Thanks for the informative link, Wifezilla. And I did not use Camden tablets

. I did boil my "wort". And then didn't get around to putting is in jars and canning it. Thus it picked up wild yeasty beasties and probably had some within, since it is plum juice I am using. The book I am basing my home wine making on, has old traditional recipes, stuff the common people would make, and before current government regulations.
Free, you could try making elderberry wine. If you ever watched "The Waltons" I believe there were 2 elderly ladies infamous for their "tonic" of elderberry wine.
The small family winery, I used to work in, used sulfur to clean the barrels. On those days I usually had to go home early. Which the owners fortunately understood. They were totally into organics and at one time even paid for the legal certification of having organic wine. They stopped paying to be certified organic. But they still pactise it, because it is what they believe in. Every aspect of their wine making is practised with utmost care for the environment and people's health. They grow their own grapes organically and sustainably.
They treated their employees well, I felt like family. The vinyard (and other seasonal) workers are treated with respect and concern. These people often work in extreme weather. During heatwaves, the owners would check on them regularly to make sure no-one was suffering from the heat, they also had us bring lots of cold drinks to them. The owners would see to it that they got breaks from the heat, by bringing them from the vinyard to the winery to cool off.
In the cold and rainy early spring, when the Mobile Bottling line was there, my job was to get the fire going in the winery (the only heat source for the building) and hot chocolate in the 2 crockpots. About 1/2 hour or so later, the crew would come in out of the cold and usually wet, put their meals in the microwave, grab some hot chocolate and huddle by the stove. They didn't speak english, but their faces showed their appreciation and I understood enough mexican to understand what they were saying.
This is about fermenting isn't it. Ok so I segued (sp) a bit.
