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Steps in the transformation of grapes into wine!!!!!?

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all steps of the grape into wine!!!! excuse my languge but i am italian! thanks!!!

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  1. After the harvest, the grapes are crushed and allowed to ferment. Red wine is made from the must (pulp) of red or black grapes that undergo fermentation together with the grape skins, while white wine is usually made by fermenting juice pressed from white grapes, but can also be made from must extracted from red grapes with minimal contact with the grapes' skins. Rosé wines are made from red grapes where the juice is allowed to stay in contact with the dark skins long enough to pick up a pinkish color, but little of the tannins contained in the skins.

    During this primary fermentation, which often takes between one and two weeks, yeast converts most of the sugars in the grape juice into ethanol (alcohol). After the primary fermentation, the liquid is transferred to vessels for the secondary fermentation. Here, the remaining sugars are slowly converted into alcohol and the wine becomes clear. Some wine is then allowed to age in oak barrels before bottling, which add extra aromas to the wine, while others are bottled directly. The time from harvest to drinking can vary from a few months for Beaujolais nouveau wines to over twenty years for top wines. However, only about 10% of all red and 5% of white wine will taste better after five years than it will after just one year.[1] Depending on the quality of grapes and the target wine style, some of these steps may be combined or omitted to achieve the particular goals of the winemaker. Many wines of comparable quality are produced using similar but distinctly different approaches to their production; quality is dictated by the attributes of the starting material and not necessarily the steps taken during vinification.

    Variations on the above procedure exist. With sparkling wines such as Champagne, an additional fermentation takes place inside the bottle, trapping carbon dioxide and creating the characteristic bubbles. Sweet wines are made by ensuring that some residual sugar remains after fermentation is completed. This can be done by harvesting late (late harvest wine), freezing the grapes to concentrate the sugar (ice wine), or adding a substance to kill the remaining yeast before fermentation is completed; for example, high proof brandy is added when making port wine. In other cases the winemaker may choose to hold back some of the sweet grape juice and add it to the wine after the fermentation is done, a technique known as süssreserve.

    The process produces wastewater, pomace, and lees that require collection, treatment, and disposal or beneficial use.


  2. 1) put all the grapes in a big bucket

    2) take off yr shoes

    3) wash yr feet

    4) have fun in mashing up the grapes by stepping on the grapes

    5) after all the grapes all mashed up...put a bit of yeast

    6) cover it very tightly

    7) leave as long as u like until all the grape sugar has turned into ethanol and water and carbon dioxide.

    8) try seedless ones if posssible....so as not to hurt your soles with the seeds...

  3. People spend lifetimes perfecting the science of making wine. Here is an overview of the basic steps involved.

    http://winemaking.jackkeller.net/request...

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