Screech Owl Cellars Wine & Vinegar

Just Something I Made brings you just something he made. Today Jeff and I labeled his red wine vinegar and he finished wax sealing the last of his bottles of 2009 Cabernet Sauvignon, all in time to share on Christmas day. I thought you would enjoy seeing a bit of the process of one of Jeff’s favorite hobbies, winemaking.He begins by purchasing and handpicking all of the grapes from a Sonoma vineyard, such as these picked early last month. I adore those vintage wooden crates, much heavier than the new plastic bins available, but these have been in his family for many years.He pours all of the grapes into the crusher then cranks by hand to separate the fruit from the stem.

The separated stems fall into a wheelbarrow and are pushed to the back of our property into the compost pile for our garden.

Our pups not only accompany him in the vineyards when picking, but keep him company during the crush.

The grapes and seeds pile into a large vat.

Yeast is added to the grapes and the vat is stored in our barn and kept covered and nice and warm with heating blankets wrapped around the outside of the vat while the grapes ferment over a couple of weeks. Each member of our family helps keep the electric blankets heated and the grapes stirred while the winemaker is on duty at the firehouse.

After the fermentation process the grapes are pressed and all the liquid is poured into large carboys (huge glass jugs). The liquid is later racked (siphoned from one carboy to another leaving sediment behind.) Left alone for a few months it is again racked into an oak barrel where it will undergo a malolactic fermentation and aged for over a year before bottling. I wasn’t around for photographing the bottling of the 2009 vintage below, I’ll try to snag some shots next time.

I designed the faux leather labels and printed them out onto full sheet label stock. Here is a previous post about his wine and labels on my old design blog. Jeff trimmed out the front and back labels on the Genesis Paper Trimmer (we love that thing!), rounded the corners with a corner punch and adhered them to the bottles. Today he warmed up the gold sealing wax over the stove in a small can,

and dipped each of the corked bottles to seal.

Jeff also makes vinegar using extra red wine from the crush which he stores in crocks and later bottles for gift giving. This year he came home with screw-top bottles and cork lids for the vinegar.I wasn’t crazy about the threads on the neck of the bottle showing so I devised a quick fix using scrap leather.

I washed the leather well with soap and water and cut into strips to fit around the bottles while wet. I trimmed the ends of the strips at angles and cut small nicks at one end.

Folding over the opposite end section, I cut a slit into the leather fold.

I slid the other end into the slit,

slipped it over the bottle,

and pulled tight lodging the cut nicks into the slit. The leather shrunk a bit as it dried hiding the glass threads beautifully.

The vinegar labels were also printed to full sheet label stock and trimmed out individually. As with the wine labels, each vinegar label edge was colored with a same color marker. This is a very important step in keeping the label appearing as a leather patch rather than a plain paper label with the white edge showing.

All the bottles were labeled side by side to keep the labels at the same height on each.

My dear friend Gia stopped by with Christmas cookies and took the first bottle of vinegar home. We will be handing out the rest of the vinegar and wine to friends and family we visit on Christmas day.

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Wire Holder Displays

This project began with purging the game cabinet. Why would any family need three cribbage boards? (I don’t even know how to play.) Before tossing into the “donate” box I thought I’d have some fun by poking some of my handmade wire holders into the holes of one of the boards. I added some handmade paper tape and here is the simple result, a place to keep all that stuff that gets piled up on our chalkboard ledge- lists, coupons, fire department calendar and more. It makes a whimsical-yet-practical display. I will add more wires as needed over time.

While I had my pliers and wire out I wanted to show you how easy it is to make a container displays with the wire holders. There are so many container possibilities from teacups to cigar boxes, the sky’s the limit. Place a piece of floral foam in the container and cover with burlap, moss or any substance you can easily poke wire through. I used a sweet little biscuit tin found at Summer Cottage Antiques in Petaluma.

I added foam, moss and wires. Then tucked in a little bit of this and a little bit of that. (I have tons of this and that!) And that’s all there is to it. Imagine all the things you could display. And when you’re done displaying one, pull out the wires and make another in a different container with different goodies.

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Candle Decor and Safety

It’s candle season folks. Ok, well, it’s always candle season, but as the weather temperature drops the wax beauties multiply a bit around my house to add a greater touch of cozy. Plain candles are fine, but being crafty in nature, decorated candle holders are always more fun. I posted a clip art candle project (above) a while back that makes dolling up your glass holders quick and easy. Then, over coffee this morning, I went hunting for more ideas and posted them to one of my Pinterest boards.

As the wife of a fireman, I’ve heard on several occasions of house fires due to candles, so I’m extra cautious about the use and burning of them. I wrote some important candle safety tips over at SC Johnson Family Economics that I hope you’ll read. Please feel free to comment over there if you have any safe candle display ideas to share, and if you have a candle project, add a link too!

Disclosure: I am a paid blogger for SC Johnson

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