May your     wines
fall bright!

This is our
e-Book,
also available on CD

Table of Contents

Title Page
Catalog at Fall Bright
Home on Keuka Lake
Index-Sitemap
Welcome

About the Authors

Basic Winemaking
Getting Started

AddingSugarChart

Adding
Sugar Math
Airlocks
Juice to Wine
Grapes to Wine
BATF

Bottle Fillers -Wands

Bottling

Bungs

Cleaning

Containers

Corks

Corkers

Fining and Clearing

Hydrometer Test

Hydrometer +5 to –5

Malolactic Culture

pH

Siphon

Spigot

Yeast: 
Lalvin

Red Star

Starter

Recommendations

Steve Shanker's Winemaking Site

ACID REDUCTION 
and ADDITION

Acid Testing TA
Acidex

Calcium Carbonate

Cold Stabilizing

Potassium Bicarbonate
Potassium Sorbate
Sodium Hydroxide
Tartaric Acid Chart

Water and Blending

CONVERSIONS
Metric Equil
.

FILTRATION
Buon Vino Mini Jet

Instructions-Mini

Cleaning-Mini
Bypass pumping

Buon Vino SuperJet

Instructions-Super

Mark III

Vinamat-type 

OAK
Barrel Treatment

Oak Chips
and Oak Mor

PROBLEMS
Fining
Hydrogen Sulfide:
Copper Sulfate
Bocksin
Stuck Fermentation    
Vinegar

SPECIALTY WINES
Blending

Bottling Sweet
 
Fruit Wines
Late Harvest Vignoles
and Riesling

Sherry
Sparkling Wine

TEST
Acid Testing

Clinitest

Clinitest-Poison

NaOH Chart
Testing  NaOH

Residual Sugar

S02 Sulfite Test
Titrets

Vinometer Alcohol

Vines, Nurseries, 
Vineyard Supplies
 
Partial list for sure!

BREWING
Basic Brewing

Beginner Mashing

HOP TOXICITY
Hop Toxicity Medical

Index-Sitemap

Online shopping at  

www.fallbright.com 

May Your Wines 
Fall Bright!

 

 

Though brewing is not the main topic in this Winemaking Book, so many of our winemakers brew too, that we are inserting this in here. 
    BREWERS ALERT:  
Hop Toxicity in Dogs
BREWERS ALERT:  
Hop Toxicity in Dogs
  
Fall Bright, The Winemakers Shoppe

Dispose of sparged hops in a secure and safe fashion.

Unbeknownst to most vets, at least eight cases of hop toxicity 
in dogs have been….

Hops Toxicity in Dogs:


We have received a report from a brewer whose dog died as a result of eating the spent hops from a 15-gallon batch of Irish Stout.

Unbeknownst to most vets, at least eight cases of hop toxicity in dogs have been recorded by the National Animal Poison Control Center at the University of Illinois in Urbana, IL.  Seven of the dogs have been Greyhounds, with one remaining case being a Labrador Retriever cross.

Ingestion of hops results in malignant Hyperthermia, an uncontrollable fever.  The first symptom to become obvious to an owner is heavy panting.  Tachycardia (rapid heartbeat) will also be present, at up to 200 beats per minute.  Temperature may rise as quickly as a 2 degrees F every five minutes.  Carbon dioxide levels in the blood rise dramatically.  Recommended treatment seems to be cold water baths to keep temperatures down, and a quick trip to the vet for temperature control and antibiotics.


The most basic lesson to be learned from all this is that brewing chemicals, ingredients, and spent materials of all types should be stored, handled and disposed of properly.  Animals and children make toys and food out of anything they can reach. 


Even empty brewing vessels can pose a threat if used improperly and can become the focus of a household accident.  Note, for example, the child-warning label required in California on all buckets.  It's our responsibility it seems, to inform the consumer that any vessel larger than a child's head and without enough leaks to drain completely before drowning can occur can pose a threat to children.  In fact, it's the parent's or the pet owner's responsibility to look after the welfare of the loved ones.

Please dispose of any brewing ingredients in a secure and safe fashion.  We (Tom and Marcy from Fall Bright) do not know if this toxic response would take place in children.  Crosby and Baker, Ltd, Westport, MA passed along the above information to us.

Medical