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MAKING SWEET WINES
Making your wines sweet is a deceptively simple and
straight forward
process. But, because there always
seems to be a few questionable
recipes or ideas flying
around for making a sweet wine, I decided to go
over
some of the basics. Hopefully this will clear up some of
the confusion
and misconceptions surrounding this
process.
- Basic Process
The first thing that needs to be understood is that any
sugar you add at
the beginning of a fermentation should
have nothing to do with how sweet
your wine will turn
out. This sugar is added simply for the wine yeast to
turn into alcohol.
The "Potential Alcohol Scale" that is on almost all wine
making
hydrometers
is used to verify that the correct
amount of sugar is being added to obtain
the alcohol
percentage you desire. If the fermentation goes as
planned,
the wine will be dry (without sugar) or close
to dry when done fermenting,
but more importantly, at
the specific alcohol level you intended.
Sweetening can then be added to the wine to taste. A
stabilizer such as
Potassium Sorbate should also be
added at this time to inhibit any re-
fermenting that the
new sugars may unintentionally feed. By adding your
beginning sugar in this way and then sweetening later
on, you gain
complete control over both the wine's
sweetness and its final alcohol level.
Now granted, if you add more sugar to the fermentation
than the wine
yeast can handle, the remaining sugars
will contribute toward the wine's
sweetness. This would
be alright except that quite often the wine ends up
too
sweet for most peoples taste with no way of correcting
it. Secondly, if
a stabilizer is not added to wines
prepared in this way, they may decide to
ferment again,
sometimes even several months after being bottle. This
can be an equation for a big mess.
The highest level of alcohol I would ever depend on
obtaining from the
initial sugars added to a
fermentation is 13%, and that's assuming you
have a
healthy, vigorous fermentation. Shooting for alcohol
levels that are
beyond this is possible, but always in
question.
So as you might start to see, piling on the sugar at the
beginning of
fermentation, in reality, gives you little
control over how sweet the wine is
actually going to be.
- What To Sweeten With?
This first thing that needs to be pointed out is that
anytime you add sugar
to a wine for sweetening and the
fermentation is complete, it is of great
importance that
you add a wine stabilizer such as "Potassium Sorbate" at
the same time. Otherwise, the newly added sugars can
potentially make
the wine re-ferment causing it to
become dry tasting all over again.
Sweetening your wine with regular store-bought cane
sugar is perfectly
okay and is what most people use.
But, I though I would mention some
other ideas that have
been used successfully by some other home wine-
makers and
myself.
-
Corn Sugar in not quite as sweet as cane sugar you buy
from the store,
but seems to give the wine a more crisp,
cleaner flavor. This would be a
good choice for most
white wines or more generally, wines with a lighter,
more delicate flavor.
- Rice Syrup has even a cleaner flavor than Corn Sugar.
It imparts a
character that can almost be described as
minty. This would be a great
choice for Sauvignon Blanc
or maybe even an apple wine.
- Honey can also be a be used to sweeten your wine. For
example, use
raspberry honey to sweeten a raspberry
wine. Very effective.
- We also offer a
Wine Conditioner that makes sweetening
your wine very
simple. It is a heavy syrup with
stabilizer already incorporated into it. You
just add to
taste.
- Juice concentrates quite often are appropriate as a
sweetener and will
also enhance the wine's flavor. Also,
consideration should be given to the
fact that the
wine's acid level will be increased by the natural acids
in the
concentrate.
- Fresh Fruit Juices can be used in the same way as
concentrate. Grape,
apple, pear all work very well.
Fresh fruit juice is quite often the best
choice when
sweetening harsher wines such as elderberry.
- Artificial Sweeteners need to be mention here as a
precaution. Sweet-
eners such as Equal and Sweet 'N Low do
not bond well on their own with
liquids. Pop
manufacturers use binders to keep these artificial
sweet-
eners suspended. If added to a wine that has been
stored these types of
sweeteners will need to be stirred
up off the bottom before serving.
By all means experiment. If you have a 5 gallon batch,
take off a
measured quart and add a
measured amount of sweetener of your
choice to it. I you like
the results, multiply your efforts to the rest of the
batch. If not, pour it
back in with the rest and start all over.
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E. C. Kraus
Home Wine & Beer Making Supplies
Address: 733 S. Northern
Blvd. - P. O. Box 7850 - Independence, MO 64053
Phone:(816) 254-7448
Fax:(816) 254-7051 Toll Free: (800) 353-1906
Email:
customerservice@eckraus.com
Copyright (c) 2003, Kraus
Sales, L. L. C. All rights reserved. This article may be
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Distribution or publishing of
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