Home Wine Making Process For Both Professional Wine Makers And Hobbyists

Posted by Mike Brown
1
Nov 2, 2015
178 Views
When it comes to serving a perfect cocktail, you can’t limit yourself with just one brand or two. A drink with distinctive flavor, and much deeper, heavier and fierier taste can be the cocktail if it leaves you satisfied, no matter whether it’s a renowned brand or a homemade liquor. Blending the right ingredients undoubtedly produces a delectable cocktail. However, wine making is not a process, one can do without the knowledge of ingredients. Wine making is the production of wine, which starts with selection of ingredients and ends with bottling the finished wine. Though grapes are the ingredients commonly used in making most wines, fruits or plants also find usage in wine making. The entire wine making process can be generally categorized into still wine production (without carbonation) and sparkling wine production (with carbonation).

Process
To start with, the grapes are harvested from farms and taken into a winery for primary ferment. At this stage, white wine making diverges from red wine. Must (pulp) of red or black grapes is used to make red wine. During the process, fermentation occurs with the grapes skins that give red color to the wine being processed. When making white wine, grapes are crushed to extract juice and remove the skins. After the juice is extracted, it’s fermented for further processing. Furthermore, yeast may be added to the must for red wine or may occur naturally. To produce white wine, yeast may be added to the juice. Fermentation takes around one or two weeks. Meanwhile, the yeast converts most of the sugars in the grape juice into ethanol (alcohol) and carbon dioxide. CO2 is then lost to the atmosphere.

It has been a traditional wine making method. When talking about the postmodern wine making, it’s been an ongoing evolution and synthesis of the work of dozens of winemakers across the globe for over two decades. The underlying purpose of postmodern method is to alter modern wine making practices. Postmodern methods include the use of advanced wine making techniques. It helps winemakers explore wines that have distinctive taste and flavors.

If you want to learn home wine making process, you can join wine making classes. Participants should have a thorough prerequisite background in winemaking. Participants will be interviewed to determine if they have adequate knowledge to join the classes. If you are found to be eligible for the classes, you'll be provided with a copy of Smith’s book, Postmodern Winemaking, which should be read prior to attending the class.
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