Can you freeze wine after you've opened the bottle?
4 months ago
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- 4 months ago
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my first wine bottle sparkler
Comments (7)actually the leafy things came off the edge of a collar on a shirt..Saw them and thought they looked to good to stay on it and just 'snip snip' and they ended up on bottle plus I also added a small insulin bottle with stones on it and wound copper wire around it and connected it to one of the copper wires on bottle......See MoreWine - bottling with Weck types?
Comments (3)Yes - that was my thought about boiling it - which would bring the temperatures too high. Although it takes 212 degrees (another disclaimer) to effectively boil away the alcohol. Since wine is a fermented process in the first place, I'm not sure that it would need to be boiled in order to be free of contaminants - as say for food preservation would have to be. Working with sauerkraut (a fermented product) with less demands for getting an adequate seal, I was hoping this principal could also be applied to wine. Those little Weck bottles are so cute - and it would be so nice to be able to have an individual bottle of wine at each imbibing, rather than having an open bottle as a second setting. Just mulling over the possibilities - but will probably invest in bottles, caps and capping supplies after all. I know I'm really a tightwad - and hate to spend the money, if there is an alternate way available. Thanks flora - appreciate the return. By the way, would enjoy hearing about your wine-making ventures, as this is rather new to me. Bejay...See More200-300 wine bottle 'refrigerator' recs?
Comments (12)We had to find one to fit a smaller space and couldn't go larger. Ours is a Cave a Vin. We called a wine cellar place to check out cooling systems and insulation -- originally thinking we would convert a closet to get more storage. Didn't work out to be practical. They also told us they had people insist on built-ins being removed when they bought a house or refuse to buy a house with one in it (both issues involving alcoholics and religious reasons). They suggested this unit and ordered it for us. I think the cost was a good bit less than the others (Eurocave, etc.) and the biggest difference (for our needs at least) was cosmetics. We were happier to not pay for better looking since all you can see is the glass door. We've had ours 8-9 years now without a single issue -- other than changing which closet we decided to repurpose. The Galt name is familiar, but I think we ordered through a Houston dealer....See MoreBottling Wine & First Batch Sampling
Comments (8)I think that it's fine for lighter colored wines to be bottled in dark glass. It gives them more protection from damaging sunlight and, as you say, you can always put it in a decanter for people to see the wine. Personally, all of my wines and meads go into dark bottles since I want people to focus on the wine when it's in the drinking glass where it can really shine and be appreciated. Congratulations on the blackberry wine! When it's well done, blackberry is very tasty and the color is beautiful. Fizzy while you're bottling can be a couple of things ... either coming out of the racking tube into the bottle very fast and splashing around inside the bottle (which isn't too bad) or the wine is not done fermenting (which is only good if you're intending on it and using champagne bottles). I'd move one of the bottles to a warm spot for a few days and then open carefully to see if it's settled down or if you're making bombs. A little harsh at bottling time is probably not too much to worry about depending on how long you've bulk aged the wine - a lot of that harshness will hopefully go away with a few months in teh bottle. I've never used screw top bottles with a cork and I haven't seen it recommended. I think it's something to do with the design of the neck on the screw tops and possibly their strength to hold a cork but I don't remember exactly. I haven't bought labels in a long while - I just grab a graphics package like MS-Publisher or Photoshop and create them there. Then I print them on normal paper, cut to size and attach to the bottles with a glue stick. Works well and it's pretty fast if you have a little help. For the vin ordinaire that I just serve at the house for friends, I'm really lazy and just write what's in the bottle using a silver or gold glass marking pen from Staples. I have to get brewing again this weekend - I've just been overwhelmed at the though of racking 15 batches to free up some glass but the thought of starting a mandarin orange metheglin and some cyser in season is getting really exciting. Good luck with your batches....See More- 4 months ago
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