scupadine wine recipe

Look for a recipe for scupadine wine. any an all help appreciated

Reply to
wxfreqrs
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Look for a recipe for scupadine wine. any an all help appreciated

-- Don SEMPER VIGILIS

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Reply to
Dionysus

Scupperdine is the name of a native American grape, probably a cross between the better known Scuppernong and Muscadine grapes. The "recipe" for making wine from it would be to crush it and let it ferment. Here's a link to a winery that does just that:

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Mark Lipton

Reply to
Mark Lipton

Mark wrote on Tue, 25 Jul 2006 09:36:43 -0400:

ML> wxfreqrs wrote: ??>> Look for a recipe for scupadine wine. ??>> any an all help appreciated ??>>

ML> Scupperdine is the name of a native American grape, ML> probably a cross between the better known Scuppernong and ML> Muscadine grapes. The "recipe" for making wine from it ML> would be to crush it and let it ferment. Here's a link to ML> a winery that does just that:

ML>

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I've never tried wine from "Scupadine grapes" but I can safely say that I have tried Scupernong grapes and wine made from them

*once* in each case!

James Silverton.

Reply to
James Silverton

"James Silverton" wrote in news:It2dnXDdHOlwrFvZnZ2dnUVZ snipped-for-privacy@comcast.com:

or as my wife says, "Twice! The first time and the last time."

Reply to
Joseph Coulter

For what its worth---all the scuppernongs I've had, mostly amateur, are better than the vinifera made in the Carolina's like Biltmore Estate---their "better " wines use left coast grapes. Scuppernong is the mainstay of "Mason-Dixon Meritage" composed of Skippering, concord or Niagara and marechel foch.

Reply to
Joe "Beppe"Rosenberg

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