Sunday, December 11, 2016

2016 Wines - Chapter 10 - Lemongrass Mint

As with the Chambourcin, I did not seek out this wine; rather, it found me. Lisa decided to clean out the lemongrass on the east side of the greenhouse. Naturally, I couldn't let it go to waste. I happened to have picked up a couple of weeks ago a 1 gallon Winexpert Pinot Grigio kit. This kit has 1.6l of PG concentrate, and I imagined that it would work well as a grape base for lemongrass ginger wine.



Ingredients for a 3 gallon batch with extra for topping:
650g fresh lemongrass
1 freshly picked Meyer lemon, juiced and zested
1.6l Winexpert Pinot Grigio concentrate
100g of mild crystalized ginger
44g of strong crystalized ginger
1/2tsp tannin
6g Opti White
3g Booster Blanc
3t pectic enzyme
2kg sugar
2.25tsp citric acid

I prepped the lemongrass stock as I have done before, simmering it twice with the ginger. The stock was drained into the primary and the lemongrass/ginger added to a mesh bag, along with the lemon zest.



The bag was added to the primary, along with the concentrate, and water to 3 gallons. Once cool, the rest of the ingredients were added. pH adjusted from 4.04 to 3.39 with the citric acid. SG went from 1.030 to 1.085 with the 2kg of sugar.

The next day I rehydrated the EC-1118 that came with the kit, and it turned out to be my first case of nonviable yeast. I didn't get any bubbling in the starter like I usually do. I pitched it anyway, and predictably, nothing happened. I suppose the yeast was killed while sitting in the kit somewhere. So I sprinkled K1-V1116 and it took off within a couple of hours. I step-fed Fermaid K and got a nice even ferment and on day 7 at 1.010 I racked it to the carboy.


I will add Kmeta in a couple more days. This wine smelled great during the entire fermentation. It will make a nice drink for summer 2017.

Sunday, November 27, 2016

Thanksgiving 2016

Adam stayed in Florida with Joy's family for the 2016 Thanksgiving, but Jake and Allie were home. I think we were all hoping for a better November, as both the election and The Game didn't have the desired outcomes. Still, it was great to have everyone together.

The weekend had an inauspicious start. 


The sole occupant, not from our family, was unhurt. Not sure the tree will survive however, as the wound is large and deep. It takes a lot of alcohol to total a car without leaving the yard.

On to the food.

The new breakfast dish had apples and pastry topping. Easy and delicious.


Breakfast casserole is tradition.


I finished some limoncello that has been sitting in the closet for a long time. Vanilla is the secret ingredient.


For the first time, we smoked our turkey. The turkey was injected, and thus the big controversy was over whether we should wet brine it starting the day before. In the end, I gave it a 12 hour soak in a diluted wet brine, then smoked it for 6.5 hours around 275F. 


It was good, but not that smoky. All of the online sources say the perfect smoking turkey is 12# and we used a 20# bird. So maybe next time we'll try a little smaller bird.


We drank 2015 Elderberry-Blackberry with dinner and while nobody commented on the wine, the bottle was emptied, so I think that is a favorable review.

Before the weather turned on Sunday, Jake and I got some outside work done. We did some fence repairs, adding a fifth board where the cattle are still pushing under the fence.


Then we rented yet another great tool, a T-post driver, and went to work in the vineyard.

With this tool, the in-line T-posts went up in under 2 hours.


The cattle watering trough is gone, replaced by a hydrant. We're almost ready for grapes. In April we're getting 36 Norton and 36 Vidal Blanc, for 2 rows of each. I'm also trying Frontenac, Marechal Foch, Chambourcin, Traminette, and grafted Chardonel.

On the winemaking front, MLF of the Chambourcin and the Syrah was more or less complete 2 weeks ago.
 

Today we hit both batches with Kmeta and racked off of the oak. Naturally, we sampled both. The Chambourcin has a deep color, medium body, firm tannins; it tastes of dark berries with a nice long finish. The Syrah is, oddly, light in color and body; tannins are soft, and it is quite fruit forward jammy. While it is lighter than I was aiming for, Lisa will love this wine.  Jake too! Happy Thanksgiving!

Saturday, November 12, 2016

2016 Wines - Chapter 9 - Elderberry

I'm only making one 3 gallon batch of straight elderberry wine this year. The rest will be either cofermented with other fruit or used in experimental rosé wines. Nothing new here except for a new yeast. The Pasteur Red proved to be a little troublesome.

We started with 15# of elderberries, thawed.


The berries were simmered in 10.5 qt of water. When the berries were thawed, but not yet too hot, I hand crushed them in the pot.


Initial SG was 1.058. Roughly 6.5# of sugar later it was 1.090. The pH started at 4.60. Although I initially used less acid than last year, I overshot the pH and drove it down to 3.29. I don't like this wine that sharp, so I added 2t calcium carbonate to bring it back to 3.53. Opti Red, Booster Rouge, and pectic enzyme were added, then I covered the surface with plastic wrap and put the bucket in the fridge for a 3 day cold maceration.


After 3 days I warmed it up and pitched a starter of Pasteur Red. I step fed as usual and removed the skins and seeds on fermentation day 4.

Now normally I don't have any trouble moving this wine right through the primary fermentation. And I understood Pasteur Red to be a strong fermenter, with no unusual H2S tendencies or nutrient needs. But this wine stalled around 1.020. Around day 5 it got a slight off odor. I added another pinch of Fermaid K and warmed it up a bit, and that did the trick. The odor cleared up, and at 1.004 I racked it to secondary. Three days after that I racked it off the gross lees.



Sunday, October 30, 2016

Putting them to Bed

Lisa was in Florida for a weekend with her mom and sister, and call was kind to me.

The back porch project took another step forward. We removed the railing in the center of the porch and I'm removing a section of concrete to make the center bed more balanced. I cut the concrete last weekend but it did not yield to a sledgehammer. I rented a jackhammer to finish removing the concrete, and it worked like a charm.


I dug out the concrete and put up the two white boards I had. I'm short by 6' 8" so we can't close the book on the project quite yet.


I put the hydrangeas to bed. The last few years I've quit putting up chicken wire baskets in favor of simply a pile of limbs to trap the oak leaves.

Those piles of limbs and leaves are hiding the hydrangeas
I can't recall ever getting the plants into the greenhouse this late, the second to last day of October. Jake helped me with the plastic a couple of weeks ago when he was home. The plants which spent the summer inside the greenhouse look great. The plants which have been outside look a little rough. Without the bananas, there was room for everything. I recorded a little tour.



Monday, October 24, 2016

2016 Wines - Chapter 8 - Blueberry Rosé

The inspiration for this Blueberry Rosé came from a single comment in a wine blog post. We collected plenty of blueberries from Danamay Farm and at a U-pick farm at the Chalet in Michigan. The berries were frozen, then thawed and directly pressed. The color was nice and dark.


We added half of a can, 24 ounces, of Alexander's Sauvignon Blanc concentrate, along with Booster Blanc, Opti White, and pectic enzyme. The pH was very low at 2.64. Just under 2kg sugar brought the SG to 1.090 and 7t calcium carbonate brought the pH to 3.29. K1-V1116 was rehydrated and pitched. It turned out to be a very slow ferment. I step fed the ferment, kept it cool at first, but finally had to warm it up a little bit to get the specific gravity moving. On day 8 the SG was 1.012 and I racked it to carboy.


This wine has a nice color and nice aroma for this stage of the game. If nothing else, it will be a unique country wine.

Minor Harvest

We had a minor harvest at the Pierce Ranch over the past couple of weeks. I cut down the bananas because we need the room and they are too slow to produce. There was one bunch of Dwarf Red left and I cut it down and slowly let it ripen in the garage. We couldn't eat them all before they were fully ripe, so I froze the remainder and we'll use these in wine.

Ready for the freezer
I grew the biggest sugar apple of my career. The rest of the family didn't like it that much so I ended up eating it all.



Finally, after about 10 years, we have blackhaws. They are reasonably sweet, mostly seed, but with a dark brown flesh which reminds me of a date or dried fig. The blackhaws are going into an Estate Quadberry Wine, along with elderberries, blackberries, and haskaps.


Sunday, October 23, 2016

2016 Wines - Chapter 7 - Lemongrass Mint

With time, the 2015 Lemongrass Mint wine improved quite a lot. It was perhaps a bit heavy on the mint, but still a very drinkable white wine. Back in May, the mint and lemongrass were abundant, but I wasn't ready to make the wine. So I picked a 3 gallon batch worth, simmered the stock, and put it in the freezer.

Since I was splitting up a can of grape concentrate, I thawed out the stock and started this wine. The stock had 650g lemongrass and 2qt mint leaves. To this I added 24oz Sauv Blanc concentrate, 2.35kg sugar, citric and tartaric acids, Opti White, and Booster Blanc. Looks yummy.


K1-V1116 was the chosen yeast. I'm not sure why, but this was kind of a slow ferment. Maybe it was the fact that I rehydrated the yeast without any must. I kept the temp down to start, and when I let the temp come back up it never really took off. But it steadily worked down to 1.009 on day 7. Because of the slightest hint of an off odor, I splash racked it to the carboy.


Sunday, October 16, 2016

Preparing to Grow some Grapes

Vineyard installation got underway this weekend in the back pasture. We finally fenced out the cattle a couple of weeks ago. Last week I brought home 4000' of high tensile 12.5g wire, 14 9' fence posts, and 14 earth anchors. Amazon had wire vices. A1 Rental had the auger and earth anchor driver. My good friends Bob and Shawn proved invaluable.

The earth anchors went in surprisingly well. Twice they stuck, but a 1" galvanized 6' pipe allowed us to get those last two all the way in.

It doesn't turn very fast, but it has a kick
We haven't had much rain, so there was a bit of a hardpan which made digging the post holes slow going at first. But once through the top 12" the auger chewed through the moister soil easily. 

Stretching the top wire proved to be a challenge. The first two methods were ineffective. But Bob earned every bite of his grilled cheese sandwich when he came up with an improvised wire reel using a garden cart. 


The wire went up easily for the last 6 rows.

Bob and I tamped in the posts at 65 degrees. We attempted installation of the tiebacks using the inline wire strainers. It turns out we were missing an important tool. 

You can't install a vineyard without this

The inline wire strainer ratchet can be found at Orscheln's for $6. On Sunday I made the lower part of the tiebacks in the workshop, then moved out to the vineyard to finish up.



The soil analysis came Saturday in the mail. The pH is 5.5. I need a lot of lime and a little potash, phosphorus, and nitrogen. I hope to till these in next weekend so I can hang the lower wire before it gets too cold.

A special thanks to Bob and Shawn for helping Saturday. My winery is open to you both any time.

Saturday, October 8, 2016

2016 Wines - Chapter 6 - Pinot Grigio

I bought two things from St. Louis Wine and Beermaking, Syrah grapes and a juice pail of Pinot Grigio.

I hope the wine is as awesome as the label on the bucket
This wine started with some crazy numbers. I rechecked twice, and repeatedly got pH 3.01, SG 1.088, TA 0.4%. I didn't tweak the juice, but added K-meta, OptiWhite, and some pectic, then pitched QA 23. My plan was to ferment this as cool as possible, under 20C. However, I pushed the temp down before the yeast really got rolling. So two days later it was still puttering along around 1.078. I let it come up to 23C to get the yeast going, then put it back in the ice pack bath, keeping it down around 21-22C. With that help it steadily dropped to 1.006 on day 8, when it got racked to a 6.5 gallon carboy.


I don't know yet if I'm a fan of juice pails. There was relatively little interaction with this wine - it was a little too easy.

2016 Wines - Chapter 5 - Syrah

We got swept up in the moment 2 weeks ago at St. Louis Wine and Beermaking and bought a juice bucket of Pinot Grigio and 3 lugs of Syrah. Doing so further violates our "locally grown" winemaking precedent, but extending our winemaking boundaries requires sacrifices.

We crushed and destemmed at the shop. The volume would have required splitting the batch, so I picked up a larger fermenter. Once home, we added a small dose of Kmeta and took some measurements. SG was 1.102, pH 3.65, and TA 0.5%. We added 30g of tartaric acid, 6g Opti Red, and 12t pectic enzyme and let it macerate overnight.


The following day we pitched RC 212. This yeast is supposed to have higher nutrient requirements, but usual step feeding with Fermaid K resulted in an uneventful, steady fermentation. Temperature peaked at 29.4C. By day 6 it was down to SG of 0.998. On day 8 Jake helped me press.


We got just under 9 gallons. After racking off the gross lees I expect about 8 gallons. We'll MLF with CH16, give it some oak, and age this for a year.


Thursday, September 29, 2016

2016 Wines - Chapter 4 - Chambourcin

I'm not going to lie, this wine has me a little nervous. It is my first red from grapes and first MLF. But I did not chose this wine or these grapes, they chose me. Thank you, Books Vineyard.




Lisa and I destenned the grapes by hand the day they were picked, then gently crushed them. We got 6 gallons of must. The original numbers were 1.082 (~20 brix), pH 3.01, TA 0.85%. Just tasting the grapes, I would not have guessed that the acid was quite so high. I treated with a small dose of Kmeta, then 5t pectic enzyme, 5g Opti Red. The pH came to 3.55 with 10t of calcium carbonate. Then 2 days of cold maceration.


After the must warmed, I pitched a starter of Montrachet. Fermentation took off, and the wine seemed to color up nicely. I step-fed Fermaid K. By day 7 it was down to 1.000. I needed the bucket for grapes the following day, so we pressed.


We got 3 gallons of free run and almost 2 more gallons with pressing. The plan is to let the wine go completely quite, rack off of the gross lees, then pitch WLP675 which arrived last week.


Tuesday, September 27, 2016

2016 Wines - Chapter 3 - Catawba Rosé

I don't care for the name "Pink Catawba." Therefore this wine shall be known as Catawba Rosé.

Three years ago Lisa and I picked Catawba and Vignoles grapes from the Books vineyard a mile down the road. I pressed the Catawba off right away using an old apple cider press loaned to me by a friend. The pH was 2.93, yet somehow it fermented, and I spent the next 12 months trying to correct a foxy, unbalanced wine. I tamed the foxiness with some infusion of passionfruit and grapefruit, and I finally loaded it with enough sugar to barely balance the acid. Now it is drinkable, but it is not a relaxed wine. It is a strong, muscular, busting-at-the-seams wine, almost too much for a table wine. It is a wine which needs to just chill; that's why we drink it with an ice cube in the glass.

I think the Books have had a couple of not-so-great harvests recently, but this year we got the call to come pick again. Lisa couldn't go, and the picking window was very short, so I went out late in the evening as the sun was casting long shadows already. I took three buckets and filled two with Chambourcin, one nearly with Catawba before it got too dark to see. As thanks, I took a 2014 Elderberry and the 2015 Lychee.

Catawba foreground, Chambourcin in the back.
When I tasted the Catawba grapes it became obvious to me why they probably need some skin time. The pulp has all of the sweetness and foxiness. The skin not only has the tannins and color but also a taste character and complexity which I have to think will help the wine. So we made Catawba Rosé.

We destemmed all of the grapes by hand and gently crushed. I was a little disappointed in the final volume, which was about 2.5 gallons of must before pressing.

Use your feet!
The pH was originally 2.86. 4t of calcium carbonate brought it up to 3.41. The original TA was 0.75% and the SG 1.082. That night we also added 3t of pectic, 3g Opti White, and k-meta. It was left to macerate at room temp for 24 hours.

By the next day the native yeast had battled through the k-meta and we had some fermentation. I pressed off 1.5 gallons of nice pink must, and pitched a starter of QA 23. It was a struggle to keep the temperature down, it was a vigorous ferment.

The ice bath.
By day 5 the SG was 1.003 and I racked to carboys. The color is unexpectedly that of apple cider. Our final volume will likely be just north of 1 gallon. With tweaks, this should be a nice little batch of rosé wine.



Sunday, September 18, 2016

Blue Apron and Some Homemade Wine

Is this cheating?

We received our first shipment of Blue Apron last week. We signed up for the two person plan, with which you get three different meals. Our first dish was cheesy grits and shrimp. My only complaint was that we needed a second green onion. Tasty!


The second dish was a corn, tomato, ricotta pasta dish which I thought was decent, not excellent.  The third was Asian chicken with bok choy and a cucumber-ginger salad, my favorite of the week.

We supplemented with a little tomato salad
Each of these meals has about 15 minutes of prep work and 15-20 minutes of cooking time. The portions are almost perfect for us, but we could use slightly less in the way of carbohydrates. I like the fact that we end up with meals and ingredients we otherwise wouldn't try.

Is it cheating? Not in terms of cooking. It is cheating in terms of shopping, and I'm fine with that.

We had two very nice homemade wines this past week. The 2014 elderberry blush continues to taste like the best wine I've ever made. I have about 3 bottles left and when it is gone, there will be sadness. We also tried the lychee wine. The first pour is not impressive, but after some time it opens up, and it turns out to be a very nice wine. Thankfully I have plenty left; for some reason we didn't drink much this summer. Hopefully it ages well and the supply lasts until next summer. 


Saturday, September 10, 2016

2016 Wines - Chapter 2 - Blueberry

I'm tickled with last year's blueberry, my only disappointment being that I only have 1 gallon. This year, I made several adjustments to the recipe and we made a 3 gallon batch.

Planning this batch required more mathematics than is typical. I wasn't sure what the yield of pressed blueberries was expected to be. I originally estimated 18# of blueberries for 6#/gallon if I got the water addition and the final volume right. I will spare the details, but my calculations indicated that I should get 1 gallon from 12.8# of berries. Because I have plenty, I bumped to 20# of berries, which were thawed and hit with K-meta. To hit 3 gallons, 1.44 gallons of liquid was required. Of this, 36 ounces was Alexander's Merlot Concentrate. This stuff is 68-Brix-sweet-goodness and I imagine it would be tasty on ice cream. In the wine, it should be an improvement over Welch's. The remaining 1 gallon and 20 ounces was water. It was all left in the bucket overnight to finish thawing.



The next day the blueberries were gently crushed. 550g of sugar brought the SG from 1.062 to 1.080; I didn't want to overshoot, as a further increase was expected as the fruit releases sugar. I added 3g Opti-Red and 3t pectic enzyme. The pH was 2.91 and increased to 3.37 with 4t of calcium carbonate. The must was left at room temp to macerate for another 24 hours.

After 24 hours on the pectic enzyme, the numbers had changed somewhat.  SG 1.072, surprisingly. I bumped to 1.085 with another 390g of sugar. The pH dropped back to 3.01, so with another 2t calcium carbonate it came up to 3.27. It was good looking, great smelling must. I pitched a starter of Montrachet and we soon had a nice cap.

Unfortunately despite perfectly timed step feeding, this wine struggled to get to 1.022 where it stuck. I pitched K1-V1116 on day 7.


By day 8 it was at 1.012 and dropping. I was tied up the following night, so I pressed it and moved it into carboys.


The volume will be spot on by the time we account for losses from racking. I'm excited about this wine!