A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (2024)

Muscadine wine is one of the few wines available made with 100% American grapes. We show how to make this patriotic tipple with our homemade muscadine wine recipe.

A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (1)

Imagine a wine that’s full bodied, fragrant and good for your health…. No, we’re not talking about spinach sauvignon or chia seed chardonnay, but the very real and easy-to-make muscadine wine!

You can make it at home by following this step-by-step recipe (if you enjoy making wine, don't forget to check out step-by-step recipes we have for our other homemade wines as well).

Table of Contents

1

An Introduction to Muscadines

2

Section 1: Equipment for Making Muscadine Wine

3

Section 2: Ingredients for Muscadine Wine

4

Section 3: How to Make Muscadine Wine

5

Conclusion

An Introduction to Muscadines

A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (2)

Recent research suggests that muscadines (a species of grapevine native to America) are something of a superfood.

They contain extremely high levels of polyphenols, powerful antioxidants which have shown to have huge potential health benefits, according to recent studies.

The skin of the muscadine grape also contains more fiber than oats or rice bran, and they are also rich in potassium, calcium and Vitamin C.

If you’ve never heard of muscadines, you’re not alone.

I had no idea what they were when I first started wine-making until I finally looked them up and had a moment of clarity: they’re grapes!

Big, fat, black-skinned, juicy grapes which grow in abundance all across the southern states of America, from Florida all the way to eastern Texas.

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Despite their name, they are not to be confused with the ‘muscat’ varieties of grape which are found in Europe and South America.

It is thought that the muscadine got its name because of its physical similarities to muscat grapes, or perhaps due to the ‘musky’ scent of the skin when ripe.

Either way, don’t expect to end up with a dry and light muscat-like wine from these grapes – muscadine wine is rich and sweet, and best suited as a dessert wine or a substitute for port.

Since the 16th century, southerners have been cultivating huge crops of muscadine grapes and using them to make wines, jellies, jams and juices, sharing all their tips and wine-making hacks along the way.

Today, it has never been easier to make DIY muscadine wine in your own home, then legitimately tell everyone that it was produced by your private vineyard.

They don’t need to know that ‘private vineyard’ is shorthand for ‘those wild grapes growing at the bottom of my garden which basically look after themselves until September when I wander down with a bucket and pick them.’

For muscadine aficionados, this wine is not to be confused with the ever-popular ‘Scuppernong’.

They are both made from the same grapes, but that’s where the similarities end.

Scuppernong is a potent liquor made from young, bronze-colored muscadine grapes, which are boiled with sugar, then cooled, strained and added to vodka.

The result is a dangerously drinkable liquor which only gets more potent the longer you leave it!

This recipe will tell you how to find muscadine grapes, when to pick them, and how to turn them into a delicious and drinkable wine which may actually be good for your health.

As long as you don’t drink too much of it, of course…

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Section 1: Equipment for Making Muscadine Wine

If you’ve made fruit wine before, you will probably already own most of this equipment.

But just in case you need a reminder, here are all the different pieces of kit you need before starting to make muscadine wine.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Every piece of equipment should be fully sterilized before and after use.

Even the tiniest speck of dirt or bacteria can wreak havoc with your fermentation process, ruining your wine before it’s even had a chance to ferment.

I use campden tablets to sterilize (which also double up as wine stabilizers) but boiling hot water will also do the trick.

Try to stay clear of bleach or other toxic products, as any unwashed residue can make you pretty sick. As far as I’m concerned, it’s just not worth taking that risk.

Here's a list of the basic equipment needed for homemade muscadine wine:

  • Campden tablets
  • A brew bin of at least 1 gallon capacity
  • 2 glass or plastic demijohns of at least 1 gallon in size with fitted airlocks
  • A large straining bag or muslin cloth
  • A 3ft (at least) long vinyl siphon tube
  • 6 wine bottles, plus corks and a corker.
  • A large funnel

If you're just starting out on your wine making journey then it might be easier to get a complete wine making kit like this one (click on the image to read more on Amazon):

A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (5)

OPTIONAL EXTRAS:

  • Powder-free latex gloves or clean household rubber gloves. Muscadines are a highly acidic fruit and when you’re dealing with large quantities they can irritate sensitive skin.
  • Hydrometer. This is a useful thermometer-type gadget which will help you keep track of your wine’s progress at each of the crucial states.
  • Acid test kit. Again, this is by no means essential for the home wine-maker, but a lot of purists would argue that an acid testing kit (or ‘titration’ kit) comes in handy when working with a highly acidic fruit such as the muscadine grape.

A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (6)

Section 2: Ingredients for Muscadine Wine

You've got your equipment ready and you're raring to go! The next step is to gather those precious ingredients that'll soon be transformed into beautiful muscadine wine.

Here's what you need:

  • 3lbs (1.3kg) fresh muscadine grapes. Dried fruit will NOT work with this recipe, as the sweetness completely changes the flavor and fermentation process. If you can’t find fresh muscadine grapes, have a look at our other fruit wine recipes and try one of them instead. The homemade ginger wine is a particular favorite of ours.
  • 2.5lbs (1.13kg) granulated sugar
  • Red wine yeast. Follow the packet instructions for details on how much to use, and how to use it.
  • Yeast nutrient. As before, check out the packet instructions for details on how much to use.
  • Campden tablets
  • Wine stopper/stabilizer such as potassium sorbate

How to Find & Pick Muscadines

Wild muscadines are native to the southeastern states of America, where they can ripen slowly during the warm, humid summers.

They love deep, fertile soil, so if you’re setting out to find muscadines for the first time, start hunting around the riverbeds.

Louisiana’s wetlands are another sure-fire source of the fruit, and there have even been sightings along the Gulf Coast.

If you want to grow your own muscadines, it’s incredibly easy. Just plant the seeds in a sunny, well irrigated spot and let nature do its thing!

Muscadines are hardy grapes which are pretty resistant to most pests and diseases. They don’t even need fertilizer.

And while you’re very welcome to become a grape obsessive, and invest in a lot of fancy vine-trailing equipment, your grapes will grow just as well if you leave them to it.

A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (7)

Once your mini vineyard is complete, just watch out for any changes.

You should start to see a few blossoms appearing in early April, followed by small green/yellow grapes, growing in clusters of 4-10.

By the summer months, the grapes should have turned a dark purple, then black, and they should be so ripe that they are almost falling off the vines by themselves. That’s when you start to harvest them.

These grapes are so plentiful that during harvest season (late July-late September) the grapes can be found in supermarkets up and down the country, and many southern farmers offer ‘U-pick’ schemes, where members of the public are invited to pick as many grapes as they can in return for free produce.

This is a cheap (well, free!) and easy way to stock up on ripe muscadines, so keep an eye out for roadside signs and notices in your local town and get in fast before the best fruits are gone!

If possible, pick your muscadines on a warm, sunny day, either in the late morning or the late evening. And don’t be tempted to snack on them while you pick – muscadines have a very tough skin which you might struggle to bite through.

While the insides are pulpy and sweet, the skin is extremely bitter and the raw taste of the grapes might just put you off continuing with the wine.

But don’t worry – this is exactly what makes muscadine wine one of the nicest homemade wines on the planet.

The bitter skin is full of tannin, which helps give your wine body and color, and the natural acidity just means that you don’t need to add citric acid or lemon juice to your wine-making process.

Finally, remember that from the moment you pick the grapes from the vine, they will start to lose their flavor and rot away.

Plan enough time to start making your muscadine wine the same day that you pick the fruit – ideally you will be ready to start the first steps within an hour of picking the grapes.

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Section 3: How to Make Muscadine Wine

You've assembled the equipment and ingredients. The first test is passed! Now, let's get started for real!

1. Prepare Your Muscadines

If you have sensitive skin, now is the time to don your rubber gloves.

Wash all your grapes and remove them from the vine, making sure that there are no tiny pieces of stalk left on the end of the fruit.

Now you have to break through the tough exterior of the fruit – and this is a lot harder than it sounds!

If you were simply enjoying your muscadines as a snack, you would probably just piece the skin with a needle or a knife and suck the pulp out from inside.

But for wine-making purposes, you want to cut through as much of the fruit as possible, so that are able to mash the mixture up.

There are lots of different techniques on how to do this, and you will probably discover your own favorite.

Here are a few of mine:

1. The ‘Freddy Kruger’ method

Put your muscadines in a large bowl, then take four sharp-ended knitting needles, and hold them between your fingers, then form a fist.

Use your ‘Freddy Kruger’ hands to punch into the bowl, piercing as many grapes as you can each time.

2. The ‘bread knife’ method

Trap a handful of muscadines between two Tupperware lids or chopping boards, and press down on the top so that the muscadines can’t escape.

Then use a bread knife (or any knife with a serrated edge) to cut horizontally through the middle, cutting all the muscadines in half.

3. The ‘tenderizing’ method

Put on a pair of work goggles, take a meat tenderizer (a clean mallet or hammer would also do), and just bash away at the grapes to your heart’s content!

4. Freeze them

This is probably the easiest way to get the skins off to be honest, but it’s not as much fun as options 1-3.

Put your grapes in a bag and pop them in the freezer. After a few hours, the skin should have cracked so you can just defrost them and move on to Step Three.

2. Start Cooking

Bring three quarts of water to the boil, then allow it to cool. Then add the sugar to the water and stir until it has completely dissolved.

Meanwhile, make sure your muscadines are well and truly mashed – you want to release as much pulp as possible at this stage.

A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (9)

When you’re happy with the consistency, tightly fix your straining bag over the top of your brew bin, and pour the grape mix over the top. Squeeze the bag well so that you get every drop of grape juice out of it.

You should now have a slightly murky looking dark red liquid in your bin. Pour over the water and sugar, and add the yeast nutrient and the yeast.

Give it a gentle stir, then cover the brew bin and leave it to ferment for 7-10 days, stirring every day or so.

You will find that the mixture bubbles quite a lot for the first few days, before settling down a bit. When the bubbles stop, the fermentation process has ended.

Top Tip #1: If you have a hydrometer, this is your first opportunity to use it! After the first 24 hours, you should have a gravity reading of between 1.100 and 1.003. When the reading hits 1.030, the fermentation process is complete, and you can move on to the next step.

Top Tip #2: If you’re using an acid testing kit, you can start testing your wine after 24 hours. Follow the instructions on the pack in order to get your reading – you are looking for an acid level of no more than 7 p.p.t. tartaric.

3. After Fermentation

A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (10)

After a week or so, your muscadine mix should have completed this first part of the fermentation process, but you will probably find that there is a little bit of foam still sitting on the top of the liquid, and some sediment collecting at the bottom.

Strain the mixture once more to remove all these little ‘bits’.

Now it’s time to move the wine into one of your demijohns.

Put down a few towels and set up a work area where you can splash away to your heart’s content.

Then using your funnel, pour the wine mix straight into the demijohn.

If the liquid doesn’t quite reach the neck of the bottle, top it up with some filtered or bottled water, and a teaspoon or two of sugar (the rule is one part sugar for three parts water).

Then fit your bung and your airlock, and leave the demijohn to sit in a cool and dark place for at least three weeks.

4. Rack and Repeat

After three weeks or so, your wine should start looking like, well, wine!

Any bubbling should have slowed down or completely stopped, and other than a thin layer of yeast and fruit sediment at the bottom of the bottle, the liquid should be clean, clear and ruby red.

Now it’s time to start the racking process.

This will clarify your wine even further by moving all the wine into your second demijohn, leaving behind any tiny bits of residue in demijohn number one.

Because muscadines have such a deep color and a tough skin, you will need to repeat the racking process at least twice with this wine in order to get the best possible result.

Once you’ve racked your first gallon of wine, you’ll find it easy to do it again. Just follow the instructions below and get racking!

How to Rack Your Homemade Wine

  1. 1

    Very gently lift your wine-filled demijohn and place it on a table or flat chair. Make sure you don’t disturb any of the sediment at the bottom of the jar, but if you do, just leave the demijohn sitting there for a few hours until the sediment has settled again.
  2. 2

    Put the second demijohn on the ground below, making sure that it is completely flat.
  3. 3

    Remove the bung and airlock, then take your siphon tube and lower it into the wine until it is around half an inch from the bottom of the jar – you want to siphon off only the ‘good’ wine liquid, leaving the sediment behind.
  4. 4

    Get things started by sucking on the other end of the tube until you taste wine, then quickly stick this end of the tube into the second demijohn and watch it fill up!
  5. 5

    Top up your racked/siphoned wine with a little filtered water and a teaspoon of sugar, then put the airlock back on and leave it in a dark, cool place for another three weeks.
  6. 6

    After three weeks, repeat the racking process again.

5. Bottling it up!

You can rack your wine as many times as you need to before you start thinking about bottling, but two or three times should be enough.

After each racking, make sure you wait at least three weeks before siphoning off the wine again.

When you’re happy with the color and clarity of the wine, you can start bottling!

Just like the racking process, the botting process involves one wine-filled demijohn sitting on a table, and your six glass bottles lined up on the ground below.

Again, you simply dip the siphon tube towards the bottom of the demijohn, suck on the other end until the liquid starts to flow, then pour the wine directly from the tube into the bottles until it’s finished.

Using your corker, cork and seal the bottles and construct a few labels with the date of bottling and the ingredients – on the off chance that you forget!

Now comes the really hard part…waiting.

Muscadine wine tastes best after it has been left to mature for two or three years. This is a LONG time to wait before sampling your wares, so I suggest you open one bottle after 6 months, another 6 months later, and so on, so that you can experience the changes in the wine’s flavor over time.

Even after a year’s maturation, you should be so pleasantly surprised by the wine’s depth of flavor that you will go out and start collecting muscadines for your next batch before the season is done.

However, after two years, the wine will take on an incredible richness that’s really worth the wait – it has been described as port-like in its taste and color, and you could happily serve it alone with a plate of good cheese and biscuits at the end of a meal.

A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (11)

Tell us how you drink your muscadine wine, and how long you managed to wait before raiding your wine cellar!

I have never quite managed to make it past two years, so I wonder whether the flavor intensifies even further after four years, or five.

If you have any variations on this recipe, or innovative serving suggestions, get in touch and share them with the Wine Turtle community!

Recommended Article: Check out our guide onhow to make banana wine next!

Conclusion

A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (12)

It may not have the cache of the Napa Valley vineyards, but muscadine wine is arguably the most popular home-grown wine in America.

Not only that, but when you know where to look, you will find these wild grapes growing absolutely everywhere!

The recent reports on the health benefits of muscadine grapes mean that more and more people are cultivating the fruit than ever before, although there is more money to be made by selling the seeds, than by producing and selling commercial quantities of wine.

That means that homemade muscadine wine may soon be the only muscadine wine you can get your hands on – so it’s a good job it’s so easy to make!

Let us know how you get on with your wine-making projects, and feel free to share this article with your friends and family so that you can spread the muscadine message!

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A Homemade Muscadine Wine Recipe You Must Try! (2024)

FAQs

How to make 1 gallon of homemade muscadine wine? ›

Steps to Make It

In a large, cleaned, and sanitized gallon-sized glass container, dissolve 6 cups granulated sugar in 3 quarts filtered water. Add 1 quart mashed muscadine grapes to water and sprinkle 1 (1/4-ounce) packet active dry yeast over top, but don't stir.

What is the best yeast for muscadine wine? ›

The wine yeast recommended for the Scuppernong is the Lalvin type: K1V-1116; for the Muscadine the Red Star type: Pasture Blanc is recommended.

Why is muscadine wine not popular? ›

The sweetness of these wines is not natural, as most Muscadine winemakers add a lot of sugar to help to counteract the natural bitterness of the grape. Many wine lovers are put off by the intense bruised fruit flavors of Muscadine wine. Even the smell can be somewhat overwhelming.

How long should muscadine wine ferment? ›

Allow this mixture (must) to ferment for 5 to 7 days. You should start to see some foaming activity within 24 hours of adding the wine yeast. Typically, 70% of the fermentation activity will occur during this 5 to 7 day period. After 5 to 7 days remove the pulp from the fermenter and discard.

Why does my muscadine wine taste like vinegar? ›

If it tastes of vinegar it sounds very much like you have got an infection in the wine. The normal cause is at the end of fermentation something might have got into the brew (like a fly) which will have caused this. This will happen when the wine is hanging around waiting to be degassed, fined, and bottled.

How many pounds of muscadines does it take to make a gallon of wine? ›

Re: Muscadines

"All my fruit recipes use 6lb fruit,, 2 lb sugar, and 3 qts water all per gallon proposed wine."

How much alcohol is in homemade muscadine wine? ›

1 - For white muscadines immediately crush & press the grapes to remove the grape skins, pulp and seeds and pour juice into a carboy. Measure the Brix to determine how much sugar to add to bring the potential alcohol up to 10-11%.

Is Moscato made from muscadines? ›

Some of the universities in North Carolina have done research about the health benefits of Muscadine grapes. In short, Muscadine and Muscato are completely different types of grape species.

Is Moscato the same as muscadine wine? ›

It's also easily confused with another grape that can be vinified either sweet or dry. Although the names sound similar, muscadine is a completely separate grape from moscato (muscat).

Is muscadine wine bad for you? ›

Muscadine grapes, wines and nutraceuticals may be beneficial in prevention of heart disease and cancer. Recent tests show that resveratrol from muscadine grapes can block cancer cells from attacking organs, thus preventing spread of the disease once it starts.

Are muscadine grapes bad for you? ›

Muscadine grapes are fat free, high in fiber and they are high in antioxidants, especially ellagic acid and resveratrol. Ellagic acid has demonstrated anticarcinogenic properties in the colon, lungs and liver of mice. Resveratrol is reported to lower cholesterol levels and the risk of coronary heart disease.

Are muscadines healthier than grapes? ›

Muscadine wine is also a great source of resveratrol, which is a potent antioxidant. Muscadine grapes contain more of this compound than other types of grapes, and some of the highest antioxidant levels among all fruits, which means that muscadine wine is likely richer in this antioxidant than other types.

Can homemade wine ferment too long? ›

Wine will ferment as long as it takes to turn the sugar into alcohol and CO2. Yes, you can let it "ferment" too long. If you do not reduce the exposure to oxygen (whether by pressing off a red or racking a white to a full container), you risk exposing the wine to too much oxygen.

What can I do with muscadine skins? ›

Muscadine juice can be used to make sorbet and cocktails, or try your hand at making Muscadine wine. And the skins and seeds of Muscadines isn't always discarded. The grapes can be used, peels included, to make pie.

What happens if you ferment grapes for too long? ›

Microbial Spoilage: If the fermentation process is not properly controlled and monitored, there is a risk of microbial spoilage. Undesirable microorganisms, such as acetic acid bacter.

How long does it take to ferment 1 gallon of wine? ›

Fermentation takes roughly two to three weeks to complete fully, but the initial ferment will finish within seven to ten days. However, wine requires a two-step fermentation process.

How many bottles of wine does 1 gallon make? ›

There are 5 bottles in a gallon of wine. In the US, you can legally produce 200 gallons of wine for personal use. (That's 1,000 bottles!) There are 300 bottles in a standard wine barrel.

How much yeast do I need for 1 gallon of wine? ›

Typical usage rate for yeast is 1 gm / gallon of juice, but being a little short or a little long is not a problem, as yeast reproduces to reach a number at which fermentation takes place. Being slightly long on usage amount simply gets the fermentation count up that much faster.

How many grape vines does it take to make a gallon of wine? ›

Another rule of thumb is that you need approximately 20 pounds of fresh fruit for each gallon of homemade wine. If each vine produces five pounds and you'd like to make one five-gallon batch from your own grapes each year, then plant 20 vines (plus a few extra, just in case).

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