Wine Making - Turning Grape Juice into Wine

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  • Chris Pearmund
    WineGrower, Pearmund Cellars
    www.PearmundCellars.com  
    (540) 347-3475

    Christopher D. Pearmund has been in the wine industry of Virginia for over 22 years. Chris began his career in the restaurant industry as chef for several restaurants in California, England, and ultimately in the northern Virginia area.

    Chris graduated to wine steward and manager for several northern Virginia area restaurants and, in 1985, became manager and buyer for a small gourmet wine shop called the Black Walnut in Middleburg, VA. In 1990, Chris began working at a 5,000 case production winery, and was winemaker from 1991 through 1996. During those years, he helped start and manage the first winery mobile bottle line on the East Coast and worked for over 40 wineries in 10 states assembling, final filtering, and bottling wine. From 1996 to 1998, Chris was a wine buyer and store manager for Total Beverage, a 25,000 square foot wine specialty store. He was also in charge of the wine training classes for all of its stores. This extensive experience provided Chris with a solid foundation for his role as a consultant for The Country Vintner, a fine wine distributor, until 2003. He has consulted with many wineries and vineyards and is currently Managing Partner at both Pearmund Cellars and the Winery at La Grange.

    Chris was elected President of the Virginia Vineyards Association in 1996, a post he held until 2000, and he is currently chairman of the Virginia Wine and Food Society and board member of the Virginia Wineries Association. Chris regularly speaks at wine and vineyard seminars and conferences and has published The Grape Press, a quarterly professional vineyard trade publication, for 5 years.

    Chris is a nationally certified wine judge by the American Wine Society, has taught the Higher Certificate Education course for the Wine & Spirit Education Trust, Masters of Wine program in London, and has organized and taught courses for both amateurs and professionals in wine appreciation. Although he regularly travels extensively through the wine regions of North and South America, Europe and Africa, Chris lives at Meriwether Vineyard in Broad Run, VA, home to Pearmund Cellars, including15 acres of Chardonnay vines.

  • Wine Making - Turning Grape Juice into Wine

    This video will show how to make wine and how to turn grape juice into wine.

    This series: 32,745 views

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  • Transcripts

    <p>Chris Pearmund: Hi, I am Chris Pearmund here in Haymarket Virginia at the winery La Grange and today we are going to be talking about wine making. Some of the subtle differences between home wine making, commercial wine making and if you are a home wine maker maybe we can share a few secrets with you. On this segment we are going to talk about some of the nuances and intricacies of taking grape juice and grapes into wine itself and some of the equipment required for the home wine maker. It's very, very simple as you may have seen in the last segment, we took representational sample to make the red wine. We don't need the stems anymore as they are kind of a little bitter on the finish. We wanted to keep our wine grapes cold to stop any indigenous fermentation but we want to use our own particular selected yeast. The yeast that we use commercially are the same yeast you could have from a home wine making supply store. The general rule of thumb is one gram per gallon of selected yeast. This represents 500 grams for 500 gallons, more than a home wine maker would need. But basically the hydration, the concept and the principles are the same. There are different yeast that are available for different types of wines. A cold fermented white wine, a warm fermented red wine or different attributes that you might want to extract from the grape themselves at different phenolic levels.</p><p>One of things that is very important in wine production is the additive of nutrition. Yeast are live animals and in doing so we want keep those animals very healthy when they convert sugar to alcohol and if I can make the analogy between ourselves as humans, if we are very stressed out, not nutritionally represented and under a lot of stress, our body is going throw up a lot of foul odors, the same with yeast. So we want to take care of these babies, so they are not going to throw up any foul odors and make our wine less than what it is capable of being. So we are going to add a product that is basically Nitrogen and B-Complex Vitamins and Thymine and such and this Nitrogen will help the yeast activate themselves in much more healthy way to give up the best flavor as possible.</p><p>We will monitor the fermentation temperature with a simple thermometer and we are also going to watch the pH levels. The pH in a wine is very important, this is red wine that we have, Cabernet Franc, the pH is 3.</p><p>55. It's a solid place for the wine pH to be, it will have a nice balance between acidity and flavor and also it's safer. The higher the pH the lower the acid and generally the less stable the wine and less longevity the wine will have. Red wines tend to have a pH between 3.</p><p>5 and 3.</p><p>7, white wines can be between 3.</p><p>67 to about 3.</p><p>0. The lower the pH generally the higher the acid, the crisper the wine and when you have a lower pH wine you normally also want to have a little bit of residual sugar or sweetness in the wine that balance out the tart acidity. And if you need to change pH, we used Tartaric acid. Tartaric acid at about one gram per gallons generally suffices enough to change any style, but you do want to have an accurate pH meter.</p><p>Tartaric acid in a small amount of this much will probably be enough for five gallons of wine. Very small amount, very simple and not needed. Stylistic thing again. On the fermentation, when it occurs you also want to be aware of keeping the involving of the skins with the wine itself. As the fermentation occurs the CO2 gases will lift the grape skins to the top surface, so two or three times a day, you want to mix up those skins back and incorporate within the wine.</p><p>This is called punching down. On a large vat and large container, there are different equipments to be used. If you are using a small five gallon container you can take a wine bottle filled with the water and mix it around. Temperature for red wine production is important, you want to keep it around in the low 80 between 80 and 85 degrees. A simple thing I have found is actually taking a wine bottle, fill it with water, take an aquarium heater, send it for 83, 84, 85 degrees stick into that wine bottle, you have a solid mass around that will keep your wine at temperature. If you are fermenting a white wine you probably want to ferment it around 60 degrees Fahrenheit. If you are lucky enough to have an old refrigerator or cool basement that's probably the ideal place for it. After fermentation the yeast will settle to the bottom of your container and you want to rack remove the top clean wine away from that yeast release. And we will talk about that more in next segment, when we are going to talk about oak alternatives and stirring wines at proper temperatures and the like, thank you. </p>

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