Making wine at home uncorks custom blends

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By LINDSAY ROBERTS
Cronkite News

PHOENIX – Tom Messier turned his Mesa home into a winery.

Four-foot-tall metal buckets line his living room. A humidifier and two wooden barrels, covered by a plastic sheet, occupy a corner of his kitchen. Stacks of red, white and fruit wines in glass jugs decorate his spare room.

Messier belongs to AZ WineMakers, a community of Arizona at-home winemakers who create custom blends. He hopes to someday turn his hobby into a business.

“I think there’s over 100 members, and we get together and talk about wine, we drink some wine, and compare notes,” Messier said.

Arizona’s wine industry attracts in-state and out-of-state tourists, according to a 2017 study conducted by the Arizona Office of Tourism. Its economic impact was nearly $57 million in 2017.

Messier and his wife, Teresa, have been making wine at home for six years and plan to parlay that operation into a full-time winery.

Their favorite part of the winemaking process is experimenting with flavors and fruits, including orange spice and banana.

“It’s an adventure, trying to figure it out how to make this better, or how to make it at all,” Tom Messier said.

Louis Maconi, another hobbyist member of AZ WineMakers, makes wine in his Chandler apartment.

As a child, he helped his grandfather make wine in the basement.

While on a cruise seven years ago, Maconi was enthralled at a day trip that took him into a cellar filled with barrels of wine.

“The smell is what got me,’ Maconi said. “It reminded me of my basement growing up, and at that time I thought, ‘I have to be more involved with this somehow.'”

Maconi ferments wine at home at least 28 days a month. The fermenting process can take from one month to several months.

“I like the romance of it,” he said. “I think it’s fun and I think it’s a part of me that I can share with my friends and my loved ones.” Wine hobbyists are not allowed to sell their products.

Unlike Messier, Maconi is happy to keep his hobby just a fun endeavor.

Messier is coordinating awards for an Arizona Emerging Winemakers contest – open only to non-commercial winemakers – in April at Yavapai College in Prescott.

 

For more stories from Cronkite News, visit cronkitenews.azpbs.org.

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Louis Marconi of Chandler started to make small batches of wine after he visited a wine cellar on a cruise. The aroma reminded him of his grandfather, who made wine in his basement. (Photo by Jenna Miller/Cronkite News)
A thick grape-juice concentrate is an essential component of the wine Louis Marconi of Chandler makes using a kit. (Photo by Jenna Miller/Cronkite News)
Louis Marconi, a member of AZ Winemakers, a association of home wine makers, works on a batch at his Chandler home. After the wine is fermented, Marconi filters powders and removes impurities. (Photo by Jenna Miller/ Cronkite News)
The wine must be carefully weighed and measured, which allows Louis Marconi of Chandler to detect small changes in sugar and alcohol content after fermentation. (Photo by Jenna Miller/Cronkite News)
Hobbyist winemaker Louis Marconi of Chandler heats corks  in boiling water so they can can easily be inserted into bottles. After about 28 days, Marconi will bottle and cork the wine.  (Photo by Jenna Miller/Cronkite News)
Louis Maconi has personal labels for his homemade wine. He believes his homemade product is better than some commercial wines. (Photo by Jenna Miller/Cronkite News)