Thursday, August 31, 2017

Estate Pawpaws

It is difficult to get to them in time, the deer eat them right off of the tree. They will ripen just a little bit after picking.


Tuesday, August 29, 2017

2017 Wines - Chapter 2 - Vignoles

I got a text from the local vineyard a couple of weeks back. They were unable to get their Vignoles pruned last winter and therefore are unable to harvest mechanically. Once ready, I could take all of the Vignoles I wanted.

Of course the call came at perhaps the worst possible time. Lisa and I were set to leave town for four days and so I couldn't really start a ferment. The solution turned out to be a well known technique known as cold settling.


We ended up with about 90# of grapes. Field testing showed pH 2.81 and SG of 1.086. We whole-cluster pressed around 6 gallons which tested at 2.85 and 1.084.


Before heading out of town, I raised the pH to about 3.0 with 2T calcium carbonate, added 2T pectic enzyme, then capped the bucket for a 4 day period of cold settling in the fridge.

The wine 4 days later had dropped a fair amount of tartaric acid and sediment, and racking yielded a nice clear must. I will definitely perform cold settling again! The pH hung in there at 2.99 but the TA was brutally high at 15g/L. Calculations indicated that 7T of calcium carbonate should drop the TA to around 8g/L and coincidentally this was the maximum recommended dose. We slowly added the calcium carbonate, watching the pH, but eventually wound up adding the maximum amount and arrived at an acceptable preferment pH of 3.33.

We used 11g Opti White, 6g Booster Blanc, 0.6g Lallzyme EX. We used QA 23 with GoFerm and Fermaid K, step fed. We mostly succeeded in keeping the fermentation below 15C using ice packs placed in water every 4-6 hours in the outer bucket.


The cooler temps didn't slow down QA 23 at all. Bentonite was added at day 3. The Vignoles dropped to 1.004 by the 7th day with great aroma and no off odors. After racking, we are just short of 6 gallons.


We'll give it a few days to finish up in the carboy and rack it off to a 5g and 1/2g carboys. A very promising wine!

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

2017 Wines - Chapter 1 - Blackberry

We didn't have to travel as often this year to get the fruit we needed, as the elderberry and blackberry yields continue to improve at home. Therefore this year's blackberry was an all-juice, no water affair using mostly home-grown blackberries. The ingredients:

  • 51# blackberries
  • 2.5# elderberries (for color and tannin)
  • 0.5g Lallzyme EX
  • 5g OptiRed
  • 5g Booster Rouge
  • 2t tannin
  • 1 cup heavy toast American oak chips
  • 2700g sugar 
  • 6t calcium carbonate 
The sugar adjusted the SG to 1.090. The calcium carbonate adjusted the pH to 3.40. 71B was the yeast, step fed with Fermaid K, total of 1.5tsp. 


I let this wine go until the cap dropped, then pressed off 5 gallons. 


Once in the carboy, I dosed with KMS. There was a fair amount of sediment and airspace after the first day. Given how quiet the wine was and that we were leaving town, I racked it down to 4.5 gallons in separate containers. We made several tweaks to the technique, including tannin and oak chips in the primary, elderberry in the primary, and letting it ferment to dry before pressing. It will be interesting to see the result.

A Good Food Day

Last weekend we went to the Chalet. Lake Michigan showed its many different faces. Grandma Sharon and Grandpa Bob came on Friday, when the Lake was angry, and so the afternoon was spent poking around St. Joseph.


Saturday the Lake calmed down and we stayed home. We had a delicious Bit of Swiss breakfast, followed by a nice walk. Lunch was tasty Vietnamese-style vegetarian sandwiches. The afternoon was spent on the beach (Lisa and Robert) and hanging out at the Chalet (Sharon and Bob). We broke out the wine early, starting with the 2016 Pinot grigio. Lisa and Sharon love it, but I still get the faintest hint of hay or a barnyard. Next we moved to appetizers and 2016 blueberry rosé. All agreed this was good wine, even better at the end of the bottle. Dinner was flat iron steak with tomato-fregola warm salad, accompanied by 2016 blackberry wine. I'm satisfied that this year's blackberry does not suffer the flaws of 2015. More Bit of Swiss for desert. Sharon declared it "a good food day." Indeed.


Tuesday, August 8, 2017

Lisa's New Hobby

I've been bothering Lisa to get a hobby. I've even offered to share one of mine. Joking, I suggested woodworking so that we could rebuild the arbor. She took me seriously.


The first arbor we built out by the pool was made of cedar and had tall, stately semicircular arches put together with biscuits. The arches themselves held up reasonably well, but there were two design flaws. First, there was not enough stability built into the span. I soon found myself going out in the spring and adding a metal brace here and there to keep the top together in the north-south direction. Second, it was made from cedar, which had a nice finish and was easy to work, but which didn't hold up well at the top of each post. A couple of years ago we took the whole thing down.

This new arbor was simplified and we knocked it out weekend before last. We have 2x8 across the span, 2x6 parallel to the walk, and 4" lag screws to hold everything in place. It wants to rack just a little in the east-west direction so we'll be adding some 45° braces. Overall however it's very sturdy. We are still debating whether it gets a coat of opaque white stain after it dries out.