This is our general starter recipe, which you can use
with any kind of juice or Brewsy Reserve. After we walk you carefully
through your first Brewsy, you'll be able to ace any of the 500+ recipes
across our website and app.
Here are the first couple steps:
Download our app!
We just released the new FREE Brewsy App! With over 5,000 hours in software development time, we built this incredible app as a gift to every Brewsy winemaker.
Chat with fellow winemakers (bye-bye Facebook!), design and share recipes, find amazing creations, and look out for special app-only deals.
Download free now:
Join our community
One of the best parts about Brewsy is the community! Join our groups and
meet thousands of other winemakers.
We have two groups: the
First Pour Club
for beginners and
Club Brewsy
for advanced Brewsy brewers as well. Join First Pour Club to start, and
then join Club Brewsy when you're ready to take your winemaking game to
the next level.
When you're asked for a secret code, just type in BREWSYCREW21.
Want to watch the process in action instead of reading about it? Watch right here, or
scroll down for written instructions.
starter recipe ingredients
☐ 1 gallon of juice (If this is your first time, we recommend
cranberry juice!)
☐ 1 brewsy bag
☐ 0.5 - 3 cups of white or cane sugar
☐ 1 airlock + stopper
Note: If your juice contains high fructose corn syrup, or the
ingredient "potassium metabisulfite", add 2 days to fermentation time.
Also, avoid any juices with the ingredient "potassium sorbate" (rare).
Part I: Preparation
Everything you need to know to get your Brewsy ready to go —
takes less than 10 minutes!
Gather everything you'll need
All you'll need is a brewsy kit, some sugar, and some juice. We highly recommend cranberry juice for your
first time – any kind will do (even white cranberry blends are awesome).
Pour your juice into your gallon jug
If you don't have a gallon jug, don't worry! You can buy a plastic 99¢ gallon jug from the grocery store
(recommended) or you can just use your original juice container (even if it's less than a gallon) to make
your wine. Any food-safe plastic that stores a beverage is safe to use with Brewsy.
Choose how sweet you'd like your wine to be
Now, you get to choose the final sweetness of your wine. Luckily you've got options — you can choose from
bone-dry to extra sweet. Or somewhere in between.🍷🍭
Just open the drink designer, put in a bit of info about your juice, and it will tell you exactly how much
sugar to add & how much juice to pour out.
Pour out some juice (if needed) and add your sugar
If you don't already have a lot of empty space at the top of your container, the drink designer will tell
you to pour some juice out. That way, when things get foamy during fermentation, the juice won't overflow
(your clean countertops will thank you in advance).
Then, add your sugar and shake that baby up!
Add your Brewsy bag
Always add one whole Brewsy bag per container. Even if you're not using a gallon of juice, the packets
shouldn't be split up — you need to guarantee that your wine gets all the nutrients in your Brewsy bag
that will make it taste delicious!
Then, close the cap and shake it all up again for a good 30 seconds. Lots of shaking helps activate the
yeast — and it turns out that shaking one gallon of juice is also a pretty good workout.
Add your airlock
Detach the rubber stopper from the plastic airlock, and squeeze the rubber stopper into your jug's
bottleneck. Then, stick the plastic airlock back on.
After that, fill the plastic airlock up to the "FILL" line with water. Snap the hole-punched lid back on
the top of the plastic airlock, and you're good to go.
Name your creation
What's a wine without a name? (P.S. — bonus points if you come up with a more creative name than what we
did here).
Put your soon-to-be wine in a warm, dark place
An attic, closet, or near your water heater are all good places. The ideal temperature is 75°F to 85°F.
(The fermentation will take longer in cooler temperatures).
Don't worry if you don't have a super warm place to keep your wine — the yeast generate their own heat, so
if you can insulate your bottle well with a big blanket or towel, it will still work great.
If you keep your house at a toasty 55°F and are concerned about making sure your wine stays warm enough,
check out these tips.
Part II: Fermentation
Find out more about the science behind fermentation here:
Let your wine hang out in its warm, dark place
Your yeast have woken up — and now they're about to do some serious, important work. AKA — eating all that
sugar you put in earlier and converting it to bubbles.... and alcohol, of course.
During fermentation, you might notice movement in your airlock, carbonation bubbles in your juice, and
different (read: maybe strange!) smells. Don't worry — it's all very normal.
If you have time, swirl your bottle once a day to keep things a-movin'!
Wait 3 - 5 days
Now it's time to play the waiting game. If your fermentation environment is warm, wait 3 days, then
taste-test. If temperatures are a bit cooler, wait 5 days.
Taste-Test
Pour just a tiny bit of wine into a glass. It won't taste amazing just yet (the taste is going to improve
a lot in the next steps), so just pay attention to the sweetness for now.
If it tastes dry enough for you, move onto the next step.
If it tastes too sweet, let it ferment in the warm place for 3 more days, then repeat the
taste-test to be sure it's dry enough for you.
In general: the longer your wine ferments, the more dry it will become.
Replace the airlock with a loose-fitting lid
Once you've double checked to make sure your wine tastes dry and alcoholic enough for you, it's time to
stop the fermentation.
Take off the airlock, and place the hole-punched lid on top of your bottle (a loosely-fitted cap will also
do the trick).
⚠️⚠️Be sure never to tighten the cap. Carbonation will still build up while your gallon jug is in the
fridge, and we definitely don't want any carbonation bombs!⚠️⚠️
Put your wine in the fridge
Once you've made sure that cap is on loosely, pop your jug in the fridge and say goodbye for two days.
Part III: Cold-Crashing + Racking (aka — removing all the solids in
your wine)
See these steps in action here:
Let your wine sit in the fridge for 2 days
During this time, the cold in the fridge makes all the solids (yeast + nutrients) from your brewsy bag
precipitate towards the bottom of the jug. You'll see a cloudy layer of solids at the bottom start to
build up.
After 2 days, rack your wine (aka: pour your wine off the sediment at the bottom)
While pouring, try to go slowly, so that the sediment at the bottom doesn't mix in with the rest of your
wine.
When you get to the bottom where it starts to get cloudy, stop pouring and discard the cloudy wine and
sediment — you won't want it in your final wine!
Part IV: Tasting (!) and Aging
Give it a try!
Your brew is finally ready to try now — so pour a glass out and celebrate your latest delicious
accomplishment!
Making adjustments is a very common part of the winemaking process, and almost all professional wineries
do it, too. It's another way to customize your wine so it's exactly how you like it.
See it in action here:
Store your brew
Your Brewsy is going to get way better with age!
Because your Brewsy doesn't have any preservatives or stabilizers,
we recommend storing it in the fridge.
Continue to keep the cap on loosely to let carbonation escape, and
have a glass whenever you feel like it!
Rack your wine again
After a couple days, some sediment will start to build up at the bottom of your container again. You can
rack your wine again to get it even clearer!