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Home Made Wine Making Equipment
Home Made Wine Starter Kit
You will need to get some equipment, don't forget to check out the second hand market first, but it's not too expensive to get started. You can by starter kits for as little as £25.00 that will provide all you need apart from things that you will have in the kitchen anyway. Do check exactly what is included and compare with buying the parts separately. Wine Making EquipmentA large saucepan is useful when making wines from natural ingredients, if you have a preserving pan for jam making, that will be fine. Best to avoid aluminium or copper though, stainless steel is best. The airlock allows excess carbon dioxide produced by the yeast to escape but stops air loaded with wild yeasts etc getting back in. A good quality kitchen thermometer, temperature control is important in wine making A measuring jug and kitchen scales, which you should have anyway. A couple of large food grade plastic bins with lid for when you start making country wines. It is pretty important to get the right type of plastic. Other grades have microscopic holes that allow yeasts and microbes to hide and will probably result in spoilt vinegar. Plastic siphoning tube, usually you can buy this by the metre. A couple of metres should not set you back more than a pound Sugar is heavier than water where as alcohol is lighter. You can buy high-tech digital versions or a manual type for a couple of pounds that will last for decades. Bottles - start saving every wine bottle you can and ask your friends and relatives! Wash them out thoroughly as soon as possible to stop mould growth and them getting smelly.
Corks can be bought for just a few pence each in bags of 100. Never re-use corks, no matter how you try to sterilise them, used corks will spoil your wine. Corking machines can be bought from just a couple of pounds up to sixty pounds. We found the twin-lever type for around ten pounds far better than the cheapest ones.
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