Fig Wine
This recipe is a pure fig wine (no raisins, dates, bananas, or grape juice). Thus, it will not really mature until a year in the bottle, but can certainly be enjoyed after 3 months. Use only the sweetest, most tasty, almost over-ripe figs. Makes one gallon (3.8 L).
Ingredients
4 1/2 lb. (2.0 kg) figs
6 1/2 pints (3.1 L) water
1 3/4 lbs. (0.79 kg) granulated sugar
3 tsp. acid blend
1 crushed Campden tablet
1 tsp. yeast nutrient
1 pkg Red Star Montrachet wine yeast
Cut off stems and chop figs. Place in large, fine mesh nylon straining bag, tie top, and put in primary fermentation vessel. Stir in all other ingredients except yeast. Check specific gravity (should be 1.085 to 1.095; if not, add up to 1/4 cup more sugar, stirring very well before re-checking gravity). Cover with sanitized cloth. Add activated yeast after 12 hours and stir twice daily, pressing pulp lightly to aid extraction of juices. When specific gravity reaches 1.040 (3 to 5 days), hang bag over bowl to drain, lightly pressing to aid extraction (do NOT force or you will cloud the liquid). While pulp drains, siphon liquid off sediments into secondary. Add drained liquid and discard pulp. Fit airlock to secondary. Ferment to dryness (specific gravity 1.000 or lower in about 3 weeks). Rack into clean secondary, top up to 1 gallon and reattach airlock. Rack again in 2 months. Rack again and bottle when clear. This is a good dry wine. If you want it sweeter, stabilize after last racking (but before bottling), then add 1/4 lb. dissolved sugar per gallon. Wait three weeks and bottle. This wine can be consumed young (after 3 months in bottle), but will improve immensely with age.
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Skeet