Author Topic: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge  (Read 6610 times)

Offline Arlon

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Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« on: May 22, 2007, 10:08:30 AM »
 This thread will be for Myself and any future Vintners/Brewers/Distillers to write down Clan recipes, techniques, and other such miscellania that we don't want to get lost in case of house fires, catastophic hard drive failures, and other such freak accidents. (Not to mention that My short-term memory is notoriously hideous, and committing such things to memory alone would be an invitation to disaster LOL)
 I will also list things like Clan chores, for slaves and Free alike, since I would like to see the Clan grow at least a little eventually. And if not, then at least My successor, should I ever retire, will not have to start from scratch. (Thinking ahead for a wonder...) ;)


    ----Arlon
« Last Edit: May 23, 2007, 02:51:23 PM by Arlon »

Offline Arlon

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #1 on: May 22, 2007, 10:12:42 AM »
OK, first of all a repost of one from the old Brewer's clan, since we really don't have a separate Brewer clan anymore :

Anisette, is very easy to make. It resembles the flavor of black licorice and is quit good in mixed drinks. Tastes just like DeKuyper's® Anisette.
Anisette
15.7 oz. (466 ml.) 100° proof Vodka (non-flavored)
7 drops anise oil
9.6 oz. (284 ml.) simple syrup
1 tsp. (5 ml.) glycerin (optional)

Prepairing a very large batch of this in the clan wagon and takeing severial cases fod bottles alcohol and folowing the in structions fro the ancient scrolls they are prepaited for delivery.

• Add alcohol to the bottle in which the anisette will be stored; add anise oil and shake vigorously until all oil is dissolved (1 min.) Add the rest of the ingredients and again shake well. Presto—it's ready to drink!



Never know, I might whip up a batch of this stuff one of these days, if there's a demand for it LOL.
  ---Arlon

Offline Arlon

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #2 on: May 22, 2007, 11:42:00 AM »
Basic Winemaking Process

 This is the basic process by which I make wine, and is the process I recommend for anyone who may follow in My footsteps. It is simple, and very compatible with the low-tech Gorean/Tuchuk winemaking equipment. The process works well with jsut about any fermentable fruit (I first used it with Ka-La-Na, with very good success). Many thanks to Winemaking.com (of all places LOL) for the information presented here (with suitable editing appropriate to our Home).


  Whether you participate in the actual process or not, the first step after picking (or, um, 'acquiring' in the proper Tuchuk fashion) the fruit, is to crush them into a mass of pulp called must. There are numerous methods of doing this; the traditional way is in a huge vat by barefoot slaves with very very clean feet  :P.

  The next step is to press the must. There is a small press in the Vintner's Wagon for this purpose. At this stage, most (NOT ALL!) of the stems are removed to control the amount of tannins in the juice. The extracted juice is then poured into a vat.
(Tannins are a bitter byproduct of fruit skins and stems, especially grapes, but they greatly assist in clarifying the wine. More info in the next post)

  Step three is the settling and racking process. During this stage the sediment separates from the juice and settles to the bottom of the vat. Over a period of time the juice is racked, or transferred, usually by siphon, into different vats and allowed to settle further.
 (I rack four times, one day between rackings, before going on to the next step)

  Step four is the actual fermentation process, where the juice becomes wine. Special yeasts are added to the juice, to convert the natural sugars in the juice to alcohol. Once the yeast dies, it is cleared out of the wine by adding a fixer (usually bentonite), which clings to the yeasties and then settles down to the bottom of the container. When the wine is racked, the sediment at the bottom of the vat (or other container, I used carboys for the first few batches) remains behind, resulting in an unencumbered wine, ready to age or bottle.

Finally, the wine is ready to Bottle. Sterilization at this step is critical! Siphon the wine from the vat or carboy into the bottles; I am working on a filter funnel thingy so that any remaining sediment can be filtered out, and so that the remaining bacteria in the wine do not become active. At this stage the wine is drinkable, thus I often sample the wine at this point to determine its quality.


   ---Arlon

 

Offline Arlon

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #3 on: May 22, 2007, 02:06:20 PM »
Some further notes on the winemaking process .....

I never remove all the stems because some tannins are needed to clarify the wine and give it more body. Too much will make the wine bitter and cause it to take far longer to ferment, but I try to keep about 5-10% of the stems and skins in the must.

Do not discard the skins after pressing, since they can still be used again, with added water and sugar, to make seconds, which although usually not as full-bodied only take about half the time to make.

And of course, always use clean, sterilized bottles and corks; nothing can ever be TOO clean.



     ---Arlon
« Last Edit: October 10, 2007, 12:17:18 AM by Arlon »

Offline Arlon

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #4 on: October 10, 2007, 12:24:48 AM »
 With respect to Meads.... these are perhaps the simplest things a Vintner makes, and by far the quickest at only about 15 days. My basic recipe is a near-literal translation of "Sir William Paston's Mead", courtesy of the SCA website: I substitute tospits for lemons, otherwise it is essentially the same.
 The recipe I am trying for the batch I started tonight is basically the same, but i added a few things to it (cinnamon, ginger, chamomile, and a hint of ramberry -- the latter because I had extra ramberries that I did not wish to waste). It already smells tasty, and should produce a very interesting and hopefully popular mead when it is finished. I will post both recipes later, since it's after 3am here right now.


...Arlon
« Last Edit: October 14, 2007, 07:54:22 AM by Arlon »

Offline Arlon

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #5 on: October 14, 2007, 08:09:19 AM »
   Sir William Paston's Mead  (as adapted for Gor) :

  7 1/2 lbs.     Honey  (about 5 pints)
  2 1/2 Tbsp   Rosemary
  2 1/2 Tbsp   Bay Leaves (about 40-45 leaves)
  2                Tospits  (Lemons in the original recipe)

  Ale Yeast


  Process:
 
  Scrape tospits with a very sharp quiva to remove peel -- NO pith (white part), as it will give the mead a bitter taste. Place 2 gallons of water in pot and bring to a boil.  Add honey and skim dross.  Add rosemary, bay, and tospit peel.  Cook for 30 ehn.  Remove from heat.  Pour 3 gallons cold water into fermenter.  Strain wort into fermenter.  Top off with remaining water to 5 gallons.  Close fermenter and allow to cool.  Pitch yeast and shake well.  Let work for 3-5 days, then bottle or keg.  Age for about 10 days.  ALcohol content approximately 2%. 

(Original Source : SIR WILLIAM PASTON'S MEATHE, The Closet Opened, pp. 41-42.)
http://www.pbm.com/~lindahl/recipes/basic_brewing.html

(For the second batch, made this month, I added cinnamon (about 2 Tbsp), 1/2 hand of Ginger, about 2 Tbsp of Chamomile, and about 2 cups of pressed ramberry juice (with some pulp, though the pulp gets strained out)).


...Arlon

Offline Arlon

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #6 on: October 07, 2008, 01:37:25 PM »
Fermented Peach

Ingredients and Tools:

•The fruit press in one of the Ubarian freight wagons
•Baskets of rotten peaches

1. Press the rotten fruit to extract the juice and some of the pulp
2. Set aside the pits; some may be boiled with the pulp to extract more juice
3. Combine the extracted juice with a mixture of salt and honey or sugar
4. The mixture will contain three parts water, six parts juice, two small cups of honey or sugar, and half a palmful of salt
5. Boil the mixture until it is two hands -- or some eight inches -- down from the beginning of the boil, stirring often
6. Next allow the mixture to simmer for a few ehn (minutes), allowing the water to further evaporate
7. The mixture will then be poured into sterile bottles with cloth at the necks to strain out the excess pulp, then sealed with porous corks that allow excess air to escape
8. The mixture will need to be strained twice more and should be ready within ten days

This pulp itself can then be placed in a vat and covered, to be set aside in a cool place and used like a honey salve which desensitizes the wounded area without the sting of black pepper
Opened bottles will keep for two years; unopened bottles will last for five years.

Offline RAGNAR

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #7 on: October 07, 2008, 03:18:10 PM »
Fermented Peach

Ingredients and Tools:

•The fruit press in one of the Ubarian freight wagons
•Baskets of rotten peaches

1. Press the rotten fruit to extract the juice and some of the pulp
2. Set aside the pits; some may be boiled with the pulp to extract more juice
3. Combine the extracted juice with a mixture of salt and honey or sugar
4. The mixture will contain three parts water, six parts juice, two small cups of honey or sugar, and half a palmful of salt
5. Boil the mixture until it is two hands -- or some eight inches -- down from the beginning of the boil, stirring often
6. Next allow the mixture to simmer for a few ehn (minutes), allowing the water to further evaporate
7. The mixture will then be poured into sterile bottles with cloth at the necks to strain out the excess pulp, then sealed with porous corks that allow excess air to escape
8. The mixture will need to be strained twice more and should be ready within ten days

This pulp itself can then be placed in a vat and covered, to be set aside in a cool place and used like a honey salve which desensitizes the wounded area without the sting of black pepper
Opened bottles will keep for two years; unopened bottles will last for five years.


Where did this information come from?

Offline Fishy!

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #8 on: October 07, 2008, 04:41:42 PM »


Where did this information come from?

The Healers pages

Offline RAGNAR

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #9 on: October 07, 2008, 06:50:40 PM »


Where did this information come from?

The Healers pages

Fermentation is a good process... but usung rotten fruit does not sound like a winner to me. Our Healers are vinting now?

kelsey

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #10 on: October 07, 2008, 07:26:07 PM »
hey now...you doubt ducky's grandma's recipe?

Offline RAGNAR

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #11 on: October 07, 2008, 11:39:21 PM »
hey now...you doubt ducky's grandma's recipe?


That explains everything.....




*Groans*

Offline Arlon

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Re: Clan of Vintners : Knowledge
« Reply #12 on: April 05, 2019, 12:18:30 AM »
ALL OF THE CLAN OF VINTNERS TAKE HEED!

Concerning the recent explosions of Sul Paga stills, and in particular the last and largest one, which destroyed two Wagons and heavily damaged a third, the following hereby be known:
ALL current Paga stills shall, during Migration prep, be disassembled and scrapped. They are too old, and have been repaired too many times -- they are no longer safe to operate. This Clan will no longer, from this point forward, operate any Still or equipment that presents a clear danger to Tuchuk, our Wagons, or the Bosk. Riders have been dispatched to The Point with sufficient payment to make at least a deposit on no less than ten new Stills. Should complete stills not be available, components to build such will be obtained instead.
These new stills shall be located no less than twelve (12) lance lengths from any Tuchuk Wagon or structure, and no less than fifty (50) lances from the Bosk. THIS IS A PERMANENT REQUIREMENT! This requirement is NOT open to discussion or debate, and failure of any member of this Clan to comply ABSOLUTELY WILL result in expulsion from the Clan of Vintners.

---Arlon
    Elder, Tuchuk Clan of Vintners