Homemade Watermelon Wine Recipe - Celebration Generation (2024)

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Homemade Watermelon wine is tasty, easy to make and a unique choice for summer imbibing. Making it requires only fairly basic ingredients.

Originally published August 3, 2011, Updated on 11/4/20

Homemade Watermelon Wine Recipe - Celebration Generation (1)

“Homemade watermelon wine is not only tasty, it's easy to make and a unique choice for summer imbibing. Also, we're a little overdue on putting on this summer's batch.

What can I say, the tornado screwed with our summer brewing schedule when it turned our lives upside down!”

Updating this post over 9 years after it was first written, it’s a bit of a wild ride to remember putting on a batch of this wine just a few months after the tornado.

Blogs sure can be a weird look back on one’s own past!

Anyway, since posting this recipe, this post has gone on to be one of the most popular on our blog! Being so old, though, there’s definitely room for updating it and adding more info.

So, here we go!

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Watermelon Wine

This wine is easy to make, requiring very little in the way of ingredients... but does require some time.

Once you wait it out, you’ll be rewarded with a beautiful, fruity wine that tastes like *summer*. It can vary in colour from a pale straw colour, to a pretty, pale pink... it just depends on the variety of watermelon.

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Wine made from yellow watermelons, after bottling. Wine made from Red watermelon loses a lot of the colour, but will end up slightly more pink than this

It’s kind of fun in that you never really know what you’re going to end up with, for colour - some start out red and lose all colour - going almost yellow - and some start out pink and stay basically the same colour til the end!

It's lovely when served chilled on a hot summer day... just be careful, it will knock you on your butt if you're not careful. The sweetness hides its potency!

Wine Making Basics

If you haven't attempted making wine before, don't be intimidated! Check out our primer to home brewing:

- Wine Making At Home, Part 1: Why?

- Wine Making at Home, Part 2: Equipment to Get Started

- Wine Making at Home, Part 3: The Brewing Process.

- Wine Making at Home, Part 4: How to Stabilize and Back Sweeten Wine

Just a small handful of entries, and you'll be good to go!

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Watermelon Wine Ingredients

This recipe uses few ingredients, but it's important to make them the right ones. Most importantly:

Watermelon

First things first: You want to use fresh, ripe, juicy watermelon.

We used to recommend using only watermelons WITH seeds, but seedless watermelons have been as good - and sometimes better - in flavour than seeded watermelons lately, so we’re relaxing that stance.

I’d recommend tasting your watermelon as you cut it. If it is “meh” on flavour now, it’ll likely be kind of “meh” on flavour once fermented.

It’s always easiest to start out with flavour, rather than try to add it after the fact. Find watermelons that have a great, robust flavour, and you’ll be glad you did!

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Sugar

While we tend to play fast and loose with the sugar choices at times, watermelon wine has a much more narrow range of sugars that work with it:

Granulated Sugar

Plain white granulated sugar is your best bet for Homemade Watermelon Wine, and it’s what we use every time, now.

It provides the most neutral flavour of all the sweeteners, which is important when the fruit being used - like watermelon - is a more subtle and easily overpowered flavour.

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Honey

While we recommend exclusively using white sugar for the best results, you CAN substitute honey for all or part of the sugar.

Note: If you substitute honey for all of the sugar, you’re making a mead. More specifically, a “Melomel” - a mead made with fruit. File that one away for future trivia contests!

If you do decide to use honey with this one, use one that is lightly coloured and flavoured. Any of the darker honey varieties - such as buckwheat - or heavily flavoured ones (like wildflower) will overpower the watermelon flavour.

You may end up with something tasty, but it won’t be watermelon flavoured!

Yeast

We like to use Red Star’s “Champagne” Yeast for this one. It has a high tolerance for alcohol, which allows for a high final ABV.

You can use whatever wine making yeast you like, just know how it’ll impact your final product.

The main way that your yeast choice will impact the final product is in ABV. The higher a yeast strain’s tolerance for alcohol is, the longer they’ll live as they’re fermenting your watermelon juice - and the higher the ABV you’ll end up with.

The more sugar the yeast processes into alcohol, the dryer the wine gets, as well.

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If you choose a yeast that has a lower tolerance for alcohol, it will die off before the ABV gets very high - or the wine gets very dry.

Yeast brands and strains can vary wildly depending on your store and where you live, so I definitely recommend talking to your local homebrew supply store. Let them know what you’re aiming for in terms of sweetness and/or ABV, and ask which of their yeasts they’d recommend.

Just don’t use bread or all purpose yeast for brewing, though. Stick to wine yeast!

Back Sweetening Your Watermelon Wine

Watermelon wine is a wine that is best made sweet. Dry watermelon wine... doesn’t really taste like much of anything. Like most fruit wines - especially the lighter coloured ones - you’ll definitely want to make this one at LEAST semi sweet.

Sometimes, you’ll find that the yeast went a bit too far with their smorgasbord, and you end up with a wine that’s not as sweet as you’d like it.

... and that’s when you back sweeten it! You can read my How to Stabilize and Back Sweeten Wine post for information on how to back sweeten it.

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Watermelon Wine Specifics

While the earlier mentioned “Wine Making Basics” posts have a ton of great information, there are a few things specific to Homemade Watermelon Wine that aren’t addressed:

Preparing your Watermelon

Chopping the watermelon is messy business. I recommend putting a cutting board in a baking sheet (the kind with rim/short walls), and cutting it up in there. Periodically dump the accumulated juice into the pot.

Seasonality

This is very much a seasonal wine, and it will NOT turn out anywhere near as good if you make it with winter produce.

Additionally - unlike most of our wine recipes - there really isn’t a frozen version of fresh watermelon!

With those bits of info in mind, be more wine than you think you’ll need, because you’re not going to want to start another batch in 6 months or whatever!

We made the mistake of only putting on 1 gallon the first time, and 5 next time. This year, we'll likely make 10 gallons - plan accordingly!

Watermelon wine makes a great gift... especially after a tornado, LOL. We had a TON of people to thank!

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Water

One question that we’re asked often is “But how much water do we add?”

It’s no mistake that we don’t call for water in the recipe - we don’t USE water for this. Unlike most fruit, watermelon breaks down almost completely when heated.

You start out with chunks of watermelon - and the juice that comes out as you cut it - but it quickly breaks down to a liquid.

Because the watermelon flavour is relatively subtle compared to most fruits, we don’t add any water at all, and just ferment straight watermelon flesh / juice.

More Home Brewing Recipes!

While you've got your current homebrew fermenting away, why not consider putting a batch of something else on, to occupy your wait time? Here are a few of my other wine, cider, and mead recipes:

Wine Recipes

Banana Wine Recipe
Blackberry Wine Recipe
Blackcurrant Wine Recipe
Blueberry Wine Recipe
Cherry Wine Recipe
Cranberry Clementine Christmas Wine Recipe
Cranberry Wine Recipe
Faux Lingonberry Wine
Lychee Wine Recipe
Mango Strawberry Wine Recipe
Mango Wine Recipe
Mint Wine Recipe
Lychee Wine Recipe
Partridgeberry Wine Recipe
Passionfruit Wine Recipe
Peach Wine Recipe
Stone Fruit Wine Recipe
Strawberry Wine Recipe
Ube Wine Recipe

Mead Recipes

Black Cherry Mead Recipe
Blueberry-Clementine Mead Recipe
Blueberry Mead Recipe
Clementine Mead Recipe
Pumpkin Mead Recipe
Wildflower Mead Recipe

Cider & Miscellaneous Homebrew Recipes

Hard Apple Cider Recipe
Home Brew Hard Iced Tea Recipe
Maple Hard Apple Cider Recipe

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Share the Love!

As you’re brewing - or serving! - your homemade wine, be sure to take some pics of your handiwork! If you instagram it, be sure to tag me - @CelebrationGenerationCA - or post it to My Facebook Page - so I can cheer you on!

Also, be sure to subscribe to my free monthly email newsletter, so you never miss out on any of my nonsense.

Well, the published nonsense, anyway!

Anyway, on to my Homemade Watermelon Wine Recipe!

Homemade Watermelon Wine Recipe - Celebration Generation (11)

Homemade Watermelon Wine Recipe - Celebration Generation (12)

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4.92 from 24 votes

How to Make Watermelon Wine

Watermelon wine is not only tasty, it’s easy to make and a unique choice for summer imbibing. Making it requires fairly basic ingredients, and is a fun way to learn basic wine making!

Prep Time1 hour hr

Cook Time20 minutes mins

Brewing Time180 days d

Course: Drinks

Cuisine: American

Servings: 1 Gallon

Calories: 6616kcal

Author: Marie Porter

Equipment

  • 2 gallon fermenter bucket and lid

  • 1 - 2 1 gallon glass carboys & stoppers

  • Siphon, siphon tubing.

  • 1 air lock and stopper

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Slice up watermelon, discarding rind. Chop watermelon flesh into 1″ cubes, placing into a large pot. Once all watermelon flesh and juice is collected in the pot, heat over medium, stirring and mashing frequently, until watermelon flesh has broken down into liquid. Remove from heat.

  • Measure about 3.5 L / 14-15 cups / 120 oz of juice, reserve any remaining – you can drink it straight, or make co*cktails from it! In large pot, combine measured watermelon juice (straining the seeds out as you measure!) with the sugar. Heat to almost boiling, stirring until sugar is dissolved. Remove from heat, cover with sanitized pot lid.

  • Once mixture has cooled to room temperature, add acid blend and yeast nutrient.

  • Using a sanitized funnel, transfer cooled mixture to a sanitized 2 gallon fermenting bucket.

  • Using sanitized equipment, take a gravity reading. It should be in around the 1.16 area. Keep track of the number! (This is an optional step, but will allow you to calculate your final ABV %)

  • Sprinkle yeast into bucket, cover with sanitized air lock. Let sit, undisturbed, overnight.

  • Within 24 hours, you should notice fermentation activity – bubbles in the airlock, carbonation and /or swirling in the wine must. This means you’re good to go! Put the bucket somewhere cool (not cold!), and leave it alone for a month.

  • Using sanitized equipment, rack the clarified wine off the sediment, into a clean, freshly sanitized 1 gallon carboy. Cap with sanitized airlock, leave it alone for another 2-3 months. r

  • Repeat racking process. Leave wine alone for a month or two. By 6 months in, your wine should be very clear, and VERY tasty!

  • When your wine has been racked a few times and shows NO more fermenting activity for a month or so (no bubbles in the airlock, no more sediment being produced, you can move on to bottling:

  • Using sanitized equipment, take a gravity reading*, then rack the wine into clean, sanitized bottles. Cork.

  • Enjoy.. and start planning for next year’s batch(es)!

Notes

* Our final gravity reading on this comes out to about 1.012

IMPORTANT:

Software generates nutritional information based on the ingredients as they start, and is unable to account for the sugars consumed in the fermentation process. As such, the calories, sugars, and carbs are shown WAY higher than reality.

Additionally, the listed value is for the entire recipe, NOT per serving.

Nutrition

Calories: 6616kcal | Carbohydrates: 1700g | Protein: 27g | Fat: 7g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 59mg | Potassium: 5040mg | Fiber: 18g | Sugar: 1637g | Vitamin A: 25605IU | Vitamin C: 365mg | Calcium: 329mg | Iron: 11mg

Related posts:

Marie's Favorite Mojito RecipeMint WineMango WineChristmas Wine
Homemade Watermelon Wine Recipe - Celebration Generation (2024)

FAQs

Can you make wine out of melons? ›

Melon wines are a challenge to make, but with careful attention to detail they can be made — and made well. Certain melons are very good candidates for winemaking but only when they are fully ripe.

What does watermelon wine taste like? ›

Watermelon wine tastes like its namesake fruit and has distinct notes of sweetness from the added sugar. Depending on the length of the fermentation process and the specific ingredients in the mash, watermelon wine can range in taste from tangy and funky to soft and mellow.

How do you make wine from watermelon? ›

To make watermelon wine, heat chunks of watermelon over a medium heat for 30 minutes so they break down into juice. Then, strain 14 cups of juice to get rid of any seeds before adding the juice to a pot with sugar. Heat the pot until it's almost boiling, then add acid blend and yeast nutrient.

What is the best yeast for watermelon wine? ›

Choosing Yeast for Watermelon Wine. You can use champagne yeast or cider yeast for all my cider and wine recipes. If you visit a home-brew store, they should be able to help you select a yeast.

How long does melon wine take? ›

Aged Values
NameValue Increase (Regular to Iridium)Processing Time (Iridium)
Melon Wine750g56 Days
Rhubarb Wine660g56 Days
Pale Ale300g34 Days
Banana Wine450g56 Days
10 more rows
Jan 15, 2021

What percent alcohol is watermelon wine? ›

More Information
SKU53670
Package Size750 ml.
Proof/Alcohol by Volume5%
BrandStella Rosa
Bottles per Case12
12 more rows

How long does watermelon wine take to ferment? ›

Allow this mixture (must) to ferment for 5 to 7 days. You should start to see some foaming activity within 24 hours of adding the wine yeast. Typically, 70% of the fermentation activity will occur during this 5 to 7 day period. After 5 to 7 days remove the pulp from the fermenter and discard.

How do you know when homemade wine is done? ›

It will be finished fermenting when the specific gravity reads below 1.000 (usually about . 990) and the bubbles(fizzing) have stopped. How soon can you drink homemade wine? Assuming everything is going right with your ferment, you can drink your wine at any point.

How much sugar do I add to homemade wine? ›

As we did earlier, we can calculate that we want the must to have 21.1% by weight — or 1.85 pounds of sugar per gallon. The deficiency in sugar is thus 1.85 minus 1.14 or 0.71 pounds. It is this amount (0.71 pounds) which would be recommended by many tables as the quantity of sugar to be added.

What alcohol goes best with watermelon? ›

Vodka: Any vodka works, I used Tito's, but you could even use tequila and make these into watermelon margaritas! While this drink calls for vodka, it's very versatile and virtually any liquor will work, white rum, tequila etc. Lime Juice: Lemon juice also works, but I love the combination of lime and watermelon!

Does watermelon ferment well? ›

Watermelon rind is wonderfully crunchy and has a great texture for fermenting or pickling. Not only does it absorb flavors well, but it also stands up well when fermented. It doesn't get mushy or fall apart as easily as some other fruits/veggies – even cucumbers, which are traditionally used for pickles.

Why did my watermelon ferment? ›

According to the Bangor Daily News, bacteria can be introduced into a watermelon while growing on the vine. The bacteria combine with the sugars and yeast inside the melon and start the fermentation process. The foam — which seeps out of the melon through cracks in the rind — is a sign that fermentation is happening.

What yeast makes the strongest wine? ›

Red Star Wine Yeast

A strong fermenter and produces full-bodied red wines. Particularly well suited for grapes from the Zinfandel and Cabernet families as well as Berry and Cherry Wine, Gamay, Merlot, Pinot, and Syrah.

Does it matter what yeast you use for wine? ›

You can of course still use bread yeast as all yeast performs the same function – converting sugar to alcohol – but your wine will likely have a much lower alcohol content than normal. The yeast best suited for baking has a lower alcohol tolerance, so it will stop fermenting after alcohol levels reach about 8%.

Can I add honey in wine? ›

Mulled Wine Ingredients

It doesn't have to be expensive (it shouldn't be), but it should have good flavor. Add about 3/4 of a cup of honey, and 3/4 of a cup of water, for every 750 ml bottle of wine. This results in a nicely sweet mulled wine, so if you would like it less sweet, cut the honey back to half a cup.

Is melon wine good? ›

The variety is also grown in other countries, such as the United States, where it is used to produce wines that are similar in style to those produced in the Loire Valley. Melon de Bourgogne is a highly prized grape variety for its ability to produce wines that are well-balanced, crisp, and refreshing.

Can you make wine from cantaloupe? ›

Like most melons, the orange-fleshed cantaloupe Cucumis melo cantalupensis, makes unforgiving wine. If you do one thing wrong, the wine quickly heads south. Even if you do nothing wrong, cantaloupes can make poor wine. It is the quality of the fruit that matters then.

What is melon wine? ›

Melon de Bourgogne or Melon is a variety of white grape grown primarily in the Loire Valley region of France. It is also grown in North America. It is best known through its use in the white wine Muscadet.

What fruits can turn into wine? ›

Any number of different fruits may be used for making wine including peaches, watermelons, plums, strawberries, blackberries, boysenberries, gooseberries, pears, grapefruits, persimmons, pineapples, and much more. The first step in making wine using other types of fruit is the same as making wine using grapes.

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