Best 4 Old American Grape Wine Recipes

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In the realm of homemade wines, "Old American Grape Wine" stands as a testament to tradition and the bounty of American vineyards. This classic recipe, rooted in generations of winemaking wisdom, yields a beautifully balanced, flavorful wine that captures the essence of American grapes. From the crisp and refreshing White Grape Wine to the robust and fruity Red Grape Wine, and the unique and aromatic Spiced Grape Wine, this collection of recipes caters to a range of tastes and preferences. Whether you're a seasoned winemaker or embarking on your winemaking journey, these recipes will guide you through the process, from selecting the right grapes to bottling and aging your creation. So, gather your ingredients, sterilize your equipment, and prepare to immerse yourself in the art of making Old American Grape Wine.

Here are our top 4 tried and tested recipes!

HOMEMADE WINE



Homemade Wine image

This is an easy recipe for homemade wine. You can choose whatever flavor you like but my favorite is the red. You will need a sterile milk jug, a large latex balloon and a rubber band to complete the project. This Wine is a bit stronger than regular table wine. Its great for cooking as well as drinking.

Provided by MSGYPSYLEE

Categories     Side Dish     Sauces and Condiments Recipes     Canning and Preserving Recipes

Time P7DT17h7m

Yield 32

Number Of Ingredients 4

1 (.25 ounce) package active dry yeast
4 cups sugar
1 (12 fluid ounce) can frozen juice concentrate - any flavor except citrus, thawed
3 ½ quarts cold water, or as needed

Steps:

  • Combine the yeast, sugar and juice concentrate in a gallon jug. Fill the jug the rest of the way with cold water. Rinse out a large balloon, and fit it over the opening of the jug. Secure the balloon with a rubber band.
  • Place jug in a cool dark place. Within a day you will notice the balloon starting to expand. As the sugar turns to alcohol the gasses released will fill up the balloon. When the balloon is deflated back to size the wine is ready to drink. It takes about 6 weeks total.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 120.6 calories, Carbohydrate 30.8 g, Cholesterol 0 mg, Fat 0.1 g, Fiber 0.1 g, Protein 0.2 g, SaturatedFat 0 g, Sodium 4.1 mg, Sugar 30.7 g

PAW-PAW & NANA'S HOMEMADE GRAPE WINE



PAW-PAW & NANA'S HOMEMADE GRAPE WINE image

We started making our own wine about 35 years ago. I don't drink wine but always wanted to try my hand at it. My motto is: If it can be done, I'm gonna try it! So, I visited with the local vintner from Post Wineries in Arkansas. He basically told me how to do it. Now everyone loves our wines. We make mainly Concord grape, but...

Provided by Peggi Anne Tebben

Categories     Other Drinks

Number Of Ingredients 19

HERE IS WHAT YOU WILL NEED FOR 5 GALLONS OF WINE:
*clean 5 gallon pails for fermenting squeezings
*one 6 gallon pail for mixing juice, sugar & water
*5 gallon carbouys for fermenting wine
*air locks with rubber corks that fit the size of your carbouys
*hydrometer for testing wine
*large funnel
*mesh bag for squeezing the squeezings
*campden tablets (purification)
*bentonite (clarity)
*sorbate (stops the wine from working when bottling)
*montrachet wine yeast (1 pkg. per 5 gallons of squeezings)
*concord grapes
*lots of sugar
*spring water or baby water treated by reverese osmosis or ozonation
*large black plastic trash bags for covering 5 gallon pails with
*heavy string with a large rubber band attached for securing trash bag around pail
*clean tea towels for straining the wine while racking it.
YOU CAN OBTAIN ANY OR ALL OF THESE SUPPLIES FROM WWW.ECKRAUS.COM ON LINE. I RECOMMEND FINDING A WATER SUPPLIER OR BUYING YOUR WATER CARBOUYS AT WAL MART THOUGH. CHEAPER.

Steps:

  • 1. Pick your grapes when they are at their ripest but not starting to dry out on vine.
  • 2. Stem & wash the grapes.
  • 3. Run through a Victorio strainer with a grape spiral & the pumpkin screen attached. Or, if you are up to it, play like Lucy & stomp with clean feet or squeeze by hand, but I don't recommend the feet! Don't squeeze with anything that will cause the seeds to be broken. They contain tannin & this has a very bitter taste & will ruin your wine. The Victorio strainer does not do this, nor does by hand do it.
  • 4. Place in clean 5 gallon bucket, the juice & all the seeds, pulp & skins. Only fill up to about 5" from top, as it will work & rise.
  • 5. Crush a campden tablet with mortar & pestle. In a drinking glass, put about 1 cup of tepid water, the Campden tablet & one package of Montrachet yeast. Stir & let set for about 5 minutes.
  • 6. Now, pour into the grape squeezings. Using a clean hand & arm, stir the bucket good to incorporate the yeast mixture well.
  • 7. Place black plastic trash bag on top of pail & secure with rubber band string. Place pail in a dark cool place. Put a heavy piece of cardboard under it in case of spillage.
  • 8. We start ours in the am hours. This will ferment in the pail for about 4 days. Each day at the same time & twice a day, you will need to stir it with your hand & really good to keep all the squeezings working. So, we start ours at say 7:00 am & then every day for the next 4 days, we stir it at 7:00am & 7:00pm
  • 9. After 4 days, using the mesh bag, squeeze the mash into clean 6 gallon pail. Discard the squeezin's.Take the alcohol potential level with the hydrometer. It should be 0% at this time. You want to bring it up to around 12%-13%. We have found that it takes about 2# sugar to each gallon of liquid to do this. You should have about 3 gallons of liquid after squeezing. Add 2 gallons of the spring water with it to make 5 gallons of liquid. Therefore, you should need 10# sugar to the 5 gallons of liquid. Stir with a long handled wooden spoon until all sugar is dissolved. At this time, take another reading. It should read about 12%-13% alcohol potential.
  • 10. Place funnel on 5 gallon carbouy & pour the wine into the carbouy. It will not all fit. You need to leave room for it to work. Just bring it up to the last line before the neck of carbouy (refer to picture). Place the stopper in it. In the airlock valve, drop in one campden tablet & then the little percolator thing. Fill this half full with spring or distilled water. Place the lid on airlock valve & place the valve in the cork on bottle. It should start to perk rather quickly. Now, just put in cool, dark place for about 1 month.
  • 11. After 1 month, it will slow down or stop all together perking. Ours was perking once per minute when we racked it. This means all your sugar has been turned into alcohol. You are going to RACK the wine now to get it going again. To do this, you will strain it into a 5 gallon pail that has a tea towel over the top with your string/rubber band tie. Indent it slightly in the middle like a pool. Pour wine through this to strain.
  • 12. Take your potential alcohol level reading again. It should read 0% again or close. You will need to bring it back up to 10%. Don't add more water, but do add enough sugar to bring it back up. Stir until dissolved. So, if it's reading 0%, you will need about 10# of sugar to the 5 gallons of liquid to do this. If it reads 2% to start with, use about 8# & then check it until you have it where you need it.
  • 13. Pour back into clean carbouy & replace the same airlock & place in cool dark place. Allow to work until it stops the perking process. This could take up to a few months.
  • 14. When the perking stops, pour wine into 5 gallon pail.
  • 15. Follow directions on your bentonite & add to wine in pail. Also, mix 1/2 tsp. per gallon of Potassium Sorbate. Follow directions on bottle for mixing it. Add to wine also.
  • 16. Return to clean carbouy & place airlock back on. Let set for at least 24 hours, but 2 days is better.
  • 17. Now, you are ready to bottle. Strain wine into 5 gallon pail that is covered with tea towel again & pour wine into pail.
  • 18. Now, using a funnel, & small pan, but not aluminum or cast iron, pour the wine into bottles & cork or use the screw on lids. Store in cool dark place. It is ready to drink. Enjoy!

WILD GRAPE WINE



Wild Grape Wine image

This wine is ready to drink and bottle in 11 days. The older it gets the better it's quality. I got this recipe from the University of Minnesota. A note with the recipe said it was from a small family vineyard in France. I made a 5 gallon batch one year and gave it for gifts until I ran out 31/2 years later. One of the recipients was my priest. After Christmas mass the year I ran out, He stopped me to thank me for his gift but told me he missed my gift of wine that year. I told him I ran out. He then told me he had to call the local liquor store to open up so he could buy wine for Christmas Masses as he had been using my wine for communion wine on Christmas for the past 3 years. I felt so honored that my wine was used in such a special way. Number of servings is based on number of 4 ounce servings per gallon of wine. I use beer bottles It seems just enough for 2 for a meal. I use quart bottles for gifts. Be sure to store wine bottles on their side so the corks do not dry out.

Provided by Gramma Pat

Categories     Beverages

Time P11DT1h

Yield 32 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 5

wild grapes
sugar
water
yeast
1 slice dried bread

Steps:

  • Choose ripe Wild Grapes, Pick them in clusters on the stems, bring them home and wash them in cold water leaving them on the stems.
  • Place grapes with stems on, in water just to cover, in an enamel or non metallic kettle.
  • Bring just to a boil, simmer till skins on the grapes pop, Mash the grapes in the water, Strain juice into a non-metallic container, through several layers of cheese cloth or a clean dish towel to remove grape pulp, seeds and stems.
  • Reserve the juice, Throw away stems and pulp.
  • Measure the juice.
  • Add equal amounts of sugar and water, (ie: 1 gal juice, 1 gal sugar, 1 gal water) put wine mixture in clean crock.
  • spread or sprinkle 1 cake or one pkg dry yeast on dry bread crust and allow it to float on top of the wine mixture, cover crock with a clean dish towel, let ferment for 3 days, strain wine, into non metallic container such as an enamel canner kettle, wash the crock and be sure to rinse it very well, put wine back into the crock, allow to ferment for 4 days, stirring every day and skimming the foam from top, strain the wine again as before, wash the crock again, put wine back in the crock.
  • Allow to ferment 4 days, stirring and skimming every day.
  • Strain the wine once more, this time it is ready to bottle.
  • The older it gets the better.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 2.1, Sodium 5.3, Carbohydrate 0.4, Protein 0.1

GRAPE WINE



Grape Wine image

August Lueders and Sons owned and operated a vineyard and winery in Frohna, established in 1868. Although Martha, Concord, Seedling, and Niagara grapes were grown, their famous product was "Martha Wine" and they had a customer list not only in Missouri but in many other states as well. The grapes were processed and the wine aged in 360 gallon wooden barrels called "hogsheads" in the basement under the large general store owned by Mr. Lueders. When sold, the wine was bottled in 5 gallon , jugs or in smaller sized long, narrow, dark glass bottles. When the Volstead Act was passed in 1918 the government permitted Mr. Lueders to sell his remaining supply for Communion purposes only. Here is the original recipe for this famous wine. Recipe from August Laueders from the cookbook "Heritage of Cooking" A Collection of Recipes from East Perry County, Missouri.

Provided by Charlotte J

Categories     Beverages

Time 45m

Yield 5 gallons of wine

Number Of Ingredients 3

grapes (enough to drain off 5 quarts)
10 lbs sugar
water

Steps:

  • Mash grapes and let ferment 3 to 5 days.
  • Draw off 5 quarts of juice.
  • Dissolve sugar in hot water.
  • Pour all into a 5 gallon jug container.
  • Add water to fill jug to top.
  • Cover jug opening with a small sandsack for 3 to 4 months.
  • Draw off and rejug and seal jug with a tight-fitting cork or other kind of stopper.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 3510.8, Carbohydrate 907, Sugar 906.4

Tips:

  • Choose ripe and healthy grapes: This will ensure the highest quality wine.
  • Clean and sort the grapes: Remove any stems or damaged grapes.
  • Crush the grapes: This can be done by hand or with a grape crusher.
  • Add sugar and yeast: These ingredients will help the wine to ferment.
  • Allow the wine to ferment: This process can take several weeks.
  • Rack the wine: This process involves removing the wine from the sediment that has settled at the bottom of the container.
  • Bottle the wine: This will help to preserve the wine and make it easier to store.
  • Age the wine: This process can take several months or even years. Aging will improve the flavor and complexity of the wine.

Conclusion:

Making old American grape wine at home is a rewarding experience. By following these simple tips, you can create a delicious and flavorful wine that you can enjoy with friends and family. Whether you are a beginner or an experienced winemaker, these recipes will help you create a wine that you will be proud of. So, gather your ingredients, sterilize your equipment, and get started on your winemaking journey today!

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