It is essential that all water used in making wine be pure and wholesome. It doesn't seem to matter if the water is hard or soft; at least, no significant difference has ever been noted. There is a body of opinion in favour of using boiled water. It not only precipitates some calcium carbonate but also sterilises the water beyond doubt and dissipates any dissolved gases, such as chlorine, used in purification. Spring water is highly regarded, but well water is often thought to be suspect, and boiling is recommended. Rain water should never be used without first filtering it through a sterile chamois cloth and boiling it thoroughly. It often contains sulphur impurities. Distilled water is not recommended since it lacks trace elements of mineral salts so often beneficial to the yeast.
When adding water to a fruit must, it should be remembered that fruit consists mainly of water. If the fruit is well crushed and pressed, up to 80% of its weight can be extracted with equipment suitable for use in the home.
Water is added not only to dilute acids but also to leach out flavour, sugar and body, as well as all the nourishment. Some ingredients such as vegetables need to be boiled for this purpose.
Flavour
Flavour is a combination of taste, odour and texture. There are four main tastes ? salt, sweet, sour, bitter ? and three ancillary ones ? metallic, fatty and alkaline. Odours have been categorised into five groups ? ethereal, camphory, floral, musky and minty. Texture in this context, refers primarily to the degree of 'thickness'.
Flavour naturally differs with every ingredient and from one year to another, or one place to another with the same ingredient. In some fruits, flowers and vegetables it is very strong and to avoid an over?whelming flavour care must be taken not to use too much of the same ingredient. By reducing the quantity of fruit to obtain a satisfactory flavour the total body, acid and nourishment are also reduced and these must then be added to make a balanced must.
In some soft fruits there is a flavour change during fermentation due partly to the withdrawal of sweetness from the flavour. Wines made from these in?gredients taste better sweet than dry.
Concentration sometimes has the same effect and this is noticeable in rosehip syrup. Dried herbs and dried flowers are also extremely concentrated in flavour and a very small packet goes a long way.
Opinions differ on the merit of using boiling water to assist in the extraction of flavour. Whilst there are many who use this method with excellent results there are others who prefer to use cold water, arguing that this does not dissipate any of the flavour or volatile acids of the ingredients. By fermenting a must on the pulp, the alcohol helps to extract the flavour and 4 or 5 days is usually sufficient. Furthermore, the off-coming carbon dioxide helps to prevent the invasion of spoilage micro-organisms.
Bottles For Wine Making
Most winemakers use ordinary white granulated sugar, since this is still the least expensive, the most convenient and the best. Soft brown sugar may be used in the making of Madeira type wines to produce a caramel taste akin to the madeira flavour. Cube sugar, caster sugar and icing sugar are all more expensive but nevertheless suitable. Golden syrup or a light treacle may be used in red wines or strong dessert white wines, but the colour and flavour of this sugar affects the colour and flavour of light white wines. Fructose or glucose may also be used, preferably some of each, though they can be used singly if desired. Invert sugar is simply a mixture of fructose and glucose which ferments very rapidly. It can be made by boiling a solution of ordinary white granulated sugar with a teaspoonful of citric acid for 20 minutes. Although invert sugar is used extensively in the brewing industry its many advantages in winemaking are less apparent than one first may think. Commercial invert sugar contains 25% water, so 4 measures of this is equal to 3 measures of granulated sugar.
Honey may be substituted for sugar in the ratio of 4 parts honey to 3 parts sugar. It will affect the flavour slightly and it is recommended that not more than one quarter to one third of the sugar be so replaced, unless a honey flavour is required in the wine. Similarly, malt extract may be used and the same proportions apply. Black treacle and molasses should always be avoided since they impart a most unpleasant taste to a wine.
Cereal as a source of carbo hydrate has limited merits. Although the starch in the cereal can be converted to sugar by the enzyme diastase, the grain imparts a flavour which can hardly be described as vinous. They are most effective when used as an additive to provide some body to a wine, rather than as a main source of sugar.
Most winemakers add sugar to a must in its dry, granulated crystals form, and stir till it is dissolved. Others prefer to use a sugar syrup to effect a quicker dissolution of the sugar without so much stirring, with its consequent admission of air and, therefore, oxygen to the must. The usual formulae is 2 lb sugar dissolved in 1 pint of boiling water to produce 2 pints of syrup (1 kg dissolved in 62 els produces 1 litre). The solution is covered and left to cool before use. If a syrup is used, less water is required.
Lactose or milk sugar is sometimes used for sweetening a dry wine. It cannot be fermented by ordinary wine yeast. The quantity to use depends on the amount of sweetness desired of course; about 20 grams (f oz) per bottle is enough for the average palate. Saccharin - which is more than 500 times as sweet as sugar -may also be used to sweeten a fermented wine. It has no carbohydrate content and cannot be used for fermentation.
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