 26-06-2003 12:08 PM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
Hey,
I'm a beer brewer myself.

Traditionally, you would just crush up the fruit and that powdery white stuff
on the fruit (which is loaded with yeast) was used to ferment the brew. but
you never know what to expect.

if you have a copy of reader's diget "Back to Basics", there is a good recipe
there.

and tons on the web too.

as a brewer i'll tell you, keep things CLEAN CLEAN and CLEANER! man you can
make some nasty stuff if you aren't careful.

if you want, I can dig up some recipes laying around

john

The Cook 26-06-2003 12:20 PM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
"Dave Allyn" (Dave Allyn) wrote:

An old friend of mine (my father's really) used to make homemade wine
all the time in the basement. He had several large wine casks he
used, and lots of people actually were after his wine alot. he never
sold it, just gave it away. He has since died. My question is this:
How do you make wine? I know there are kits out there, and I have
looked at them, but they all seem to have a powder you add to the mix,
and you have to keep ordering the powder from them. does anyone have
a good recipe?

another friend of mine always said you could make wine out of almost
any fruit, and he used apples, peaches, pears, whatever he could find.


I know this is OT, but I didn't really want to have another NG to
keep up on, and hoped you guys might be able to help out....

thanks again...


email: daveallyn at bwsys dot net
please respond in this NG so others
can share your wisdom as well!



There is a newsgroup rec.crafts.winemaking that you might try. I know
nothing about it but it should be worth a look.
--
Susan N.

There are 10 types of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who do not.

Steve Calvin 26-06-2003 02:56 PM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
The Cook wrote:
"Dave Allyn" (Dave Allyn) wrote:


An old friend of mine (my father's really) used to make homemade wine
all the time in the basement. He had several large wine casks he
used, and lots of people actually were after his wine alot. he never
sold it, just gave it away. He has since died. My question is this:
How do you make wine? I know there are kits out there, and I have
looked at them, but they all seem to have a powder you add to the mix,
and you have to keep ordering the powder from them. does anyone have
a good recipe?

another friend of mine always said you could make wine out of almost
any fruit, and he used apples, peaches, pears, whatever he could find.


I know this is OT, but I didn't really want to have another NG to
keep up on, and hoped you guys might be able to help out....

thanks again...


email: daveallyn at bwsys dot net
please respond in this NG so others
can share your wisdom as well!




There is a newsgroup rec.crafts.winemaking that you might try. I know
nothing about it but it should be worth a look.




--
Steve


Steve Calvin 26-06-2003 03:20 PM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
Steve Calvin wrote:
The Cook wrote:

"Dave Allyn" (Dave Allyn) wrote:


An old friend of mine (my father's really) used to make homemade wine
all the time in the basement. He had several large wine casks he
used, and lots of people actually were after his wine alot. he never
sold it, just gave it away. He has since died. My question is this:
How do you make wine? I know there are kits out there, and I have
looked at them, but they all seem to have a powder you add to the mix,
and you have to keep ordering the powder from them. does anyone have
a good recipe?

another friend of mine always said you could make wine out of almost
any fruit, and he used apples, peaches, pears, whatever he could find.


I know this is OT, but I didn't really want to have another NG to
keep up on, and hoped you guys might be able to help out....

thanks again...


oops, sorry about the blank post...

Anyhow, I received a recipe for tomato wine from a nice woman on another
group that I could post when I get home tonight if you'd like it. It
takes about a year for it to come of "age" and then it's more like a
mild, slightly sweet brandy.




--
Steve


Rich McCormack 26-06-2003 03:56 PM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 

"Dave Allyn (Dave Allyn)" wrote:

An old friend of mine (my father's really) used to make homemade wine
all the time in the basement. He had several large wine casks he
used, and lots of people actually were after his wine alot. he never
sold it, just gave it away. He has since died. My question is this:
How do you make wine? I know there are kits out there, and I have
looked at them, but they all seem to have a powder you add to the mix,
and you have to keep ordering the powder from them. does anyone have
a good recipe?

another friend of mine always said you could make wine out of almost
any fruit, and he used apples, peaches, pears, whatever he could find.

I know this is OT, but I didn't really want to have another NG to
keep up on, and hoped you guys might be able to help out....

thanks again...


Use the following link to visit my beer and cider making page.
On the page, I've reduced the process down to about as basic
as it can get. The only hardware required is a gallon jug,
stopper to fit the jug and a length of plastic tubing. Most
any fruit juice can be substituted for the apple juice. I've
gotten acceptable results using canned frozen concord grape
juice. Granted, I wouldn't pour it to accompany a fine filet
mignon for dinner, but it works great mixed with lots of ice
and lemon-lime soda for making wine coolers to quench the
thirst on hot summertime afternoons.

http://home.pacbell.net/macknet/beerpage.html

--
"The smallest minority on earth is the individual. Those
who deny individual rights cannot claim to be defenders
of minorities." -- Ayn Rand

Rich McCormack (Poway, CA)

Who is Rich McCormack? Find out at...
http://home.pacbell.net/macknet/

Dan Mazerolle 26-06-2003 05:20 PM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
For all the info you need go to
winemaking.jackkeller.net



"Dave Allyn (Dave Allyn)" wrote in message
...
An old friend of mine (my father's really) used to make homemade wine
all the time in the basement. He had several large wine casks he
used, and lots of people actually were after his wine alot. he never
sold it, just gave it away. He has since died. My question is this:
How do you make wine? I know there are kits out there, and I have
looked at them, but they all seem to have a powder you add to the mix,
and you have to keep ordering the powder from them. does anyone have
a good recipe?

another friend of mine always said you could make wine out of almost
any fruit, and he used apples, peaches, pears, whatever he could find.


I know this is OT, but I didn't really want to have another NG to
keep up on, and hoped you guys might be able to help out....

thanks again...


email: daveallyn at bwsys dot net
please respond in this NG so others
can share your wisdom as well!




Pam 26-06-2003 07:32 PM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
In our last fun filled episode, Thu, 26 Jun 2003 10:14:34 -0400,
Steve Calvin proclaimed:



Anyhow, I received a recipe for tomato wine from a nice woman on another
group that I could post when I get home tonight if you'd like it. It
takes about a year for it to come of "age" and then it's more like a
mild, slightly sweet brandy.


Oh yes! Please do.

It sounds like a fun thing to try.


Pam, Brandywine tomato brandywine, anyone?






---
"Oh no, not again."
- A bowl of petunias on its way to certain death

tippy1 26-06-2003 07:32 PM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
JohnDKestell wrote:

Hey,
I'm a beer brewer myself.

Traditionally, you would just crush up the fruit and that powdery white stuff
on the fruit (which is loaded with yeast) was used to ferment the brew. but
you never know what to expect.

if you have a copy of reader's diget "Back to Basics", there is a good recipe
there.

and tons on the web too.

as a brewer i'll tell you, keep things CLEAN CLEAN and CLEANER! man you can
make some nasty stuff if you aren't careful.

if you want, I can dig up some recipes laying around

john


John,

I would like to have a recipe for a red wine if you have it.
--

Squire

tippy1 26-06-2003 07:32 PM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
Steve Calvin wrote:

Steve Calvin wrote:
The Cook wrote:

"Dave Allyn" (Dave Allyn) wrote:


An old friend of mine (my father's really) used to make homemade wine
all the time in the basement. He had several large wine casks he
used, and lots of people actually were after his wine alot. he never
sold it, just gave it away. He has since died. My question is this:
How do you make wine? I know there are kits out there, and I have
looked at them, but they all seem to have a powder you add to the mix,
and you have to keep ordering the powder from them. does anyone have
a good recipe?

another friend of mine always said you could make wine out of almost
any fruit, and he used apples, peaches, pears, whatever he could find.


I know this is OT, but I didn't really want to have another NG to
keep up on, and hoped you guys might be able to help out....

thanks again...


oops, sorry about the blank post...

Anyhow, I received a recipe for tomato wine from a nice woman on another
group that I could post when I get home tonight if you'd like it. It
takes about a year for it to come of "age" and then it's more like a
mild, slightly sweet brandy.

--
Steve


Hey Steve,
I would love to try this one! Would you mind sending the recipe?
--

Squire

Dave Allyn 28-06-2003 04:32 AM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
thanks for the help.. I looked at he tomato wine recp you posted...
FINALLY!! something to use all my extra toms for! :)

on the other hand, I did check out rec.crafts.winemaking shortly after
the post. 700+ messges later.... managed to find a link to a
website that has ALL the basics, and TONS of recipies. a VERY good
site IMHO... Link is below.

rambling begins
To tell you the truth, I actally learned alot in a short time... not
just about winmaking, but about wild fruits, grapes, etc. I never
knew what the white on the grapes was, but Now I understand the
importance my mom always put on washing the grapes before making juice
when I was a kid... :) There is lots of other information about how
the process works, what each part does, and how things can go wrong...
to anyone interested in makeing, or just bored and interested, check
it out!
/rambling

here's the link I promised:
Jack Keller, The Winemaking Home Page
http://winemaking.jackkeller.net


email: daveallyn at bwsys dot net
please respond in this NG so others
can share your wisdom as well!

Jan Flora 28-06-2003 06:08 AM

slightly OT -- wine recipies
 
In article , "Dave Allyn"
(Dave Allyn) wrote:

An old friend of mine (my father's really) used to make homemade wine
all the time in the basement. He had several large wine casks he
used, and lots of people actually were after his wine alot. he never
sold it, just gave it away. He has since died. My question is this:
How do you make wine? I know there are kits out there, and I have
looked at them, but they all seem to have a powder you add to the mix,
and you have to keep ordering the powder from them. does anyone have
a good recipe?

another friend of mine always said you could make wine out of almost
any fruit, and he used apples, peaches, pears, whatever he could find.


I know this is OT, but I didn't really want to have another NG to
keep up on, and hoped you guys might be able to help out....

thanks again...


email: daveallyn at bwsys dot net
please respond in this NG so others
can share your wisdom as well!


The powder was probably winemaker's yeast. You can ferment just about
anything. We make raspberry and rhubarb wine up here (seperately) in Alaska.
Do a web search. You'll find LOADS of help.

Jan


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