Topic Closed
Go 
|
New 
|
Find 
|
Notify 
|
|
Admin 
|
New PM! 
|
 Slow Traveler
|
Sorry no idea (I have my own grapes but I've never made wine) but you can have a look at this website for anything regarding: do your own, grow your own etc. It's a great community and they're really helpful and nice!
|
| |
| Posts: 1943 | Location: Urbino, Le Marche, Italy | Registered: 09 October 2005 |   |
|
 Slow Traveler
|
In primary school, probably third or fourth grade, we tried to make our own wine from store-bought grapes. We hand pressed them, and bottled the juice. After aging in our classroom. After a few months we had very, very bad vinnegar. Alice Twain -- A Typesetter's day 3.0: Blog.
|
| |
| Posts: 10690 | Location: Milano, Italy | Registered: 06 December 2002 |   |
|
 Slow Traveler
|
quote: when I lived in Hershey,Pa.
Ida dear, you lived in HERSHEY? A friend whose father ran the Hershey Motor Lodge for years is visiting next week...she better bring a golden almond bar with her... hmmmmm. Hershey and wine. ok, word association... Hershey,chocolate..... Wine, Barolo. Barolo and chocolate together???? yum.
|
| |
| Posts: 3625 | Location: Acqui Terme, Piedmont, Italy | Registered: 30 July 2005 |   |
|
 Slow Traveler
|
quote: I haven't made homemade wine but I have drunk it - ICK. All of the homemade wines I have tried were less palatable then the least expensive wine available in the local liquor shop. Unless you have access to professional equipment and a expert winemaker save yourself the trouble and aggravation.
I am sure you are probably right, but I just wanted to try it one time. I have always said that if I had my life to live over, I would want to be a winemaker (a real one, not a play one)!
|
| |
| Posts: 1376 | Location: SoCal - Cherry Valley CA | Registered: 15 February 2004 |   |
|
 Slow Traveler
|
quote: Originally posted by JDeQ: I haven't made homemade wine but I have drunk it - ICK. All of the homemade wines I have tried were less palatable then the least expensive wine available in the local liquor shop. Unless you have access to professional equipment and a expert winemaker save yourself the trouble and aggravation.
Sorry but I have to disagree with this generality. Many in my extended family make wine. (I do not so I can't offer personal advice.) The wine made was good drinkable table wine (both red and white). It just takes good grapes, knowledge, experience good equipment and patience! It is a labor of love with my relatives.
|
| |
| Posts: 657 | Location: Palmyra, NJ, USA | Registered: 29 July 2003 |   |
|
 Slow Traveler
|
My daddy used to make wine. I remember trips (as a very little girl) where he would take me with him to train yards and buy cases of grapes right off the trains. We had a cantina in the basement of our house in Brooklyn that always held two large barrels of homemade wine. Hanging from the ceiling were loops of homemade sausage. The wonderful aroma, when you walked into that room, was fantastic. Every once in a while, I get a whiff of something familiar that just transports me to that magical room! Some of the best meals I remember consisted of cheese, homemade sausage and chunks of crusty bread dunked in homemade wine. I am lucky to now live next door to a wonderful Italian family who still make their own wine and sausages. The fragrance that wafts from their garage (where their winemaking operation takes place) in September/October is a lovely, heady aroma of fermenting grapes. 
|
| |
| Posts: 871 | Location: New York City | Registered: 28 May 2003 |   |
|
 Slow Traveler
|
Another thing that it takes to make at least decent wine is quantity. Wine likes to sit and ferment with its friends. it like big vats, at least for the first part of the fermentation process. Later it can be put in smaller ones and bottled, but the first part always comes out better in large amounts. Alice Twain -- A Typesetter's day 3.0: Blog.
|
| |
| Posts: 10690 | Location: Milano, Italy | Registered: 06 December 2002 |   |
|
Slow Traveler
|
Or you can take a shortcut and buy it made. I buy large barrel every year from the local woolgrowers hotel. Nothing fancy simple good homemade brew.
|
| |
|
 Slow Traveler
|
In italy it is possible to buy not barrells (the barrell costs too much) but "damigiane", humungus bottles witha shape similar to the smaller "fiasco" but holding 20 liters or so. These must be stored in a cool, dark place. The damigiane are bought from the producers themselves: some small producers have truck to distribute the damigiane in neighobring cities (my grandfather bought for years a couple of damigiane or wine this way). In order to make the wine drinkable you have to "move" it from the damigliana to the bottles and store the bottles, also because the distributor will request the damigiane back. Transferring the liquid is easy enough done witha syphon, the hard part is corking the bottles. You need to buy corks and the machine to cork the bottle, or you may decide to buy caps and the other machine to cap the bottles... Either way, you need a bit of equipment. Alice Twain -- A Typesetter's day 3.0: Blog.
|
| |
| Posts: 10690 | Location: Milano, Italy | Registered: 06 December 2002 |   |
|
 | Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
Topic Closed
© SlowTrav.com 2000 - 2008
|


* Advertise on Slow Travel

Announcements
New to the forums?
Forum Rules
Larger fonts
Slim Signatures
Slow Travel Chats
Weekly Travel Chats or Casual Chats, Monthly Book Chats (CRC). See Announcements forum for schedule. Chat Rooms
Slow Travel Affiliates
SlowTrav Sponsors
Book a Rental Car
Book a Hotel
Travel Insurance
Book Trains
Buy European Cell Phone
Buy Long Distance Cards
Buy Books, Maps, Events
Buy Luggage





Slow Travel by Country
Italy - Shortcuts
France - Shortcuts
UK & Ireland - Shortcuts
Switzerland
Spain
North America
Rest of the World
Europe Trip Planning
What is Slow Travel?
Slow Travel Community
Trip Reports
Slow Photos (photo gallery)
Favorite Blogs & Webcams
Podcasts
Trip Calendar
Patriarch & Matriarch
Submit Your Reviews
What's New and Pending?
Europe Travel
Currency Converter
World Telephone Guide
World Weather.com
The World Clock
Featured Books
Italy, Instructions for Use
Chow Venice: Food and Wine
Featured Sites
Sorrento Webcam
Bruno Bozzetto Movies
|