Create Your Signature Wine with the Best Wine Making Equipment

 

I’ve been perfecting this setup for a couple years now and I think it’s done. I’ts engineered so I can stand there and drink beer and work as little as possi…
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Create Your Signature Wine with the Best Wine Making Equipment

Author: Amitaya

Do you love experimenting with wines and often desire to produce your own brand of wine? Wine making is an undemanding, cost effective way to stock up on your desired vintages. So now create your personal vintage and get ready to take pleasure in the fruits of your labor with our list of wine making equipments that would assist you in creating your unique flavor with a great taste. By using the right wine making equipments with the right blend of materials, you can easily produce delectable wine.

Wine making equipment is easy to find, and quite affordable. You must buy and use only food grade equipment. As non-food grade materials could be perilous as toxic chemicals might percolate into the wine during the fermentation procedure. Make sure you own the best wine making equipments in order to produce delectable wine. Here is a brief summary of the essential wine making equipment.

First, one must have a carboy. A carboy is just a glass jug. It comes in various sizes from one gallon to six gallon sizes. Another very important part of your wine making equipment is the bung. The bung is a rubber stopper with drilled holes in its middle where an airlock is attached. Bungs come in different sizes; therefore you must find one that fits your carboy.

Next is the airlock. The airlocks are used to prevent oxidation of the wine. If the wine is exposed to too much oxygen, it will break down through oxidation and become unpleasant. The airlock makes a valve which prevents air from going into the carboy during fermentation, while at the same time keeps carbon dioxide from evading.

A hydrometer tube is also a significant wine making equipment. A hydrometer tube looks like a 12 inch thermometer with a piece of paper stuck inside with numbers printed on it. You can measure the amount of sugar in the wine at different stages of the fermentation process.

Other wine making equipment items include a wine thief and a food grade bucket. The wine thief is a small glass tube used to sample a small amount of the wine; it is used by simply dipping it into the wine container and scooping out a small amount. The food grade bucket is a handy bit of wine making equipment if you are planning on making a large quantity of wine, as it is able to store as much as six gallons of wine.

Lastly, you would require a food grade hose for Racking. Racking means transferring wine from one container to another. This is done by siphoning the wine via the food grade hose. This piece of wine making equipment protects wine from getting stirred up and oxygenated.

It is not difficult to find these wine making equipments and for your convenience you can order your equipment online from trusted dealers.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/business-ideas-articles/create-your-signature-wine-with-the-best-wine-making-equipment-4675630.html

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<a href=”http://making-wine-makers.com/wine-making-equipment”>wine making supplies</a>
<a href=”http://making-wine-makers.com/home-wine-making”>make your own wine</a>
<a href=”http://making-wine-makers.com/shiraz-wine-gone-worldwide”>shiraz wine</a>

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20 Responses to Create Your Signature Wine with the Best Wine Making Equipment

  1. Treehugger says:

    1 gallon = Litter, how many? I used a converter on my mobile phone and it said that 30 gallons is something like 117 litters and I find this insane it must be wrong or is it not?

  2. FishMan! says:

    1 gallon is 3.78541178 litres

  3. BobB says:

    This is a philosophy problem. You have one 18 gallon bucket and one 13 gallon bucket. You have an infinite amount of water. Both buckets are unmarked and you have no other tools. How do you measure out exactly one gallon of water?

  4. tastaygroove says:

    1. Fill 13 gallon bucket and pour into 18 gallon bucket
    2. Fill 13 gallon bucket again and pour into 18 gallon bucket till full
    There is now 8 gallons left in 13 gallon bucket. Empty 18 gallon bucket.
    3. Dump the 8 gallons of water into 18 gallon bucket
    4. Fill 13 gallon bucket and pour into 18 gallon bucket till full
    There is now 3 gallons left in 13 gallon bucket. Empty 18 gallon bucket.
    5. Dump the 3 gallons of water in 18 gallon bucket
    6.Fill 13 gallon bucket and pour all in 18 gallon bucket
    The 13 gallon bucket is now empty and there is 16 gallons of water in 18 gallon bucket.
    7. Fill 13 gallon bucket again and pour into 18 gallon bucket till full
    There is now 11 gallons of water in 13 gallon bucket. Empty 18 gallon bucket.
    8. Dump the 11 gallons in 18 gallon bucket
    9. Fill 13 gallon bucket and pour into 18 gallon bucket till full
    There is now 6 gallons in 13 gallon bucket. Empty 18 gallon bucket.
    10. Dump 6 gallons into 18 gallon bucket
    11. Fill 13 gallon bucket and pour into 18 gallon bucket till full.
    You are left with 1 gallon of water in the 13 gallon bucket.

  5. henry says:

    I have a 10 gallon rubbermaid cooler that I want to turn into mash tun. My goal is to make the switch from extract home brewing to all grain. I have a 5 gallon glass carboy, 5 gallon plastic fermenter, 5 gallon plastic bottling bucket, siphons, and all the other little stuff. What would be the easiest and CHEAPEST way to switch to all-grain ?? Thanks

  6. Shinning*finger says:

    You have 2 buckets; one holds exactly 5 gallons and the other 3 gallons. How can you measure 4 gallons of water into the 5 gallon bucket? (Assume you have an unlimited Supply of water and that there are no measurement markings in any kind on the buckets).

  7. Zort says:

    Fill five gallon bucket. Pour water from five gallon bucket into three gallon bucket until three gallon bucket is full. This leaves two gallons in the five gallon bucket. Empty three gallon bucket. Pour the two gallons from the five into the three gallon bucket. Fill five gallon bucket. Use water from five gallon bucket to fill the remaining gallon of space in the three gallon bucket. Voila, four gallons.

  8. LoveCream says:

    i just bought a 10 gallon tank and i was wondering how much gravel is need for 10 gallons. Also i bought 3 femalesand 1 male gouramis, and i want to breed them, what plant do i need? please someone answer my question

  9. stargrazer says:

    I prefer approx. one lb. of rock per one gallon of tank. So 10 to 12 lbs. of a dark natural colored gravel will do fine in a 10 gallon tank.

    Gouramis prefer a densely planted tank with a cover of floating plants along with some driftwood and a dark substrate.
    Some plants to try:
    java ferns attached to driftwood
    small cryptocoryne wendtii
    duckweed as floating cover

  10. Natasha says:

    I need to replace my water heater. It’s a 48 gallon water heater. I can only find 40 and 50 gallon water heaters. I’m one person in a 1200 square foot house. Is it okay to replace with a 40 gallon? I can’t sell the house anytime soon so I’m not worried about a future owner.

  11. RobertF says:

    A 40 gallon generally should be plenty for a family of 4 so for 1 it should be plenty.
    The 48 was supposed to be an energy saver , what a joke there, it takes the same amount of heat to heat the water.

  12. Sally says:

    All I want is the 75 gallon all glass aquarium and lighted hood, no extras. I want these both to be new. Also I would like to know the price of a 75 gallon acrylic aquarium. What about plexi glass. How much for the aquarium and how much for the hood?
    I just want a base price. I can negotiate with fish shop owners, how low can I negotiate. How much are they at petco? I know petco has a $1 a gallon sale up to 55 gallons.
    Also could you give me the dimesions of a standard 55 gallon and a standard 75 gallon.

  13. CoralReefForum says:

    my 55 gallon is 4 feet in length, 12 inches wide, and 20 inch high

    my 75 is a corner tank so i dont have the specs on that.

    Anyway lets go back to question. All glass is cheaper than acrylic, Im not sure if you know the difference, but heres alitle bit about it.

    Acryilic is light, but gets damaged more easily. It is more expensive as well. Where glass is heavier, and less easily scratched.

    My hood for my 55 gallon was a 100 dollars by itself. I did buy my 55 gallon new, with a double stand for 88 dollars from my lfs.

    So that is just a general price range. For a brand new 75 with a hood you can expect the ball park number of 170-200, the hood being the most expensive part.

  14. BobF. says:

    How much does a gallon of whole milk cost at a Safeway supermarket in California? Thank you.

  15. chefgrille says:

    According to safeway.com here in the north bay of CA, Lucerne brand whole milk is $4.89 a gallon. A gallon of organic whole milk is $7.69.

  16. freedom says:

    There are currently two eldery fish in the thirty gallon. I will transfer them to the ten gallon. The thirty gallon has a filter rated for 10 to 30 gallon tanks and if possible I would like to reuse it for the ten gallon.

  17. Ghapy says:

    Don’t make it more complicated then it is – with a transfer like this it’s so easy.

    1, fill the 10 gallon with 75% water from the old tank. Top it off with 25% new water (25% water change).

    2. Move the fish and filter to the new tank.

    Case closed. The fish have moved, the bacteria has moved and you continue as normal. You can move the gravel if you wish – it’s optional since most of the bacteria resides in the filter (where water is pulled through at a much higher rate).

  18. Rick says:

    I was curious how much a gallon of jet fuel cost and how many gallons an average jet holds?

  19. BizjetFlyer says:

    That’s a pretty wide open question. Jet fuel in the US retails for between $5 and $8 a gallon in most places. That’s for private jets. Airlines use their size and volume purchasing power to negotiate lower rates directly from the fuel providers. I can’t give you an accurate estimate of what those costs are… My best guess is about $3-4 a gallon.

    As for how much the “average jet” holds, that varies vastly by type. Small business jets hold around 700 gallons. Small regional jets hold around 2,100 to 2,500 gallons. The largest airliners can carry about 64,000 gallons.

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