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Monday, December 12, 2011

Spike Your Juice lets you make wine from any juice in 48 hours

If I ever spend any significant time in prison, I'm going to ask someone to mail me a few packets of Spike Your Juice.

This fascinating product allows you to turn almost any kind of juice into wine in just 48 hours. It's really simple: It's nothing more than a small 1g packet of yeast and sugar; smaller than a sugar packet you'd add to coffee. That, and a rubber stopper and airlock is all you need to make wine out of basically any juice you can imagine.

It's based on a seasonal German product called Federweisser, the freshly pressed, still-fermenting grape must, only available during harvest. Federweisser is the opposite of shelf-stable, as it changes every hour and cannot be transported for long distances. I've tried it in Germany, and I like the concept more than I liked Federweisser itself. That's also true of Spike Your Juice. This is fizzy fun for the DIY crowd.  

Here's what you do: Bring the juice to room temperature and open it (a 64-ounce container is recommended; no artificial sweeteners). Pour in the packet. Close the top with the rubber stopper and airlock, which allows CO2 to escape; this is important, because otherwise your juice bottle might explode. Then, wait two days.


The company sent me a free sample along with a bottle of Welch's Black Cherry Concord Grape Juice, so naturally I tried this first. After 48 hours, I had a pleasantly fizzy, quite sweet concoction that tasted like sparkling Merlot. I gave it another 72 hours, tasting each day, and it got drier and drier as the yeast converted more sugar to alcohol.

I wish I could tell you how much alcohol was in each step, but here's the difference between a wine writer and a winemaker: I don't have a refractometer at home. Silly me! The company claims the yeast can keep converting up to 14% alcohol. Anecdotally, I guess I got the cherry/grape juice up to nearly 10%, and my next experiment possibly a little higher.

You can slow -- but not stop -- the fermentation by putting the juice container in the refrigerator. My advice is to do this sooner rather than later. I thought I wanted the juice drier, but it turned out to be more pleasant sweeter. Or maybe I'm just a typical American wine drinker: Talk dry, drink sweet.

My success was partial with the Black Cherry Concord Grape: I would rather drink a real, non-fizzy Merlot, but my wife, who has a sweet tooth, liked it and nearly finished the bottle, one glass per night, until it got too dry for her. My disdain for it came from the fact that it tasted so much like professional wine, which I prefer.

So I decided to try something really different: orange juice. I sprung $6.50 for a jug of fresh-squeezed unfiltered organic orange juice, figuring you'll only get good results if you start with the best material.

After 48 hours, the taste was amazing. It was like the best mimosa you've ever had, mainly because places that serve mimosas invariably use low quality orange juice and cheap Cava. My DIY version was mildly fizzy, with plenty of orange flavor and a great balance of sweetness and acidity. It was delicious! I should have left well enough alone.

But I just had to see what would develop, so I let it ferment longer. In 24 hours it was much drier, a little fizzier and less pleasant. The next day, it was sharply alcoholic and had no perceptible sweetness, and I had no desire to drink it. If only I'd slowed the fermentation after 48 hours ... well, lesson learned. I eventually poured it down the drain.

I'm not going to say Spike Your Juice is better than a professionally made sparkling wine. But you can't buy professionally made sparkling pomegranate juice or grapefruit juice. Point two: It's a fun little experiment.

And point three: If I'm in prison, I'm going to make the best apple or cranberry or even bread pudding wine in the joint, if I can just get me some Spike Your Juice. (You can order it here.)

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8 comments:

  1. I have to admit, you were among the LAST people I would have figured to try this (not implying that I think you hate fun). We gave the gift box kit to a winery owner last year and the look of horror on his French winemaker's face made it worth the $25.

    I don't have the link but there is a wineblogger who did a pretty serious test, and evaluated it up to (I think) two weeks out. My initial attempt didn't fare well, with my refractometer showing a measly 3% alcohol.

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  2. G.E.: Your comment pleases me. Who wants to be predictable?

    My 48-hour-mimosa was certainly in single digits booze-wise, but then, so are restaurant mimosas.

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  3. Refractometer are used in the field to test grape sugar content. Yes, you can use a refractometer in the cellar but a hydrometer is much cheaper (no more than $20 vs $70 or more)....

    The concern I have about this product is that it may not necessarily work with all juices. Some juices contain preservatives that would inhibit the yeasts (that is what they are supposed to do: preserve the juice by preventing spoilage by fermentation, among other things)....

    If you want a still juice wine that still is sweet, just add more sugar. Assume that the yeasts will give out at around 14% ABV. So add enough sugar for the yeasts to convert to to 14% ABV (about 26Bx) and let the sugar already in the juice remain for sweetness.
    The ferment will go to completion and the wine will still be sweet.

    If you want it to still have carbonation, just siphon it off into a container which you will seal when the ferment is just still slowly going. You want the bubbles in the ferment (not the airlock) to go no faster than half the rate of a glass of beer. Put the sealed container in a cool place (not the fridge). In a week or two, the ferment should finish. Chill before opening and open very slowly.

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  4. SUAMW: The package does say not to use on juices that contain preservatives.

    It also says not to use it on juices with artificial sweeteners. I don't drink those anyway, but am not sure why it wouldn't work.

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  5. This would go SO great with take out from In N Out BUrger. But then, so does everything! :)

    Fast wines for fast times & fast food?

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  6. Because artificial sweeteners are nonfermentable.

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  7. SUAMW: OK, I get that, but, maybe I'm just dense here, wouldn't fruit juice still have some sort of natural sugar in it? I just don't drink juice with artificial sweetener so I don't know.

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  8. Yes, I think they all do. Many juices are reconstituted. So I suppose, then, that in the process they can remove fermentable sugars and replace with nonfermentable ones. Additionally, most juices probably get additional sugar in production so I guess one could substitute artificial sweeteners for something like cane sugar or high fructose corn syrup.
    There is also a possibility (but I'm speculating here) that nonfermentable sugars could be competitive inhibitors of yeast's fermentation mechanisms - meaning they compete for a place on that mechanism with fermentable sugars and when they do get in, they shut the mechanism down.
    Alternately, it's possible that addition of artificial sweeteners may require addition of stabilizers that may prevent fermentation.
    All speculation.

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