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Winemaking (rec.crafts.winemaking) Discussion of the process, recipes, tips, techniques and general exchange of lore on the process, methods and history of wine making. Includes traditional grape wines, sparkling wines & champagnes. |
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I have red that I bottled in 2003 and it turned out very dry. A
little too dry for me, so I sweeten it at the table. The last half dozen times that I've cracked a bottle I have experimented with using Karo Corn Syrup instead of sugar (since it's already disolved). I think I like it better than normal sugar. Seems to mellow the wine acids along with sweetening it... my impression is that the end result is smoother than with just sugar. I see it contains two kinds of corn syrup, salt, and vanilla. The mellowing effect may be due to the samll amout of salt... using a salt water dip really helps make an acidy Pineapple more enjoyable. Does anyone else out there use Corn Syrup? I like it's effect enough that I'm contemplating using it to re-sweeten before bottling, but the presence of salt and vanilla seems a bit scary since I don't know whether this will end up doing something way funky to the wine over the long haul. What about the difference between sucrose & fructose? Corn is fructose, right? What about these other ingredients? |
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