Good to know, thanks. I'll have to find a cooler place.
And yes, it's Redstone. It's all I can seem to find around here. I'll have to pick up a bottle.
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I found some plum wine that was bottled in 2009 at my grandpa's place. How do I check if it's safe to drink? There is a lot of it.
Thanks, sounds like it should be safe enough to taste and won't kill me.
Anyone you have around familiar with plum wine and/or are you?
I wouldn't trust myself to know if X item is good to go unless I am familiar with the baseline. For example, all liquor tastes like it should be throw away to me.
Not that I know of. I figure I'll grab a bottle and try some. Both links said over and over that it shouldn't hurt you, even if it is bad. If it tastes good I'll drink it, if not, I won't. I'll let you know how it goes.
Mead has a reputation for being pretty sweet, though that might not be fair anymore since it's started to gain popularity. There's just a lot more variety. When I first started playing around with wines and meads, it was hard to distinguish whether the odd burning flavors were related to issues with fermentation that I could learn to prevent, or just part of having a higher ABV result. But either way, the two most common suggestions were letting it age or adding back some sort of sweetener. Even if you prefer a dry result, adding even a bit more sugars back (honey, sugar, whatever) to your result can change the flavor and mask that harshness somehow. Just do it a little at a time. It's also why measuring ABV is important, because you'll probably find that your preference lands you in a particular range combo of sweetness and/or ABV and then you can target that next time around.
IMHO, the super-high ABV results tent to yield less tasty drinks, but can be fun contests in some ways to see how far you can push fermentation. I have some hooch in the basement that is basically only useful for bragging rights when friends come over. :)
Send me a bottle and I'll try it for you. :)
Seriously though, from everything I've read it's fairly hard to create something too harmful. If air gets to it, you'll be drinking vinegar but you'll figure that out pretty quick. Most bacteria that can live in alcohol are not hurtful and often used on purpose for sours.
It would be nice to know at least a little bit about how it was made though. I had plum wine once that a buddy made and it was awesome.
I really wish I had enough property for fruit trees. Sounds like it's probably more work than I imagine but it would be nice to be able to bottle your own juice and alcohol based on a personal orchard.
And yeah, we do need to figure out how to have an exchange or swap sometime, maybe this spring or something. Winter is a good time for having bubbling carboys in the basement. :)