First tastings of a cranberry wine

After Thanksgiving, I took advantage of the sale on cranberries by making cranberry wine. At Jack Keller's suggestion, I used the highbush recipe on his site:

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I've finally bottled it. Some I bottled with priming sugar to make sparkling wine. The rest is just a red wine. I bottled 4 days ago and have tasted it. It's kind of harsh, but I don't think it's bad. I'm wondering how long I might have to wait on it.

Instead of using golden raisins/sultanas, I used Californian raisins. I only now discovered that mistake. This may explain the darker color of the wine. I manually pressed the berries/raisins after an initial fermentation using just my hands. Well, they were sanitized and all; I remember not being able to scratch some itches while I was doing that. I don't think I got an infection in the wine, but I may have over pressed.

The flavor is kind of bitter. The bitterness isn't in the initial taste. The impression I get from the first sip is church wine. Kind of diluted, but very warming. The wine does warm up my chest. My girlfriend thought I reeked of booze after a glass of this wine. I don't have the OG, so I don't know the conversion. The FG was 1.002 at

55 degrees Fahrenheit. I'm thinking there might be some fusel in the wine since it was fermenting at around 72 degrees ambient temperature.

It seems to me that the wine needs about half a year in bottles before it'll taste sane. I'm wondering about the bitterness and the general booziness. I've only made one other red wine before--from a kit. It had intially a rubbery taste leftover from yeast, and that aged out quickly.

Reply to
Adam Preble
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Hello, I've made cranberry wine and it usually is very good at a year. Most wines will benefit from a bit of aging, it will smooth out the alcoholic kick taste, and the harshness of the cranberry. I sweeten a bit which helps with the harshness sometimes. How old was it when you bottled it? Darlene

Reply to
Dar V

I make cranberry wine from the frozen concentrates I pick up at walmart. I'm carefull that I get concentrates that do not contain preservatives as this will of course inhibit or prevent the fermentation. I do find that I have trouble gettting the wine to ferment out all of the sugar. 1.090 to start. All of that being said... It makes an awesome wine. One of my favorites. I've yet to have a single person that tasted some not aske me for a bottle and / or offer to buy the supplies to make more.

I've never tried it from the fruit berrys.

Reply to
Brad

I think raisins have too much influence in the taste of wine. My high- bush cranberry wine is done without it. I recommend if you make strawberry wine do it without the raisins. You need to do a little extra aging but the time is well worth it.

Reply to
Murray Clark

I made that recipe about 3 years ago. It was harsh after one year but not too bad. After 2 years it was much better. After 3 it has not changed much beyond 2. I like it blended with a white wine (50:50) but most women that have tried it like it as it is.

Ray

Reply to
Ray Calvert

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