Follow this guide to make a delicious Rhubarb Wine at home, in easy to follow simple steps.
Chop the Rhubarb stalks into short pieces and crush them in a pre-sanitised fermenting bucket. Pour the water over the contents together with the rest of the ingredients (Note: Always use cold water with Rhubarb, never use hot water as this can release Oxalic acid in the wine). Stir thoroughly.
Cover the bucket with a cloth and leave to ferment in a warm place for 5 days. Stir the contents of the bucket daily. Then strain into a 1-gallon demijohn through a muslin or nylon straining bag. Press as much as possible and discard the pulp. It may be necessary to top up with cooled boiled water to 4½litres.
Fit a bung and airlock and leave in a warm place to continue to ferment out completely.
Fermentation usually completes in 2–4 weeks, but you should then check it with a hydrometer. The hydrometer will indicate the remaining sugar level and finishing levels are as follows:
- Dry Wine-0.990-0.996
- Medium Wine-0.996-1.009
- Sweet Wine-1.009-1.018
Finishing your Rhubarb Wine
At the end of fermentation add 1 crushed Campden tablet and half a teaspoon of potassium sorbate per gallon. Leave in a warm place for 3 days to kill off the yeast. Then, leave the wine in a cool place (15 °C) to clear before siphoning it from the sediment.
Country wines often do not clear on their own, so winemakers should add finings after fermentation. Winefine finings are very effective. When clear you should pass the wine through a Vinbrite filter to obtain a professional finish before bottling.
Bottling your wine
Bottle the wine and store it in a cool, dark place to mature for at least 6 months. During this time any rough tastes will be smoothed out and the wine will improve in bouquet and flavour. Rhubarb wine produces a delicious delicate blush wine that is perfect for Summer lunches in the garden.

