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Wine Storage Tips



Once the clear wine has been bottled and you intend to keep it for more than three months, it is important to realize that corks dry out. When this happens, the shrinkage could cause the sealing-wax to crack, causing tiny air holes to appear and wild yeast & bacteria could attack the wine.


All bottles fitted with ordinary corks or cork-lined screw caps should always be stored on their sides. This allows for the wine to keep the cork moist (which prevents shrinkage). Rubber-banded screw-stopper bottles may be stored upright.


Knowing that wine should be stored throughout the year at a certain, constant temperature, many people go to much trouble and dream up all sorts of ingenious devices to achieve that end. Authorities are divided in their opinions as to the ideal temperature in which wines should be stored. This is most likely due to the fact that wines (like human beings) like what suits them best. Perhaps there is an ideal temperature for certain types of wine, but what suits the Eskimo does not suit the Australian aborigine, and this will likely never change.


In any case, the aborigine and the Eskimo get changes in temperature and no harm comes to them. In fact, they seem to thrive on it. So why not let us think of our wines as being something like ourselves in that they are quite at home in the temperatures that we give them?


Rapid changes are best avoided. Of course, (as with human beings), if we can store our wines on a stone floor, all the better! If this is not possible, a cupboard on the north side of a building will do provided a chimney does not run through it.


A friend of mine stores three hundred bottles of some really magnificent wines in an attic which becomes very hot in the summer and nearly freezes in the winter. However, no harm ever comes to any of his wines. So, store your wines anywhere you can and don't worry.


When serving home-made wines, remember that they are best when served at room temperature. Champagnes should be served cellar-cool or iced.

About the Author


James Wilson owns & operates www.e-homewinemaking.com, a site providing wine-making tips, tricks and techniques. If you're interested in making your own wine, visit www.e-homewinemaking.com today and sign up for the FREE wine-making mini-course!

A Short Wines Summary

Wine Storage Tips


Once the clear wine has been bottled and you intend to keep it for more than three months, it is important to realize that corks dry out. When this ha...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Wines Products we recommend

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An assorted throng of the classic wine culture favorites. This elegant wine basket includes all the traditional classics – Assorted Sausage, Stone Wheat Crackers, Parmesan Bruschetta, Classic Pepper Wine Biscuits, Classic Water Crackers, Bistro Dip, Port Salut Cheese, Brie Cheese, Jazzy Pralines and Aged Parmesan Bits. A bottle of red - a pristine German Cabernet Sauvignon, and a bottle of white – the fruity Chardonnay, completes this trustworthy classic wine basket. A great gift for any occasion! CWB04 CWB04D


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Current Wines News

Are You Interested in Home Wine Making

Tue, 07 Oct 2008 06:48:28 -0700
Most homemade wine is made from a grape juice concentrate, so don’t worry about growing and harvesting your own grapes - or needing to stomp on them once you do! You can also use different fruit juices as well, for a different type of flavor.

How To Make Homemade Wine

Sat, 04 Oct 2008 15:12:45 -0700
The Different Types of WineRed wines are not only different in color from white wines and rosè wines but they also have flavors that are stronger and richer. White wines typically have a more delicate flavor. Some white wines can even have a pale green color.

Halibut Receipes: Grilled Halibut With Rice Wine

Sat, 04 Oct 2008 00:18:11 -0700
A recipe for halibut fish with rice wine as its main flavoring


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6:08 PM

January - Charles Shaw

A Charles Shaw Artilce for Your Viewing

Making Wine From Grapes



In the ordinary way, recipes for wines made entirely from grapes are not a practicable proposition. This is because grapes are merely crushed and fermented without either sugar or water being added. Provided you have enough grapes, making wines from them is the simplest winemaking of all-that is, of course, provided they are fully ripe. Small unpruned bunches often contain a lot of small undeveloped fruits between the large juicy ones and these must be removed before the bunches are crushed. The whole bunches, stalk as well, are used as these add something to the wine. The yeast forming the bloom on your grapes may be the kind that will make excellent wine, but we cannot be sure of this owing to the near-certainty that wild yeast and bacteria are present with it. As we have seen in previous chapters, we must destroy these yeasts and bacteria and add yeasts of our choice to make the wine for us.


You will need at least twenty pounds of grapes to be assured of a gallon of wine-and this amount may not make one gallon of wine, though it make one gallon of strained 'must'. Therefore the more grapes you have the better.


If enough grapes are available, the process is as follows:


METHOD: Put all grapes in a suitable vessel and crush them, making sure each grape is crushed. Measure as near as you can or judge as accurately as possible the amount of pulp you have and to each gallon allow one Campden tablet or four grains of sodium metabisulphite. Dissolve this in an egg cupful of warm water and stir into the pulp and leave for twenty-four hours.


After this, give the mixture a thorough mixing and churning and then add the yeast. The mixture should then be left to ferment for five days.


Following this, the pulp should be strained through a strong coarse cloth to prevent bursting and wrung out as dry as you can. The liquor should then be put into jars and fermented the same ways as other wines.


A good plan when doing this is to mix a quart of water with grape pulp and to crush this well to get as much from the skins as you can. If you do this, you must add one pound of sugar and dissolve it by warming the juice just enough for this purpose. This thinner juice may be mixed with the rest but before the better quality juice is put into jars.


Where grapes only are used with water (as suggested above) it must be borne in mind that to get enough alcohol for a stable wine we must have between two and two and a half pounds of sugar to the gallon. Juice crushed from grapes rarely contains this much, therefore it would be wise to add one pound when the fruit is crushed and before the juice is put into jars. If the wine turns out dry, it may be sweetened.


We may use a hydrometer to find the sugar content so that we know how much to add to give the amount of alcohol we need, but this is not for beginners without previous experiences in this sort of thing. The better plan is to follow my suggestions above, and if the wine is dry to sweeten it and then preserve it with Campden tablets or metabisulphite.


Since the color comes from the skins, if we want a red wine from black grapes we ferment the skins as directed earlier in this chapter. A white wine from black grapes is made by crushing the grapes and pressing out the juice and fermenting the juice only. The difference in the process already described is that instead of fermenting the skin for five days, the juice is pressed out after it has been allowed to soak for twenty-four hours.
If you happen to be making some of the fruit wine such as elderberry, plum, blackberry or damson, at the same time as making grape wine, it would be a good idea to put the strained fruit pulp which would otherwise be discarded into the 'must' of the other fruit and let it ferment there.

About the Author


Gregg Hall is a business consultant and author for many online and offline businesses and lives in Navarre Florida with his 16 year old son. For fine wines and wine accessories go to http://www.oldworldvineyard.com

A synopsis on Charles Shaw.

Making Wine From Grapes


In the ordinary way, recipes for wines made entirely from grapes are not a practicable proposition. This is because grapes are merely crushed and ferm...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Charles Shaw Products we recommend

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Current Charles Shaw News

Houston Wine Company Offers Wine Discount to NASA Astronauts

Mon, 30 Jul 2007 00:00:01 -0700
Houston, TX (PRWEB) July 30, 2007 -- A Houston based wine company, "Luko Wines", which makes botique wines in California has reacted to the obvious need of NASA astronauts by offering them...

Over 8,000 Wine Retailers Now Listed On Wine-Searcher.com

Tue, 14 Nov 2006 00:00:01 -0800
Auckland, New Zealand (PRWEB) November 14, 2006 -- Wine-Searcher (www.wine-searcher.com) reveals that the number of wine sellers listed in its search engine has reached 8,000. The site's range of...

WineMarketer.com Launches the First Portal for Online Wine Marketers

Mon, 28 Aug 2006 00:00:01 -0700
Philadelphia, PA (PRWEB) August 28, 2006–- In an online retail world where everyone is trying to make a buck, Wine Marketer has taken a different approach to entering the market by providing a...

Camelback Vineyards– “Man is not a Camel”

Wed, 05 Jul 2006 00:00:01 -0700
San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) July 5, 2006 -- Galli Estates, owner and producer of the Camelback Vineyards label selects boutique wine distributor MDM Distribution to represent their brand in the United...

Wine Basics is Now the Fundamentals

Wed, 26 Apr 2006 00:00:01 -0700
(PRWEB) April 26, 2006 -- Introduction? Basics? Beginners?… Foundation! The Wine School of Philadelphia has changed the name of its flagship program to The Wine Foundation Program. Originally...

Longevinex™ Red Wine Pill Selected by Greenpower for European Distribution

Fri, 03 Feb 2006 00:00:01 -0800

Cooper Mountain Vineyards Selects MDM Distribution to be Their California Distributor

Tue, 24 Jan 2006 00:00:01 -0800
San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) January 24, 2006 -- Cooper Mountain Vineyards is pleased to announce their selection of MDM Distribution as their California Wine Distributor. Cooper Mountain Vineyards has...


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