Best Wine Information Blog

5:28 AM

08/16/08 - Wine Vineyard

A Wine Vineyard Artilce for Your Viewing

Make no wine before its time



My Approach to Winemaking


"Make no wine before its time."


C.J.J. Berry's classic First Steps in Winemaking presented 130 winemaking recipes in a unique fashion, listing the recipes under the calendar month in which the ingredients are usually plentiful and the corresponding wines are usually made in Great Britain. While that organization probably served the home gardener well in the 1950s and 60s in Great Britain, elsewhere, especially in these days of readily available produce from produce and supermarkets, such an organization makes less sense. It is difficult to utilize such a presentation without constant reference to the index. An alphabetical organization is far more utilitarian and will be used in my recipes section, with the primary ingredient listed first. I'll leave the timing of your winemaking to you.


While I love grape wines, I also love the varied tastes of "country wines," those wines made from fruits, vegetables, seeds, grain, leaves, flowers, bark, roots, and other non-grape ingredients. In particular, I like making these various wines. So, while you will find grape-wine recipes here, you will find that the bulk of this web site is devoted to non-grape wines.


I am also more than a little partial to making wines from wild, edible plants. Maybe it's the Boy Scout in me or maybe it's the idea of using what God has placed before us to be used, or maybe it's the activity of hunting for and gathering the ingredients in the few remaining wild parcels of land surrounding us, but I suspect it's a bit of all three. Thus, I am fond of using wild grapes for my grape wines and wild edibles for my non-grape wines. So you will find sections of this web site devoted specifically to the native grapes of North America and making wines from wild edible plants. In most cases, the recipes for a wild ingredient's wine is the same, or almost the same, as for the domesticated variety of the same ingredient if there is a cultivated variety. When this is the case, the ingredient's wine recipe(s) will be found in the main recipe section. But when there are special considerations for the wild variety, the recipe(s) will be listed under the section on making wines from wild edible plants. Wine recipes for wild grapes will be found, naturally enough, under the section on native grapes. The point is, if you don't find a recipe under the main recipe section, look under the edible plants section just to be sure. And, in a very few cases, you will find different recipes for the same ingredient under both sections. Again, look in both sections just to be sure.


Finally, I have to warn you that portions of this web site are, as they say, "under construction." That simply means there is more to say on the subject. No, you won't find any "under constraction" signs, but you might notice that the page or section is obviously unfinished. Where this occurs, I apologize in advance. The material I aim to present is simply vast, and I only have limited time to devote to web-building. So I ask you to bear with me, bookmark the site, and check back often. The truth is that I have hundreds of wine recipes to post and intend to do so, but it does take time. If you can't wait, send me an email request for a particular recipe and I'll write you back and post the reply under the requested recipes section (another good place to check, by the way).


My best to each of you, and may your wines always meet your expectations.



About the Author


We have been in the Wine and Beer ingredient industry for
several years. Please visit our websites


The Masters Touch and New
York Micro Brew



A Short Wine Vineyard Summary

Make no wine before its time


My Approach to Winemaking
"Make no wine before its time."
C.J.J. Berry's classic First Steps in Winemaking presented 130 winemaking recipes in a uniqu...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Recommended Wine Vineyard Items

Screwpull Trilogy Twist Style Pocket Corkscrew with Foil Cutter


Trilogy Pocket Model Corkscrew and Foil Cutter SetThe new Trilogy Pocket Model Corkscrew from Le Cruset makes cork removal a cinch. The patented red ball feature ensures a smooth transition between cork extraction and ejection from the corkscrew – no more jammed corks! Polycarbonate construction will last forever and it folds up neatly for storage or to go in your pocket. Set includes the Trilogy Foil Cutter that doubles as a stand.


Price: 24.95 USD



Current Wine Vineyard News

Have You Read?: Book shows that history doesn't have to be boring (Tahoe Daily Tribune)

Fri, 08 Aug 2008 06:12:16 PDT
Author Geraldine Brooks' historical novel "People of the Book" is loosely based on a real book, "The Sarajevo Haggadah." The novel is a fictionalized account of how that book survived and the vulnerability of culture and ideas.

Best Bets (Denver Post)

Thu, 07 Aug 2008 23:59:25 PDT
Wednesday.Shorts. Ten area high school students strut the figurative red carpet when they premiere shorts they made for the Cinemocracy online film competition (sponsored by the Denver Film Society, Denver Office of Cultural Affairs and the Denver 2008 Convention Host Committee). "Downfall" and "Clique" address "What Is Democracy?" wrestling with images of homelessness and notions of media ...

A guys' sip and sample (Toronto Sun)

Wed, 06 Aug 2008 03:04:46 PDT
Hurry! Hurry! Beerfest tickets going fast


Wine Search
Wine List

Labels:

BlinkBitsBlinkList Add To BlogmarksCiteULike
diigo furl Google  LinkaGoGo
HOLM ma.gnolianetvouzrawsugar
reddit Mojo this page at Rojo Scuttle Smarking
spurl Squidoo StumbleUpon Tailrank
TechnoratiAddThis Social Bookmark Button
&type=page">Add to any serviceSocial Bookmark
onlywire Socializersocialize it