Anyone tried this.

What are the pros and cons?

And comparison with traditional wine ( shelf life , health benefit etc )

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    121 year ago

    I don’t understand the point of the instant pot. You can just skip that part entirely and still get wine in the end. Just add yeast to your grape juice, leave at room temp, and wait.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      31 year ago

      You need it so you can mull the wine after making it so it tastes somewhat decent.

      In my experience you can make bad wine directly in the big plastic grape juice jugs by adding some yeast.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    81 year ago

    Interesting idea. Seems like it would make a very boring wine though. I imagine it would be better to juice high quality grapes yourself rather than buying bottles of grape juice. Might be worth infusing it some other ingredients as well. I don’t know if you’d want them in the instant pot though

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      121 year ago

      The grapes used to make the juice you buy at the store are not the same grapes that are used to make actual wine. The person who wrote that recipe doesn’t know what wine should taste like, and I wouldn’t trust that recipe.

      The grape juice you buy for drinking is mainly made from Concord grapes, which won’t make something that tastes in any way like real wine. You need grapes like Cabernet or Pinot Noir (for example). These aren’t just the names of wines, they’re the names of the varieties of grapes used.

      • @babboa
        link
        English
        101 year ago

        I mean, you CAN make wine out of Concord grapes, but it still tastes like Concord grapes after fermentation. Many places that lack the more temperate climate of France or coastal California make a lot of wine out of Concord and similar grape varieties bred from native grape species that are in many cases more disease resistant and tolerant of extreme temps. Overall, they tend to be sweeter wines(though concords technically have a lower natural sugar content on average than many traditional varieties) and often they get mixed with other fruit wines (blackberry, blueberry, strawberry, and even another native grape called a muscadine) because they aren’t easy to extract a lot of tannins out of, and are a real one trick pony from a flavor perspective. Many attempts have been made to breed grapes that exhibit more “traditional” wine flavors, to varying degrees of success.

        That being said, this is some real prison hooch territory and there’s zero reason to do something like this with as accessable as winemaking kits are these days. Now if you’re in a prohibition type scenario maybe it makes at least some sort of sense.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    51 year ago

    This sounds awful. I think the only benefits would be: underage drinking, wine slightly faster than following a more traditional wine recipe.

    If you are doing a hot ferment, you probably want a kveik yeast, as someone already mentioned. Or some spices and shit to cover all the weird off tastes. Or age them out (but if the whole point is to have wine in two weeks, I guess you won’t age the wine for 6 months…)

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      11 year ago

      Yeah the whole thing reads like a protip for alcoholics, and I’m saying this as a recovering alcoholic.

  • @max641OP
    link
    English
    21 year ago

    Ok. Seems no one has had tried/even heard about it yet. I’ll try in the next few days and share here.