How To Make Homemade Raspberry Wine: Time-Tested Recipe!

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  • Опубліковано 16 лип 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 491

  • @erikjohnsen807
    @erikjohnsen807 2 роки тому +464

    This is the best possible timing for this video. Yesterday I picked four pounds of wild red and black raspberries to make wine, they’re in the fridge and tonight will be my first attempt.

    • @xdyourmom1953
      @xdyourmom1953 2 роки тому +21

      Nice! Make sure to let us know how it turned out

    • @Bowie_E
      @Bowie_E 2 роки тому +4

      Wow! That is good timing!

    • @unknow3437
      @unknow3437 2 роки тому +6

      Strainer would come in handy really depends on what method you use

    • @rydz656
      @rydz656 2 роки тому +4

      Sober up, wino.

    • @justcookie7156
      @justcookie7156 2 роки тому

      Leaving a comment for when you finish it and let us know!

  • @jacobanderson8219
    @jacobanderson8219 2 роки тому +198

    My little brother will enjoy seeing this, he's been home brewing for years now. He's usually stuck by various types of mead and beer for most of his projects, but he has done some wines in the past.

    • @etuanno
      @etuanno 2 роки тому +7

      I'm doing home brewing as well.
      My standard recepie is pretty much undestilled rum. So I take brown sugar (white doesn't work at all, because there are no minerals in it), add my yeast (I use standard baking yeast so it doesn't get too strong) and then let it ferment. I like to add some lemon juice right before serving so it tastes like an alcoholic lemonade. The price is also a reason why I do it. About 75 cents per gallon isn't much.

    • @dylanzrim3635
      @dylanzrim3635 2 роки тому +4

      @@etuanno here in Australia, you can do beer, mead, wine. Once distilling equipment comes into play we risk jail. Oh and I’m pretty sure the licensing structure for home distilling is super flawed, like clear spirits only, gotta buy and use tags..... and I’m also pretty sure we get in the crap if we decide to use it as biofuel

    • @DH-xw6jp
      @DH-xw6jp 2 роки тому +3

      @@dylanzrim3635 same in the US, with the exception that home distilling is strictly prohibited. Straight to jail.

    • @dylanzrim3635
      @dylanzrim3635 2 роки тому +6

      @@DH-xw6jp I bet you don’t go to jail for distilling water for your beer mash though.
      Here you can distill water, or make non distilled alcohol but not both, having equipment for both is a big fine.
      Screw em’ though... if I want to mash and distill wood chips to run my generator I will 😂

    • @DH-xw6jp
      @DH-xw6jp 2 роки тому

      @@dylanzrim3635 right right.
      The act of "Distilling" (evaporating liquid with heat) isn't illegal.
      Home brewing isn't illegal.
      But if they catch you with both you can get caught up in "conspiracy to commit" crimes,
      and if they catch you with mash actually _in the still,_ (or the resulting product) you are screwed.
      Remember, the agency that enforces federal gun laws in America is the same one that enforces alcohol laws (tabacco and explosives laws as well). And the BATFE are buttheads.

  • @B-Reel929
    @B-Reel929 Рік тому +11

    I'm from the Appalachian mountains and my grandma used to make something like this every year. She would use white shine instead of wine but my favorite was the pulp. She would sit it aside, dry it out, and we would sprinkle it over our oats in the morning.

  • @jasonbagley8706
    @jasonbagley8706 2 роки тому +40

    My grandparents had an abundance of black raspberry bushes on their property. I remember helping myself to them every summer, along with the other grandchildren. Black raspberries will always have a special place in my heart.

    • @kyleblankiv7589
      @kyleblankiv7589 2 роки тому +1

      You ever have those candy raspberries? Black and red? They're like crack!

  • @michaelpineiro533
    @michaelpineiro533 2 роки тому +11

    I see you've chosen the Alto Wine for this recipe, 15 stamina, 30 stamina regen, very nice.

  • @boblobster
    @boblobster 2 роки тому +47

    Later in the season, apples make an excellent German type wine. Elderberry makes a really good red providing you don't use too many and ferment with grape juice.

    • @TJStellmach
      @TJStellmach Рік тому

      One reason to limit elderberries is that they contain toxins that form cyanide in the body. Cooking deactivates that, however.

  • @bmolitor615
    @bmolitor615 2 роки тому +39

    9:20 - we ferment blackberries over a picking season by putting a layer of bruised berries down in a carboy - when there's an inch or so, put in a layer of brown sugar, and so on. It stops bubbling after a while, so gently decant in November-ish into another carboy and rest a few days, decant again into bottles, and start drinking it.

    • @judgeworks3687
      @judgeworks3687 2 роки тому

      What’s a carboy?

    • @bmolitor615
      @bmolitor615 2 роки тому +6

      @@judgeworks3687 when you, uuuh... type it into google it comes up as large glass or plastic container for fluids, go figure... it's used in fermentation.

  • @bgmaple47232
    @bgmaple47232 2 роки тому +182

    I love the fact that Jon's hands and the utensils are stained that lovely shade of purple. How would someone in the 18th century deal with removing the stain?

    • @tinagriffith841
      @tinagriffith841 2 роки тому +84

      You can possibly say he's been caught redhanded making the wine?

    • @KainYusanagi
      @KainYusanagi 2 роки тому +46

      Probably just let the stain wear off over time.

    • @Marlaina
      @Marlaina 2 роки тому +49

      Purple??? I thought it looked deep pomegranate red like blood, which is why Jon told us not to worry, it’s just wine.
      He didn’t in fact kill someone in the name of nutmeg 😆

    • @pbyguy7059
      @pbyguy7059 2 роки тому +16

      Time cures all wounds. And also stained hands.

    • @KainYusanagi
      @KainYusanagi 2 роки тому +10

      @@pbyguy7059 The stain is only a few cells deep, just gotta wait for them to reach end of life and get let go.

  • @HLBear
    @HLBear 2 роки тому +18

    The color of that final wine is gorgeous! I will try this.

  • @HrafnirKrumr
    @HrafnirKrumr 2 роки тому +15

    Your videos are a moment of peace for me. This atmosphere of calm and friendly storytelling is what we all lack these days I think.
    Thank you for what you are doing! Greetings from Ukraine.

  • @guysview
    @guysview 2 роки тому +21

    Jon sips the wine. Then he goes crazy like the guy in Reefer Madness and chugs the entire bottle. Starts howling like a wolf.

  • @stonetooth2506
    @stonetooth2506 2 роки тому +5

    Rumor has it John is still washing his hands.

  • @JonathonPickett
    @JonathonPickett 2 роки тому +11

    Thank you for a different approach. Every year I try to make 5 gallons of black raspberry wine by fermenting them with a little added sugar. It is always a very good wine. I’m currently down to 4 bottles but I have 15lbs for another 5 gallons.

  • @lynnodonnell4764
    @lynnodonnell4764 2 роки тому +4

    LOVE the stoneware funnel!

  • @RJCJ76
    @RJCJ76 2 роки тому +1

    It’s great to come in after work and sit down with the family over tea or coffee and watch your videos. We enjoy all your guests and recipes. Keep up the good work and thanks for all the years of great content!

  • @ladyofthemasque
    @ladyofthemasque 2 роки тому +5

    I can see why there's a difference of 3 days versus 4 or 5. With the sugar added right away, the yeast will be more active right away. Without any extra sugar, the yeast will have to rely upon the natural sugars from the berry juices alone, and will be slower-starting, requiring more time to achieve the same level of fermentation. For both, I'd definitely give them a week, loosely capped, for further fermentation, before corking tightly.

  • @timothybozyczko6469
    @timothybozyczko6469 Рік тому +1

    I really enjoy these seasonal type episodes. I get so excited to try these at home and remind me of the simpler pleasures before the we move on to the next season.

  • @Angela-hn6mb
    @Angela-hn6mb 2 роки тому +6

    This reminds me of making cordials. Very similar techniques. Main difference is not straining off the fruit solids until after it's sat with the alcohol for a few weeks.

  • @Edminster
    @Edminster 2 роки тому +2

    i love the comparisons between cookbooks to see how methodologies were refined and changed over the years !

  • @SivakAurak
    @SivakAurak 2 роки тому +1

    Amazing timing! I just finished an experimental batch of mead using wineberries I foraged in the woods near my house.

  • @carm2005
    @carm2005 2 роки тому +4

    I've been fermenting, gallon and a half batches of fruit juices, for about a year. Experimenting with different kinds and mixes. Seems like white grape, concord grape, apple and cranberry are ones you can never go wrong with. I've been using SafCider AB-1 yeast for it all. I bottle it in 1 liter Grolsch bottles, they're reusable and don't need to mess with bottle caps.

  • @chamberswagner2010
    @chamberswagner2010 2 роки тому +3

    This spring I played around with the Raspberry Wine recipe from The Housekeepers Instructor (Schnebbelie 1805) but I wanted to use strawberries. I did what you wanted to do and fermented the strawberries with the sugar (since strawberries are a bit more difficult to juice I think than raspberries and I got more out of macerating them). I let that wine sit for over a month and it is fantastic. It basically tastes a bit like a slightly alcoholic strawberry jam. It really did capture the essence of those early spring berries. But I do want to try it with raspberries as well.

  • @Sauvenil
    @Sauvenil 2 роки тому +3

    We're in the middle of blueberry season here in northern MN, but they're actually bilberries. Raspberries are coming soon though.

  • @seamus6387
    @seamus6387 2 роки тому +8

    I will say if you can get like a high strength hard cider it will go good with berries too. Needs to be like 15% abv to start with to last any amount of time.
    And to those who don't do alcohol. Sweetened and flavored vinegars are good to and make a really good syrup to flavor water.

  • @hussitewagoner6838
    @hussitewagoner6838 2 роки тому +25

    Of all the wine I’ve made, Fig beats them all .
    Choke cherry the biggest disappointment, until forgotten about for a year it when it became intensely smooth and rich .

    • @IceLynne
      @IceLynne 2 роки тому +5

      Fig wine?? I have 6 good size figs trees with 4 varieties. I'm going to look into how to make that!

    • @hussitewagoner6838
      @hussitewagoner6838 2 роки тому +5

      Lynne Dunlap
      Never seen a recipe .
      Was preparing for preserves but ran out of time, I split them , sugared them and the next day the sugared juice spoke to me .
      Just pour off the sugar juice ( keep pulp out so it doesn’t have to be clarified ), add a hand full of raisins ( for tannin ) , and yeast ( unless you want the natural yeast) and let it work.
      I don’t monitor the alcohol content, just work it till the yeast can’t live in it anymore. Around 15%
      LET IT SIT , at least 3 months.
      Golden nectar
      The pulp just needs sugar replaced to finish it into preserves, the water reduction keeps the preserves thicker.

    • @TheodoricFriede
      @TheodoricFriede 2 роки тому +1

      As a side note, Fig wine can be distilled into 'mahia' which is a traditional spirit made by Morrocan Jews.
      I have been meaning to learn to make both as I am, myself, a Morrocan Jew. Alas, not a whole lot of figs In Texas it seems.

    • @hussitewagoner6838
      @hussitewagoner6838 2 роки тому +1

      TheodoricFriede
      Never heard of mahia, and I just happen to have a small still.
      Figs should be all over Texas.
      Another side note , the Atlas of Morocco , Appalachian and Northern Highlands of Scotland are supposed to be the same mountains separated by Pangea’s breakup.

    • @JP2GiannaT
      @JP2GiannaT 2 роки тому

      We've made fig wine too. It's almost like grown up Kool aid. Very sweet, pretty strong too.
      I'll have to try adding the raisins this year.

  • @kinjiru731
    @kinjiru731 2 роки тому +2

    Looking forward to seeing the followup in the Tavern!

  • @supergeek1418
    @supergeek1418 2 роки тому +2

    In modern parlance, those recipes are more cordials than wine. I usually make several fruit cordials every year, using vodka as the infusing liquid. Black raspberries make what is essentially Chambord.
    All and all, an excellent way to preserve the fruity goodness.

  • @dmmamobi
    @dmmamobi 2 роки тому

    The fact that there are black raspberries growing in our backyard makes me excited to try this recipe out! Wonderful video!

  • @Cambone13
    @Cambone13 2 роки тому +1

    10:55 i dont know why, but your absolutely purple hands are hilarious through this segment

  • @carolynyoung3415
    @carolynyoung3415 2 роки тому +3

    Blackberries are in season in Ohio too! My favorite planting. They are so easy to grow and snacking in the yard is so rewarding.

    • @dwaynewladyka577
      @dwaynewladyka577 2 роки тому

      On my dad's farm in Alberta, Canada, I remember the wild berries we had. We had ditch strawberries, Saskatoon berries, and other fruit. There even was a hazelnut bush. They were so good. Nothing compares to wild berries. Cheers!

  • @nordicson2835
    @nordicson2835 2 роки тому +7

    I love the way nature gives us gifts every season , we are blessed , thank you for these wonderful posts. My grandmother used to put cranberries, ( we are in NJ)
    In vinegar after a few months we had a cranberries vinegar , great on chicken , fish and vegetables.

  • @kariannecrysler640
    @kariannecrysler640 2 роки тому +1

    The stained hands have always been my favorite thing about berry picking 😊🍀💚

  • @tresand9595
    @tresand9595 Рік тому +4

    I made mullberry jam this year! I left out a bird feeder and they graciously shared the mullberries with us this year (except the orioles, they ate the mullberries and the oranges I left for them) I think wine will be for next season!

  • @CaniHaveTheRedPill
    @CaniHaveTheRedPill 2 роки тому

    I’m so thankful for this channel.

  • @BetImRight
    @BetImRight 2 роки тому +1

    Can't wait to try this out!

  • @J.A.Smith2397
    @J.A.Smith2397 2 роки тому

    The first coming video I can think of I've actually been intrigued about!

  • @Dr.Mrs.TheMonarch
    @Dr.Mrs.TheMonarch 2 роки тому

    Great timing. Just harvested some berries. We sadly didn't get any apples this year to make our ciders. But this will do. Thank you for sharing this recipe.

  • @estemburdel
    @estemburdel 2 роки тому

    i'm so glad i found this channel, i can't believe i just learned about its existence a few weeks ago, every video is just fascinating

  • @drsch
    @drsch 2 роки тому +1

    As someone who has lived overseas for a long time, I really miss berry season so much. Thanks for this video, it reminded me of home.

  • @aresaurelian
    @aresaurelian 2 роки тому +2

    Ah, a cliffhanger. Love it.. Can't wait for the garden party and tasting the raspberry wine in its full glory.

  • @TheJollyLlama875
    @TheJollyLlama875 2 роки тому +1

    I can only speak to beer brewing but in that the bulk of the fermentation is generally done in three days, for ales at least, and the rest of the time before bottling or kegging is usually used to let any solids settle on the bottom of the fermenter. Seems like Hannah Glass knew how to get the most bang for her buck out of those berries!

  • @stacilee9057
    @stacilee9057 2 роки тому +1

    I've been picking black raspberries hard to find recipes thank you!

  • @oldschoolcfi3833
    @oldschoolcfi3833 2 роки тому +3

    Made this with Blueberries, as they're ripe around this time of year. Was really good, and better than waiting for the entire berry-to-wine process.

  • @jakebow1027
    @jakebow1027 2 роки тому +5

    Never heard of making wine using already existing wine. Awesome video. Looking forward to that livestream for the final result.

    • @FrikInCasualMode
      @FrikInCasualMode 2 роки тому +2

      Mixing wine with fruit juice is an old technique of improving poor quality wines. It also helped to stretch the amount of wine.

    • @jakebow1027
      @jakebow1027 2 роки тому

      @@FrikInCasualMode That’s actually kind of neat.

  • @DougPalumbo
    @DougPalumbo 2 роки тому

    Looks great! Will try for sure!

  • @Kuhesgewehr
    @Kuhesgewehr 2 роки тому +1

    Your ginger beer video got me into winemaking during coronoavirus. Now I have about 40 gallons working on the porch and around the house, and 400 bottles in the cellar.

  • @blarghahragh
    @blarghahragh 2 роки тому

    Thank you for these wonderful videos

  • @KuyaHandyKap
    @KuyaHandyKap 2 роки тому

    you guys are about to break the 2 million subscriber mark! congratulations! 😊

  • @27dcx
    @27dcx 2 роки тому +3

    any time you're using a cloth to filter juice from pulp, you can gather up the loose ends around a stick and use that to twist the bundle and squeeze out the juice. It increases your leverage greatly and really saves your hands if you're doing it a few times.

  • @k.p.1139
    @k.p.1139 2 роки тому

    That was fun! Thanks, Jon!

  • @binaryguru
    @binaryguru 11 місяців тому

    I love your purple hands! This look really fun to make!

  • @thedrewsite
    @thedrewsite 2 роки тому +2

    Lol, your title card was perfect 😄

  • @noone1132
    @noone1132 2 роки тому

    I love this videos. You learn a lot.

  • @MrUnshyGuy
    @MrUnshyGuy 2 роки тому

    Never realized you guys were in Indiana, always cool to learn a UA-cam channel I’ve been watching for a while is from my state!

  • @johnmcque4813
    @johnmcque4813 2 роки тому +1

    There's a huge difference in fermenting. In order to produce alcohol, it has to be done below 52f, above 52 f it can ferment into vinegar. My dad, the plumber heating cooling guy, did and experiment with me, on fermenting. He stuck a fresh gallon of apple cider at the bottom of our fridge, and one on the pantry shelf. A month later we had apple cider wine and apple cider vinegar on the pantry shelf. Beer makers could not produce beer in the warm months because they needed a cooled place to make it. The first refrigerator cooling system was produced, all because Coors's Beer owned the first patent on refrigeration system. That patent lost out to a gas other then ammonia sulfide, I believe it was. Beer created refrigerators. Beer created the world as we know it, it even created algebra, farming, transportation $ trade, geometry, etc... all because someone collecting grains left a storage pot out in the rain, found a couple days latter, after the grain sprouted and it was carbonated, and they tasted it, and POOF, the first barley soda was founded. It just took off from there over the millennia. True Story, Nettflix: How Beer Saved the world!

    • @chris999999999999
      @chris999999999999 2 роки тому

      You can absolutely ferment above 52F and not get vinegar. The acetobacter that make ethanol into acetic acid need oxygen to do that, so vinegar is impossible if you cut the fermenting liquid off from the air. I live in South Carolina and before I gave up drinking I would homebrew routinely during the summer when my thermostat was set for 80F. Never got vinegar unless I wanted it.

  • @darrellwilliams1581
    @darrellwilliams1581 Рік тому

    I’m making my first batch of apple cider, and I learned that adding the sugar before fermentation feeds the yeast that is on the fruit which can increase the alcohol content during fermentation. Depending how hardy the yeast is, it could get to a point where the alcohol is too much for the colony. Love the channel guys!

  • @gilbertotabares8196
    @gilbertotabares8196 2 роки тому +2

    Whew😅
    That thumbnail had me thinking you were wringing out a cow's heart. Good thing you cleared that up.

  • @Aramis419
    @Aramis419 2 роки тому

    I used to work at a winery in Amish country here in PA. Whenever the boss and I got bored, we’d look up these old recipes!

  • @bobjohnson9342
    @bobjohnson9342 2 роки тому +1

    The thumbnail is magnificent for reasons obvious

  • @ismaelcoronajr
    @ismaelcoronajr 2 роки тому

    Sir. You touch on all of the awesomeness of our history. I love your show!

  • @doms.6701
    @doms.6701 2 роки тому +1

    "it shall be 3 days, not 4 or 5"
    Definitely some Monty Python writing 😂.

  • @CarolinaJoubert
    @CarolinaJoubert 2 роки тому +3

    Could a start to finish wine making video be in the future? You know with the crushing of grapes, historic sterilizing processes, the fermenting ect? It would be so cool to see!
    Also thank you for this video!

  • @jilliemc
    @jilliemc 2 роки тому +1

    Yes! Good idea to add the sugar when you did. I bet it will turn out delish!

    • @tissuepaper9962
      @tissuepaper9962 2 роки тому

      Hannah Glasse wrote *the* most commercially successful cookbook of the 18th century. She knew her stuff, for sure.

  • @kenbrockfarm8656
    @kenbrockfarm8656 2 роки тому

    As a homebrewer, love to see the kind of content!

  • @jamesgoetzke8393
    @jamesgoetzke8393 2 роки тому +1

    I sailed the Pacific in the 1970's on a US Navy vessel. We made jungle juice on the boat. Things were different back then. Vietnam ammo ship.AE-26. we used pillow cases for straining. We stole the officers case of grapes. Then raisens. Used a big steel milk jug. Yeast and sugar. 30 days and perfect. We peeled potatoes and made wine for movie night on Thursday. Children of the Corn seemed to always run. As long as man lives we ferment berries. Love your shows.

  • @davestelling
    @davestelling 2 роки тому

    One can always find a kindred spirit herein with The Townsend's...

  • @dandeehart9553
    @dandeehart9553 Рік тому

    This almost seemed like a funny educational comedy skit in a way - with each time they pan back to him his hands 🙌 look more purple or like Barney’s mits. Just in case anyone thought he doesn’t literally get his hands ‘’dirty’’ . Education with a chuckle!
    Love this channel!

  • @wendynordstrom3487
    @wendynordstrom3487 2 роки тому

    Ohh, I love that stoneware jar! 🤩

  • @unknow3437
    @unknow3437 2 роки тому +2

    I've made homemade wine before I need to try this method out thanks

  • @covishen
    @covishen 2 роки тому +3

    Take that berry pulp and spread it around outside for even more berries next year

  • @ronaldreagan9408
    @ronaldreagan9408 2 роки тому +1

    I've got a great old passed down many times recipe for homemade wine but it is one of those that take 4-8 weeks. However It only takes a gallon of fruit for 2.5 gallons finished yield. But the best thing to do when working with Raspberries or something of the sort, is to mix them half and half with Rhubarb. It's alot easier to get a bucket of rhubarb than a bucket of raspberries. Balances all the flavors out really well and if you have a decent rhubarb patch of your own then you know that you have too much rhubarb than you know what to do with. Chokecherries would probably be the one fruit you don't want to mix with anything. But you could mix almost anything with Rhubarb. Apple, Pear, Peach, Plum, Strawberry, almost anything you can think of. If you give this comment a Like I will share it with everyone haha.

    • @wurzella1
      @wurzella1 2 роки тому

      Rhubarb is a freaky plant, it seems to have magical properties in how it combines with, accentuates and improves pretty much any other fruit.

  • @BTSmith-lp5pe
    @BTSmith-lp5pe Рік тому +1

    the 1670s method of using alcohol and berries infused is literally how you make a number of liqueurs at home using high grain alcohol and then the fruit and or spices/herbs you wish. Typically you freeze the berries (this replaces the hand bruising) and opens the berries, you then add them to a jar it can be as little as half a pound of berries and you only need to cover them with the high grain alcohol. You then leave it as this for a week shaking the contents in the jar (one with a clip top) so it's sealed. After the week you strain the liquid from the berries and then you just cut the liquid by adding water and sugar (best to use syrup which is boiled water and sugar) you do this by mixing them to get the abv you want. Instead of water and sugar you can also use fruit juice the abv wont be exact because of this but you can get it pretty close.

  • @funky5mama
    @funky5mama 2 роки тому +1

    I live near a brandy distillery in Illinois. I've always wanted raspberry brandy! I know a few ditches by a creek that the black raspberries grow wild. Maybe I can take some plain brandy and do this.

  • @mikebrooka9395
    @mikebrooka9395 2 роки тому +1

    Dad and myself would Crack a lid and let it sour for a month or longer. It tasted great and when sealed, lasted over 40yr years and counting

  • @alanbilton2547
    @alanbilton2547 2 роки тому +1

    Id like more recipes please, ive tried previous ones that were delicious

  • @trufom6926
    @trufom6926 2 роки тому +1

    Black raspberries precious as you said, Jon. Their season is short and they are very difficult to harvest in the wild. Their flavor is absolutely wonderful and totally different from mullberries, blackberries, and red raspberries. Their shelf life is really short too. They smell like perfume to me and they bring back so many memories of gathering and my sister making cobbler with them (to stretch them.) Their delicacy and difficulty of gathering is why I would bet that 99% of people have no idea of what they're missing by not ever having eaten them.

  • @kittenkagome1
    @kittenkagome1 Рік тому

    Great technique!

  • @kong46
    @kong46 2 роки тому

    your videos make me happy

  • @jonathonchappell
    @jonathonchappell 2 роки тому

    I've been picking mulberries and wild raspberries the last few weeks, this was great to see

  • @UberChargedTrollFace
    @UberChargedTrollFace 2 роки тому

    excellent video as always :)

  • @rosemcguinn5301
    @rosemcguinn5301 2 роки тому +1

    What a handy looking funnel!

    • @dwaynewladyka577
      @dwaynewladyka577 2 роки тому +1

      I like the tools Jon uses in his videos, including the birch twig whisk. Cheers, Rose! ✌️

  • @matbroomfield
    @matbroomfield 2 роки тому +1

    That's such a great set and costume. They really add to presentation. No whow do you get that juice off your fingers authentically! :D

  • @clairewyndham1971
    @clairewyndham1971 2 роки тому +2

    Thanks for this suggestion! While I don't **brew** per sey, I do make mead, cordials and vodka. Just seeing this started me thinking about maybe some Raspberry mead..My hives are pretty plush right now..

  • @octapusxft
    @octapusxft 2 роки тому +1

    I remember in the mysterious isle by Jules Verne, how often it was explaining how various plants in the isle could make an agreeable wine

  • @raymondm5232
    @raymondm5232 2 роки тому +1

    Anyone watching this be very very careful storing this for the weeks after. The amount of sugar added will not ferment in the 3 days. So as it sits lots more co2 will be created. Make sure the storage container can let out gas or you will paint your home with raspberries

  • @joanhoffman3702
    @joanhoffman3702 2 роки тому

    I’m not much of a drinker. That being said, my favorite drink is mead with black raspberry nectar added to it. Redstone Meadery in Boulder, Colorado. So good!

  • @deannastevens1217
    @deannastevens1217 Рік тому

    This sounds yummy. I need to know where you got that wonderful pottery funnel. It's beautiful and functional. Wonderful video. Great Details.

  • @mrknoch
    @mrknoch 2 роки тому +1

    Jon at his finest. Great video. He should be a professor.

  • @Mr_Dancy_Pants
    @Mr_Dancy_Pants 2 роки тому +3

    This is the kind of wine-making process for terrible criminals; they'll always be caught red-handed.
    Seriously, though, this is fantastic. It blends two loves of mine, wine-making and history. Absolutely well made and definitely earned a sub and notification. ^.^

  • @michaelpineiro533
    @michaelpineiro533 2 роки тому

    Digby's sounds amazing, triple extraction, then barrel aging, but fermentation adds that good funk.

  • @tcp3059
    @tcp3059 2 роки тому +1

    "And Mr. Townsend's hands were stained pink forevermore..."

  • @WatcherintheDark69
    @WatcherintheDark69 2 роки тому

    I have been harvesting blueberries from my blueberry bush since the last week of June. It still has a lot left to ripen. This would be a neat idea to try.

  • @MollyWinter
    @MollyWinter 2 роки тому

    I'm excited to see the end result of this one!

  • @SirFrederick
    @SirFrederick 2 роки тому

    There were some blackberries ripe a week ago, but none since then. I'll have to be on the lookout and just get some wine while I wait.

  • @CarolusInciusEtScoti
    @CarolusInciusEtScoti 2 роки тому

    I love how his hands are stained by the raspberry juice... we used to have blackberry brambles on our land when I was a lad and our handsgot stained like that... brings back happy memories.

  • @db-xp6zw
    @db-xp6zw 2 місяці тому

    I had view different method of aging and distillation before and while i doubt that it would have been mentioned in the cook books but with the ceramic jar simply adding water to the area where the lid meets the jar creates a seal that prevents outside contaminants from entering the liquid but allows for the gases from the distilling to escape. Also I read another recipe that said to add the sugar to the squished berries to extract more liquid fron them

  • @rlegato364
    @rlegato364 2 роки тому +1

    last year, I used the pulp to flavor some rum. Yum. 😋

  • @Br1cht
    @Br1cht 2 роки тому +1

    You’re the man!

  • @jesternario
    @jesternario 2 роки тому +1

    experiencing the flavors and the aromas of the 17th century this episode :)

  • @thdn8127
    @thdn8127 Рік тому +1

    "I'm going out to make red wine" could be Minuteman code speak.